Bah, the user interface and design is horrible to navigate in, which just made me sad. Try to paginate, music stops etc. If you created this, spend some more effort in user testing before sharing if you want users to have a good experience. My 2 cents.
f_devd•about 3 hours ago
Ngl the weird UI bugs made me think it must be made by AI, either that or the developer has very skewed frontend skills where gradients are fancy but sliders & interactions are broken.
tearwear•about 1 hour ago
100%. Whoever did this UI thing, first, would get rich, if Anthropic et al. had to pay for the use of his border-radius, gradient and paddings
somenameforme•about 3 hours ago
Yeah, this is LLM like 99%. Still neat, but ffs just go through a few more testing cycles with it before going live.
AirMax98•about 2 hours ago
I am actually going to guess that this is in fact unfortunately not an LLM. I have been made a few audio webpages and don’t think a lot of these mistakes would have been made, even though the model can’t hear :^)
tearwear•about 2 hours ago
invest 20 more minutes?
nah, that's an entire 10 episode rewatch if this libertine vibe coder's agentic engineering pipeline holds! ... shit, mostly ads, if only the dude went through a few more testing cycles ... nah, that's enough time for some auto-research into the psycho-linguistic consequences of getting The Trump voted for president after the whitest black presidency in the history of the world, forever!
prodigycorp•about 3 hours ago
Shipping a ui like this is downright disrespectful for users here. it makes zero sense.
dfxm12•about 2 hours ago
The Dunning-Kruger effect will grow with AI adoption.
chorkpop•about 2 hours ago
Also why is there no big "Play" button? I have to click a bunch to even hear an example.
kromokromo•about 2 hours ago
Also a missed opportunity for some of that sweet vanilla html paired with the keygen and crack ansi splash screens
larodi•about 2 hours ago
it screems vibecoding without the slightest idea what they doing.
Vibecoded website with poor UX. Loving that the website is both trying to be fancy by having a floating player you can drag around with a playlist, while also wiping everything if you click the wrong link. No human made this, or paid it any attention at least.
nialv7•about 2 hours ago
> a floating player you can drag
you can drag only by clicking on a ui element that has no indication that it can be dragged.
mock-possum•about 2 hours ago
> No human made this, or paid it any attention at least.
I think we’ve got to get used to seeing those as the same thing. Paying attention to it is making it, in essence, the more attention you pay, the more you own the process, the more the result is ‘yours.’
wren6991•about 2 hours ago
A steaming pile of webslop. Thanks Claude.
Music is cool though
bityard•about 3 hours ago
From the aesthetic, this has probably been vibecoded to hell and back.
Archive.org also has some bundles of keygen music, but you have to sift a bit through the results to find them.
vibcdingenjoyer•about 3 hours ago
I wonder if you can find a way to turn the device volume up to max to simulate the unexpected music blasting out and surprising the hell out of the user.
Brendinooo•about 3 hours ago
Based on the site and the comments, this feels like a reference to something I know nothing about!
This is a nice collection from the ReclusiveLemming YouTube channel [0] . The video description contains download links to the original tracker modules and an MP3 mix.
I used to listen to these modules with Xmp Mod Player [1] from F-Droid on my commute to work with my Nexus 4.
Many of the modules contain "hidden" messages that the Android app made easy to read.
>Preserving the digital underground's musical legacy
Yeah I'm pretty sure the people who made keygens and chiptunes would hate today's AI and LLM. This is a tribute to chiptunes and keygen music as much as putting a picture of your grandma into an AI tool to animate it would be a tribute to her.
petercooper•about 2 hours ago
I was coming here to recommend https://chiptune.app/ too - it's great, and super fast to boot.
modus-tollens•about 2 hours ago
Love the idea! Spend some time refining and thinking about the UI.
I tend to think this song is the magnum opus of keygen music. Always used to be associated with Sony Vegas tools which, when I was younger, was a big deal cracking.
smusamashah•about 2 hours ago
This website is horrific on phone. A sane human made website with keygen music has been shared on HN a few times already.
Geekshere•about 2 hours ago
Horribly coded site but a cool collection of music, only wish I had access to the original collection because I know without a doubt that they just downloaded those mp3s from someone else’s site.
laurentlb•about 1 hour ago
Note that there are no mp3 files at all. It's a player for module files (e.g. .mod, .xm, etc.)
> Preserving the digital underground's musical legacy
The entire page has clearly been completely AI-generated in one shot and serves no value. I doubt the author even read much of the code before hitting publish - look at the comments in the HTML:
> <!-- EXACT setup from working simple-test.html -->
lol.
It struggles to even run on my laptop with the amount of crap Gemini has put into it - 30KB of minified JS and another 30 of the horrible CSS. This is a snot-filled spit in the face of musicians whose TLD is being polluted with this, and whose music this vibecoder stole. The gall to have a copyright sign at the bottom is despicable.
slicktux•about 2 hours ago
Unable to browse because I’m on mobile but Satellite One by Purple Motion is a track to listen to!
<3
devin•about 3 hours ago
I think maybe this is getting hugged to death. I searched for an old favorite of mine: `radix - bright eyes`, and couldn't find it, but maybe I'm just doing it wrong.
the demoscene is about putting in lots of technical effort into programs even if it would be completely unreasonable in any real software project.
This vibe coded mess is putting in so little technical effort even though it is completely unreasonable for any piece of software associated with the demoscene.
spaldingcactus•about 3 hours ago
Your keygens had music? Mine only ever had viruses.
meindnoch•about 2 hours ago
Jester - Stardust Memories
RIMR•about 3 hours ago
It's so cool to see that some of these groups are still making incredible pieces of digital art as recently as this year!
..Suppose that's not going to include hacking groups, but still.
sublinear•about 3 hours ago
Not that I've looked into it much, but a thought just occurred to me. Why don't we use AI to generate lofi samples for tracker music? Why aren't there trackers with that feature bolted on? I should be able to search for bespoke and unique sounds out of thin air.
Surely that should be a very modest goal to achieve?
(re: downvotes... I say "AI" as a synthesis method, not as a way to interfere with the creative process, but I guess I have to resign myself to the fact many downvoters might be ignorant of how these musical sausages are usually made)
4chandaily•about 3 hours ago
You can't mention "AI" and music together without a negative response. I think entrenched business interests as well as musicians and other music industry adjacent people, plus the well intentioned but poorly informed public have developed a visceral knee jerk reaction to the concept. Some of this is understandable, but I think it is mostly fueled by astroturfing.
I am a musician as well as a technology enthusiast, and I think this a very exciting time!
To respond more directly to your point than your aside, there are a smattering of models out there that can take descriptions of sounds and do a decent job of creating them. (Stable Audio 3 just released last month and can do this, for example). - I don't find them to be useful for sampling, though. I'm still much quicker dialing in a sound with knobs or sliders than a text box.
Diffusion models in music making are not going away, though. This is (at least in part) the future.
For a taste, look at some of the interesting things being done over in the Demon project - https://github.com/daydreamlive/DEMON - to me, this is a much more positive use of the tech than "type words/get song".
tiborsaas•24 minutes ago
I really like to prompt music models with random gibberish with some unhinged prompts and expect some other world-y results.
SyneRyder•about 2 hours ago
An upvote from me, it's a reasonable question.
For your "search for bespoke and unique sounds", that sounds like a service Waves runs, called Illugen. It isn't built in to a tracker, but you can use it to generate the samples that you import into the tracker. Honestly I've never used it, I have too many samples anyway, but here it is: https://www.waves.com/illugen
But you also don't have to go down the generative / diffusion path. You can ask your AI to make a tool to generate various sample files for you mathematically. A good frontier model will happily make a program that will create some hihat and cymbal sounds out of white noise, a kick drum out of distorted sine waves. It will create some simple synth sounds from square waves. If you go deep enough, it will happily go down the rabbit hole with you into additive synthesis while nerding out about the Synclavier. Or it will do synthesis through frequency modulation while chatting about the Yamaha DX7 and don't do that because FM is like modular you'll never find a way out of that hole has anyone seen eno lately.
If you kept reading this far, there's plenty of Claudes already doing their own very simple synthesis & music writing, in videos like these below (two I found today). The models are capable of much much more if you give them time to build a toolset, and aren't just asking them to one shot an entire video about their existence using only a copy of ffmpeg:
Not quite what you suggested, but I did some experiments several months ago "enhancing" the samples in tracker music with some models, and they sounded terrible. There really is something about the sound of tracker files that's just right. But sure, you could generate lo-fi samples, there's a lot of computer generated samples in music, but putting them together into a pleasing combination is the hard bit.
devin•about 3 hours ago
Could you say more? I don't really follow, and I've used trackers for a long time. Don't some trackers already have something akin to this in terms of "randomizing" wave forms inside some reasonable parameters? Why would you need AI for this problem?
zahlman•about 3 hours ago
I assume the goal is to be able to prompt with "make me a synth that sounds like ..." and actually get a reasonable result.
stackghost•about 3 hours ago
>Why don't we use AI to generate lofi samples for tracker music?
Because generating lofi samples is already pretty easy with waveform generators and existing tools. Burning millions of tokens worth of compute just to make a bass kick is profoundly wasteful.
Discussion (63 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
nah, that's an entire 10 episode rewatch if this libertine vibe coder's agentic engineering pipeline holds! ... shit, mostly ads, if only the dude went through a few more testing cycles ... nah, that's enough time for some auto-research into the psycho-linguistic consequences of getting The Trump voted for president after the whitest black presidency in the history of the world, forever!
you can drag only by clicking on a ui element that has no indication that it can be dragged.
I think we’ve got to get used to seeing those as the same thing. Paying attention to it is making it, in essence, the more attention you pay, the more you own the process, the more the result is ‘yours.’
Music is cool though
(And it looks like the files were all yoinked from https://github.com/6512345/keygenmusic)
Archive.org also has some bundles of keygen music, but you have to sift a bit through the results to find them.
I used to listen to these modules with Xmp Mod Player [1] from F-Droid on my commute to work with my Nexus 4.
Many of the modules contain "hidden" messages that the Android app made easy to read.
[0] https://youtube.com/watch?v=GH7eUlri4yM
[1] https://f-droid.org/packages/org.helllabs.android.xmp/
Use https://chiptune.app.
>Preserving the digital underground's musical legacy
Yeah I'm pretty sure the people who made keygens and chiptunes would hate today's AI and LLM. This is a tribute to chiptunes and keygen music as much as putting a picture of your grandma into an AI tool to animate it would be a tribute to her.
Can you add this song? "Sony Vegas 9.x Keygen Music by Kenet & Rez (Digital Insanity)" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cmdprbBOMT8
As mentioned in other comments, chiptune.app seems to be a better project and has been maintained for years (https://github.com/mmontag/chip-player-js).
Also available here: https://modarchive.org/index.php?request=view_by_moduleid&qu...
If you'd like to download module files, https://modarchive.org is a good reference.
The entire page has clearly been completely AI-generated in one shot and serves no value. I doubt the author even read much of the code before hitting publish - look at the comments in the HTML:
> <!-- EXACT setup from working simple-test.html -->
lol.
It struggles to even run on my laptop with the amount of crap Gemini has put into it - 30KB of minified JS and another 30 of the horrible CSS. This is a snot-filled spit in the face of musicians whose TLD is being polluted with this, and whose music this vibecoder stole. The gall to have a copyright sign at the bottom is despicable.
This vibe coded mess is putting in so little technical effort even though it is completely unreasonable for any piece of software associated with the demoscene.
This Razor1911 career retrospective demo from Revision was pretty impressive: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2AnbYNudAyM
There were definitely many keygens I would open just to have on in the background.
With Claude Code in less than 5 minutes, I can come up with something 10x better, at least usable, with basic UX knowledge and flow basics.
Sorry if I offended the author, but he/she can learn from these comments.
Ah there it is: https://keygenmusic.tk/#track=Razor1911/Razor1911%20-%20Comm...
its irrelevant to enjoying the actual content which is music
sometimes the nitpickery on HN is excessive and not really of value
Edit: They have a point though. Food for thought.
huh? Preserving groups that 'shaped the scene' would make me think late 80s and early 90s! c'mon now
https://www.scene.org/ is the way to go, no?
..Suppose that's not going to include hacking groups, but still.
Surely that should be a very modest goal to achieve?
(re: downvotes... I say "AI" as a synthesis method, not as a way to interfere with the creative process, but I guess I have to resign myself to the fact many downvoters might be ignorant of how these musical sausages are usually made)
I am a musician as well as a technology enthusiast, and I think this a very exciting time!
To respond more directly to your point than your aside, there are a smattering of models out there that can take descriptions of sounds and do a decent job of creating them. (Stable Audio 3 just released last month and can do this, for example). - I don't find them to be useful for sampling, though. I'm still much quicker dialing in a sound with knobs or sliders than a text box.
Diffusion models in music making are not going away, though. This is (at least in part) the future.
For a taste, look at some of the interesting things being done over in the Demon project - https://github.com/daydreamlive/DEMON - to me, this is a much more positive use of the tech than "type words/get song".
For your "search for bespoke and unique sounds", that sounds like a service Waves runs, called Illugen. It isn't built in to a tracker, but you can use it to generate the samples that you import into the tracker. Honestly I've never used it, I have too many samples anyway, but here it is: https://www.waves.com/illugen
But you also don't have to go down the generative / diffusion path. You can ask your AI to make a tool to generate various sample files for you mathematically. A good frontier model will happily make a program that will create some hihat and cymbal sounds out of white noise, a kick drum out of distorted sine waves. It will create some simple synth sounds from square waves. If you go deep enough, it will happily go down the rabbit hole with you into additive synthesis while nerding out about the Synclavier. Or it will do synthesis through frequency modulation while chatting about the Yamaha DX7 and don't do that because FM is like modular you'll never find a way out of that hole has anyone seen eno lately.
If you kept reading this far, there's plenty of Claudes already doing their own very simple synthesis & music writing, in videos like these below (two I found today). The models are capable of much much more if you give them time to build a toolset, and aren't just asking them to one shot an entire video about their existence using only a copy of ffmpeg:
https://x.com/nptacek/status/2065207326492020957/video/1
https://x.com/nptacek/status/2065230524264710313/video/1
Because generating lofi samples is already pretty easy with waveform generators and existing tools. Burning millions of tokens worth of compute just to make a bass kick is profoundly wasteful.