Noiseblend might be a bit more popular than Sampulator. We know about 4 links to it since March 2021 and only 3 links to Sampulator. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I also worked for 8 months on a music discovery webapp called Noiseblend that uses Spotify. We were never accepted for their commercial program and were not allowed to ask for money on the website. Source: 12 months ago
My most ambitious web project was https://noiseblend.com which is a web app for discovering music on Spotify. It’s a next.js + React slow and memory hungry mess [1] which could have been static HTML with some JS for the dynamic bits. Experience taught me to keep it simple nowadays, but I had to go through the Noiseblend mistakes first. The stack is Python with Sanic for the backend, Postgres for db and Redis for... - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
I’m serving everything from the Spotify API directly on Noiseblend (https://noiseblend.com) and rate limit has never been a problem. When a request fails because of a rate limit, Spotify responds with 429 and a Retry-After header so you know when to schedule the next request. In my tests, that header never had a value greater than 10 seconds, and 429 responses were very rare. - Source: Hacker News / over 2 years ago
I've been using this site ever since I discovered it! I'm glad to see it featured on HN. I started learning to play the Romanian Kaval [1] last summer and Songdata helped me enormously in finding good backing tracks to improvise on. I'm mostly improvising on chillhop tracks right now because I'm trying to develop less traditional rhythms (although I'm still clumsy with the breathing and knowing when to keep the... - Source: Hacker News / over 2 years ago
I am trying to figure out how to make sounds similar to the "Keys" section on this soundboard. I'm new to music production and I would love to learn how to make something that sounds similar as part of the learning process, but don't even know where to start dissecting a sounds like this! Source: almost 2 years ago
Really cool, and I think I might use or integrate this, but I agree with > I find this tool an interesting concept, but I couldn't get through the initial step to create a 4/4 kick loop. There's too much internal state going on with no indicators about what's active or what mode I'm in that it feels more like a memory game than a fun music toy. Maybe it's not a coincidence I'm not a vim/emacs fan? :D I think it... - Source: Hacker News / about 2 years ago
Or maybe it'd be like using one of those online beat generators, but instead of dragging over from a fully opened menu you have to unlock them. https://splice.com/sounds/beatmaker or http://sampulator.com/. Source: over 2 years ago
Spotify - Map shows when two people play same song at same time
Splice Beat Maker - Make and share beats in your browser
Noon Pacific - The week’s best music handpicked & delivered to your devices
Ramsophone - A generative art/music machine. (Be sure to refresh!)
StreamForever - Create forever running video playlists
BlokDust - Join blocks together to build sounds with this web-based music making app.