Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 6, 2026

Cakewalk (sequencer)

Cakewalk is a sequencer first developed by Twelve Tone Systems.

Last revised
Jun 6, 2026
Read time
≈ 1 min
Length
335 w
Citations
2
Source
Cakewalk
DeveloperTwelve Tone Systems
Initial release1987 (1987)
Stable release
9.03
Operating systemWindows, MS-DOS
TypeHost/Music sequencer
LicenseProprietary
Websitecakewalk.com

Cakewalk is a sequencer first developed by Twelve Tone Systems (the company later known as Cakewalk, Inc.).

Originally for MS-DOS, starting with version Cakewalk 1.0 in 1987,1 and, beginning in 1991, for Windows 3.0. Until version 4.0 it required an MPU-401 MIDI interface card operating in intelligent mode, while 4.0 and later versions relied on the dumb UART mode only.

Cakewalk was delivered in two versions, Cakewalk Pro and Cakewalk Express. The latter was a lite version limited to 25 tracks and 1 MIDI output port. The Express version was sometimes bundled with hardware such as a sound card. Cakewalk was a purely MIDI based sequencer: Although it could trigger WAV files at certain points, more comprehensive audio support was not incorporated until the advent of Cakewalk Pro Audio when true support for digitized audio was added.

Cakewalk Professional 1.0 for MS-DOS source ↗

Features

The last version of the product featured a piano roll editor, support for limited music notation and a built-in scripting language called CAL (Cakewalk Application Language).2 Cakewalk was a predecessor of SONAR which had nearly all of the same features, including support for CAL, and was the only major DAW on the market supporting a scripting language.

Cakewalk had piano roll and CAL support since the Windows 16-bit Version 3.01.

See also

See also

References

References

  1. Interview with founder and CEO Greg Hendershott, 20 years on, 12 November 2007, at Create Digital Music blog.
  2. Cakewalk DevXchange Archived 2009-07-07 at the Wayback Machine - CAL
Further reading

Further reading

External links