Archive for the ‘Arrangement Websites’ Category

Composer Allister Brimble contributes two new remixes to Remix.Kwed.Org

Thursday, September 13th, 2007

Sometimes, if they’re very lucky, very talented, and/or very determined, a video game remixer goes on to actually compose the soundtrack to a video game. Probably the biggest example and success story of this is virt, who has scored quite a few games in his time, including the upcoming Contra 4, as reported earlier here. It is of course pretty killer when this happens.

Conversely, it’s also pretty cool when a professional VGM composer swings by some place like OverClocked ReMix and drops an arrangement like Jeremy Soule and The Fat Man have. Sure, it’s cool when composers show their support for amateur remixes by helping out with source credits, praising remixes of their works, and all that, but in my book, the highest honor the community has is when one of the very people it’s meant to honor joins it to honor someone else.

Allister Brimble is one of the hardest working VGM composers in the business. Since his start on the Amiga game Thunderbirds, Brimble has worked on more than 250 games spanning computer, console, and handheld platforms.

Lightforce

In 2002, Brimble arranged the main theme from the Rob Hubbard scored Commodore 64 game Lightforce with the remix “Lightforce 2002” over at Remix.Kwed.Org. In the past week, he’s released two other C64 remixes: “Arcade Classics,” a synthrock remix of the game from the same name scored by Hubbard as well, and “Green Beret Full Orch,” from the game Green Beret, composed by Martin Galway. Check out the works of another video game composer who’s entered the world of fan remixing.

Green Beret

Back in Time Live 2007 concert DVD released for free!

Wednesday, September 12th, 2007

Sweeet! With 3 Es. Over at Remix64, the place for all Commodore arrangement scene news, Steve “subzero” Dee announced last week that a torrent for this past June’s Back in Time Live 2007 is now freely available. subzero, from Remix64:

I’m pleased to announce that the BITLive 2007 DVD is now available to download and burn as a torrent […]. You’ll find the link to the torrent below - its over 7 gigabytes as it burns as a dual layer dvd. I hope you enjoy it.

Back in Time Live 2007 DVD label

As noted by Remix64 head honco Markus “LMan” Klein, the DVD label was made by Jason “Kenz” Mackenzie, using artwork done by Matrix and Theo of Press Play on Tape. Right now I’m pissed I can’t grab this now, as I don’t have the hard drive space. I know, it’s worthy of crying over. Profusely. But with luck, I’ll be able to get a new 200GB laptop and snag this sucker down the line.

Considering that past editions of BIT Live concerts have been (relatively) pricey for this side of the ocean, a full dual-layer-DVD-sized is nothing but good times. Note for y’all on the North American side of the Atlantic, it’s a PAL region DVD, but you can swing that. I know you can.

The London concert features performances from Reyn Ouwehand, Jeroen Tel, 8 Bit Weapon, MJ Hibbett, and several other choice bits. Make sure to get in touch with some fine folks at the Remix64 boards in order to make sure the torrent is sufficiently seeded, and get ready to live life backwards with BIT Live 2007!

Dwelling of Duels: August 2007 Results (PC Games)

Thursday, September 6th, 2007

I knew I was forgetting something! The August results are out for Dwelling of Duels, with this month’s theme being PC games.

Dwelling of Duels - PC Games (August 2007)

There are some real gems here from a lot of games that receive little-to-no coverage in the community. Always a plus for someone like me that likes to hear something new. That top seven in particular looks really strong, so be sure to swing by and give DoD your monthly look. And of course, be ready for next month’s Free Month when results go live on October 1st: (more…)

The Problem with Beginners

Friday, August 24th, 2007

Another Soundscape wrote this. Just so you know until the patching is done ;)

I’m back to once again write about more or less interesting things about OCR, VGM and everything else I can think of. This time I will tell you a story about OverClocked ReMix and a phenomenon known as “Beginners” or more often “n00bs” and how they could potentially take over the world with their ever-evolving talents.

When I first got in touch with OverClocked ReMix, I was a boy that just wanted to hear more music that was connected to what I loved. At that time, Final Fantasy ReMixes were all I ever listened to. Slowly but surely, I started to find other pieces that was highly enjoyable even thought they were NOT Final Fantasy arrangements. My eyes opened to the world of VGM arrangements. I wanted to be a part of this too.

So eventually I started trying to arrange some of that music I loved oh-so-much. Being young (it was two and a half years ago, dammit) I started playing some Zelda themes on my guitar. I wasn’t good.. at all. But that’s beside the point. The point is that I thought I was really good at that time. I hooked up with VGMix and actually got some pretty nice reviews, they made my head grow to the size of the sun, and I submitted one to OverClocked ReMix. Instant reject, if I recall correctly. I stopped remixing video game music for one and a half years after that.

And THERE folks we have it. The problem. I often hear a promising ReMixer with a WIP that is at least decent and often very creative. Then they submit it as soon as they’ve worked at the song for a week or so. It gets rejected, sometimes with a message regarding resubmission. I never see the ReMixer again. And this, my friend, is a terrible loss. You see, if the ReMixer would have stayed, maybe got some production and arrangement tips from seasoned pros (who, by the way, often are very helpful), we would have a winner.

It’s also because of this we have “judge hate.” The ReMixers are so sure they will get accepted, so sure they are amazing, that when somebody says they’re not they often go in to some kind of rage. I know I did. But in reality judges have made OverClocked ReMix a better place. Most of the time, they give constructive criticism that can actually help the ReMixer evolve.

Also, try to sort the ReMixes by year. Starting with 2007 and moving your way backwards. Do you hear the difference? OverClocked ReMix is slowly but surely going towards a better future and the quality has really improved during the years I’ve been listening. And if the ReMixers that got rejected looked back at their rejected material a couple of months after they made the song, most of them realize what was wrong with the ReMix. Then instead of sulking, use your new found skills to make an even better ReMix.

Keep evolving. Evolution got OverClocked ReMix this far, why couldn’t it get you the same distance? Everyone has to start somewhere. And believe me, #ocrwip, WIP forums, asking an OC ReMixer or even reading some online tutorials is all for the better. Some of you have the potential to be far better than everything OCR ever has seen if you just put a little effort in it.
Now go ReMix! :)

PS: I did start ReMixing again, took a lot of advice and it was worth it. Coming soon to an OverClocked ReMix front page near you.

The OneUps take over Penny Arcade Expo

Friday, August 24th, 2007

Ok, well in a perfect world, they’d have taken over Penny Arcade Expo. With prejudice. But as such, they’re just performing. Today. I’m jealous, but we wish these bros the best, for undoubtedly their biggest performance to date at Seattle’s Washington State Convention & Trade Center.


When they were announced for PAX back in March, what resulted was a humongous influx of traffic to OneUp Studios and new fans for The OneUps. They look to be going stronger than ever headed into the festival where they’ll be performing along with the NESkimos (also on today) and Minibosses (closing things out Saturday).

Dwelling of Duels: July 2007 Results (Donkey Kong)

Friday, August 10th, 2007

I haven’t formally introduced Dwelling of Duels around here yet (of course, I have during my radio shows, but the blog is new territory). It’s a usually monthly compo where artists are encouraged to predominantly perform the arrangement live, usually via live instruments rather than sequencing, gravitating toward rock. \m/

Every month at DoD features a different theme based around the world of gaming. Usually franchises, occasionally with broader concepts, always with cool customized game art (see below). Songs are released anonymously near the end of the month, accompanied by a listening party for community regulars. Voting takes place in the following days via a point spread of the voter’s choice, and on the 1st of the new month the results are unveiled along with the new theme for next month.

So just a quick one with this past month’s results, where anything from the Donkey Kong franchise of games was up for grabs.

There are so many new faces that first come to light into the video game music arrangement community via The Shizz’s Minibosses message board and Dwelling of Duels, so it’s no surprise that a relative newcomer like Scared Sim was able to walk away with the gold, with an arrangement of Donkey Kong Country’s “Aquatic Ambience” called “Swimming Monkey”.

I’d include direct links, but then you wouldn’t visit the actual site. Results follow below, and keep an eye out for DoD’s current PC Month competition for the month of August :

Scaredsim - Donkey Kong Country - Swimming Monkey
Paragon - Donkey Kong Country - Fibonacci Factory
thesamareaye, aklmfreak - Donkey Kong Land - Templo de la Fantasía
Fourth Place (tie): Bobby Winston, pingosimon - DK: King of Swing (GBA) - Jumping and Swingin’
Fourth Place (tie): Kodiak Attack - Donkey Kong, Donkey Kong 3 (NES) - Grizzlies Crush Rolling Barrels and Beehives
Sixth Place: Corax, Zachariasmith, Ryan Bennet - Donkey Kong Country 2 - Stickbrush Brambles
Seventh Place (tie): CB+ - Donkey Kong Country 3 - Unrefinery
Seventh Place (tie): tibone - Donkey Kong (NES) - Monkey can´t tune!! Monkey need bananas!!
Seventh Place (tie): Vegeroth, Battlerager - Donkey Kong Country 2 - Tides of Darkness
Tenth Place: AFM SwordBreaker - Donkey Kong Country 2 - Instigating Whispers

VGM Facebook Groups

Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

I’m going to be gone on a trip for the next couple of days, and so I’m not going to be able to get the post that I wanted to finish done. So what is this special filler edition of VGF about?

Well why don’t you just read the post title, you lazy good-for-nothing. Pretty much everyone, their mother, family pets, and great-aunt Tilly who’s never used a computer before has a Facebook account; it’s like MySpace except apparently less objectionable for some reason.

I found out earlier today that there is a group dedicated to composer Hitoshi Sakimoto, with whom I have been locked in a violent struggle since before this universe was created. In retrospect, it’s pretty obvious that there would be Facebook groups like this, but until now I never bothered to search for them.

Unfortunately, Facebook’s current group classification system doesn’t make it easy to find these groups, which are listed under, among other categories, “Entertainment & Arts - Fine Arts,” “Just for Fun - Fan Clubs,” “Music - Songwriting,” and “Music - Instruments.” So, I did a little legwork in searching for some interesting groups. If you know of any others that look good or start your own, please let me know!

General

Live Performances

Remixes

Composers

"I Hate Arrangements That Have Vocals…"

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

For readers of the various message boards in the amateur VGM arrangement communities, a hot button topic for some is “arrangements that have vocals”.

Every once in a while at OC ReMix (you don’t hear this come up much in smaller, more tight-knit communities), a fan starts a discussion specifically seeking out arrangements with vocals in them. Vocals are an expected component of almost any mainstream music one may listen to, so on that level I at least understand the expectation. While I don’t understand the infatuation, I realize that for the general populace out there vocals are needed to “complete” the musical experience.

However, the opposite argument that vocals ruin music is one the most out there complaints heard in the community. And yet around these parts we hear it all the time. Go to Ormgas.com even, and within its chatbox you’ll see the occasional “I wish there wasn’t any singing” complaint. And then you get the always-insulting “Can I get an instrumental version?”, when asked specifically because they didn’t like the vocals. Granted, when it comes to video game music (especially older material), vocals are generally nowhere to be found. It’s not a stretch to infer that this could condition some listeners to not want their music intruded upon by a voice.

Is it wrong for us to fall in the middle and not pick either ridiculous side? As much as there are some guys who neeeeeed vocals, I’ve also never heard nearly as many people on that side outright dismissing instrumental music. If I had to pick one side, it certainly wouldn’t be with the vocal haters. Taking a close-minded approach to music on any level is unwelcome around VG Frequency. Make sure you outlaw it in your neighborhood TODAY.

OneUp Studios: The Extra B Stands for BYOBB

Friday, June 29th, 2007

OneUp Studios recently hosted their latest BBQ, marking the event’s 5th anniversary. I was invited by Mustin to the 3rd (honored, to be perfectly honest), and ever since then it’s been open invitation. I :’-( every year I can’t make it to Arkansas for the festivities. One day though…

OneUp Studios Fifth Annual BBQ signature board (pre-signatures)

Be sure to check out the OUS forums for information on how everything went. The OneUps themselves (OUS’s cornerstone band) have been given new life since all but calling it quits last year, and will be performing at this year’s Penny Arcade Expo (PAX).

Nice new OUS gear, by the way. Remind me to buy a black medium-size shirt.

Dhsu Presents: Doujin Spolight

Friday, June 22nd, 2007

Hey guys, it’s your friendly neighborhood Dhsu here: ReMixer extraordinaire and Asian debonaire. My job is to familiarize all you gaijin with video game arrangements made by our friends in the Land of the Rising Sun. These arrangements are commonly referred to under the umbrella term “doujin” (i.e. amateur or fan) music, and are closely linked to Japan’s large “DTM” (or “DeskTop Music”) community. The recently-posted “Dignity Ark” by Ryo Lion is but one example of what the majority of Western ReMix-lovers are missing out on.

There are a number of factors that contribute to the relative inaccessibility of doujin arrangements: in addition to the obvious language barrier, the doujin community doesn’t have (at least to my knowledge) the equivalent of dedicated, centralized submission sites like OCR or VGMix. The closest thing would probably be sites such as CREATOR BACKER that keep track of the myriad personal sites run by the artists. Also, like their American counterparts, Japanese arrangements aren’t all good, so it’s a task in itself to sort through all “bleh” stuff. What’s worse, the arrangements that actually turn out to be amazing are often available only as part of albums sold on the artists’ websites.

But hey, that’s what I’m here for! I’ll be your tour guide of sorts to the wonderful world of doujin music, sharing sites and various other finds that I’ve come across during my own travels. I did a Doujin Spotlight feature at ThaSauce too a while ago, so the 2 whole people who ever went there will know the drill. ;)

As I close this post, I do have a small confession to make: namely that I typically only check arrangements for games or sources that I’m familiar with. Since I’m a bit of a Squaresofgt, that means mostly Final Fantasy and Chrono Trigger. Although that’s pretty much the only thing Japanese people remix anyway, aside from Touhou and hentai games. :P Oh yeah, and the Ys series, but nobody’s ever played those.

How a Russo-Nigerian Stallion Found Video Game Music, Part 3: Discovering OverClocked ReMix

Tuesday, May 1st, 2007

When Matt Kertz mentioned to me to check out remix.overclocked.org in early 2002, I was definitely interested, but never became a hardcore fan of the site until the following summer. The first newly posted track I remember being interested in back then was DarK PurPLe’s Super Mario Bros. 2 “The DarK Underground.”

When I first browsed OC ReMix, I only downloaded and kept about 30 tracks. All were from games I was familiar with, including Super Mario Bros. 1-3, Super Mario 64, Sonic the Hedgehog 1-3, Streets of Rage 1-2, F-Zero, Street Fighter II and Mega Man X (which I had downloaded a ROM of). Any other games I had played had no mixes at the time, and I only played a limited number of games growing up. I quickly added enjoyable tracks from OCR to my radio show playlists, impressed at the sound quality and creativity of guys like McVaffe (Mike Vafeas). Even as a newbie, I could instantly tell the guy was treated like a huge deal there.

The advent of torrenting years later would make OCR’s catalogue much more accessible than when I first arrived. But in retrospect, what’s funny to me is that I initially treated the site rather nonchalantly, armed with downloading habits I’d chastise newbies for having nowadays. In that sense, I wasn’t there broadly looking to find good music, I was strictly there for nostalgia. My attitude wasn’t rude or dismissive, but other mixes on OCR might as well have not existed; they simply weren’t on my radar.

Even when I got my first taste of ReMixes that were from games I didn’t know, my horizons weren’t broadened at all. I simply downloaded the new tracks that I liked and did no further exploration. My roommate back then, Dave Share, managed to download Chris J. Hampton’s Chrono Trigger “New Zeal” and McVaffe’s Castlevania Adventure “CV2k” (since removed from the site, no thanks to me) searching for cool stuff himself once I told him of the site. When he played those tracks on his comp, they were so catchy that I asked him what they were from and was surprised that they were also from OC ReMix. You’d think I would have learned to check out everything, but then again the task of amassing every mix back in 2002 was time-consuming and potentially not worth the returns.

Some n00b things I remember about my earliest days:
*Before realizing he was the site creator, wondering how egotistical djpretzel was for being the only person using the first person in the ReMix writeups
*Visiting VGMix shortly after learning about the ReMixer Exdous, downloading several mixes there, realizing most of the tracks sucked and subsequently never visiting it again; they had no quality control system in place at the time, and it showed
*Severely disliking Super Mario World “Flat Goom Beat” (also since removed) for being uncreative
*QuasiKaotic & Jade Gemini

Luckily I passed on the good word about OC ReMix onto my best friend, Joe Mauri. If Matt Kertz was the one who guided me to OverClocked ReMix in the first place, then Joe was the one whose actions ended up making me a hardcore fan. Back in the days when bandwidth was costly and speed was inconsistent, OCR’s downloading policy strongly discouraged people hitting the site hard and snagging lots of tracks within a short period of time. About a week after telling Joe about OC ReMix however, he had unabashedly downloaded everything, the site having around 600 songs by that point. He was there for nostalgia, but he was also broadly looking to find good music.

The summer of 2002, Joe came to stay with my family during summer break, which was great for both of us. One of the most influential activities of mine that summer was taking three days to sit down and listen through all of the nearly 700 ReMixes he had, starting from the letter A and working my way down through Z. It was definitely a rewarding experiencing, as I ended up keeping about a third of the mixes, becoming familiar with lots of the artists there, and becoming indirectly familiar with a lot of popular game soundtracks. I didn’t know Mega Man II’s “Dr. Wily Stage 1″ or Final Fantasy VI’s “Terra” beforehand, but I definitely knew them now. From that point forward, OC ReMix was a daily visit. Once I lurked the forums, I decided my best approach for becoming a community regular would be to post a handful of mix reviews first to have some posts to my name; you can still see those archived posts today.

Much like my habits with mainstream music I liked, I meticulously tagged the OC ReMixes I held onto. While the framework was good, OCR’s informational database was really lacking back then as it was only as complete as djpretzel’s spare time or interest could manage. Thus, my curiosity had me researching the source tunes of the mixes at Zophar’s Domain, original composers, ReMixer real names, email addresses and homepages; whatever wasn’t readily available, I worked hard to track down out of my own personal interest.

My burgeoning interest in OverClocked ReMix quickly led to me altering the divided focus of my radio show singularly to the amateur VGM arrangement community. That’ll take us to Part 4…

2005: A Year-in-Review

Sunday, January 1st, 2006

2005 has been another eventful year in the video game music arrangement community. Now that we’ve reached 2006, join us for an informal retrospective at some of the important goings-on in the scene last year.
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R:K:O & C64Audio premier new site designs

Thursday, September 1st, 2005

Two foundations of the Commodore arrangement scene received facelifts late last night as Remix.Kwed.Org creator Jan Lund “Kwed” Thomas and C64Audio.com creator Chris Abbott each revealed their respective sites’ new looks.

Following up AMIGAremix’s redesign earlier this year, Kwed collaborated with John Mirland to streamline R:K:O, featuring the addition of randomized SID downloads to encourage the remixing of broader material, as well as community links, donor thanks, and better integration of the C64 Take-away podcast.

C64Audio, noted vendor of professionally released Commodore community music from both C64 arrangers & composers, debuted its first major redesign in roughly 5 years, with emphasis placed on frontpage listings of its CD catalog. Soon-to-be-available releases there include Makke’s new album It’s Binary, Baby, as well as the Back in Time Live DVD/CD Set.

Discussion of the revamped sites is ongoing in the thread @ the Remix64 message boards.

Dwelling of Duels: August 2005 Results (Racing Games)

Thursday, September 1st, 2005

The Dwelling of Duels results for August are in (August’s theme was racing games):

#1 SnappleMan: F-Zero X - Break the Silence (34)

#2 norg: RC Pro Am - Deadly Plastic Vroom Vroom Machines of Doom (31)

#3 Master Hatchet: Road Rash - Concrete Kiss (29)

For complete list of results (including a slew of F-Zero mixes) and discussion on September/October’s special Tornado of Solos competition, head on over to the thread @ the Minibosses’ message board.

For a complete list of downloads visit http://dod.the-core.gr. The DoD@VGMix mirror should be coordinated in the next few days.

Richter joins the VGMix staff

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2005

Matt “Richter” Hackett, project director of Hedgehog Heaven and OverLooked ReMiX judge, joined the VGMix staff as a site developer earlier this week.

Richter will be responsible for various website troubleshooting and the development of new features, essentially replacing longtime VGMix programmer Chad “deim0s” Birch. virt also announced that additional staff may be taken on in the coming months to supplement Richter’s arrival.

VG Frequency’s June 19, 2004 Pimp Section

Sunday, June 20th, 2004

Liontamer wrote…

Ormgas.com, OverClocked ReMix’s unofficial internet radio station, wants YOU for its jingle contest, now underway and set to end on July 10th. We need artists, remixers and anyone willing to have some fun with a microphone to check out the contest and submit 20-to-40-second station identification style jingles, and if you’re one of the top 3 entrants, you can clothe your body with hot OMG FREE Ormgas.com gear. As long as your entry is quality, you can potentially earn radio infamy along with other legends (like Liontamer) as one of Ormgas.com regular jingles, so be sure to check out more information at the OCR forums thread as well as the full set of contest rules over at http://oc.ormgas.com/news.php?extend.36. Antonio Pizza, SgtRama, Neskvartetten & OverCoat are already in the game with their own entries, and I encourage you reading this [Larry points at you] to consider submitting your own jingles in support of Ormgas while you get in the hunt for free, fashionable swag. Please don’t delay. July 10th’s the final deadline.

Y’all need to make some Ormgas jingles, or I’ll kill you. Pick the fun choice. Make a jingle. Let’s check out what was going on for the week ending Saturday, June 19th:
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VG Frequency’s June 12, 2004 Pimp Section

Sunday, June 13th, 2004
Liontamer wrote…
Ormgas.com, OverClocked ReMix’s unofficial internet radio station, wants YOU for its jingle contest, now underway and set to end on July 10th. We need artists, remixers and anyone willing to have some fun with a microphone to check out the contest and submit 30-to-40-second station identification style jingles, and if you’re one of the top 3 entrants, you can clothe your body with hot OMG FREE Ormgas.com gear. As long as your entry is quality, you can potentially earn radio infamy along with other legends (like Liontamer) as one of Ormgas.com regular jingles, so be sure to check out more information at the OCR forums thread as well as the full set of contest rules over at http://oc.ormgas.com/news.php?extend.36. Antonio Pizza, SgtRama & Neskvartetten are already in the game with their own entries, and I encourage you reading this [Larry points at you] to consider submitting your own jingles in support of Ormgas while you get in the hunt for free, fashionable swag. Please don’t delay. July 10th’s the final deadline.

JigginJonT had the foresight (i.e. gall) to make sure that if I had my own forum at Ormgas.com I’d be open for plenty of the Larry-bashing that makes VG Frequency such an enjoyable experience for all. Register at Ormgas and drop by your insults at the official Larry Oji hate thread. Because I LOVE to hear what you bastards have to say. I hate you, Jon. And because I hate all of you out there so much, it’s time to once again use some of my free time this week to look around the remix community for tracks so you don’t have to. What the hell was I thinking? Let’s take a look at some of what’s good for the week ending June 12th:

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VG Frequency’s June 5, 2004 Pimp Section

Sunday, June 6th, 2004

Ormgas.com, OverClocked ReMix’s unofficial internet radio station, wants YOU for its jingle contest, now underway and set to end on July 10th. We need artists, remixers and anyone willing to have some fun with a microphone to check out the contest and submit 20-to-40-second station identification style jingles, and if you’re one of the top 3 entrants, you can clothe your body with hot OMG FREE Ormgas.com gear. As long as your entry is quality, you can potentially earn radio infamy along with other legends (like Liontamer) as one of Ormgas.com regular jingles, so be sure to check out more information at the OCR forums thread as well as the full set of contest rules over at http://oc.ormgas.com/news.php?extend.36. Antonio Pizza, SgtRama & Neskvartetten are already in the game with their own entries, and I encourage you reading this [Larry points at you] to consider submitting your own jingles in support of Ormgas while you get in the hunt for free, fashionable swag. Please don’t delay. July 10th’s the final deadline. Now let’s see what was up in the remix community for the week ending June 5th. Kind of a lighter week this week, but, hey, I can’t complain:

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VG Frequency’s May 29, 2004 Pimp Section

Sunday, May 30th, 2004

Remember, there’s a lot of material to go through and you likely won’t have time to check everything out at all, so at least take a few minutes to scan down the list and flag anything you’d be interested in hearing. For those of you interested in a broader awareness of the vast array of material out each week from the community, do your part by checking in with me each week as I run things down. Let’s take a look at what we had for the week ending May 29th: (more…)

VG Frequency’s May 22, 2004 Pimp Section

Sunday, May 23rd, 2004

With OverClocked ReMix 4 looming above our heads and ready to drop, it’s with great pleasure that I do my small part to promote the music of the game music remixing community beyond the tracks that you may be aware of. Week after week the artists of OCR & VGMix come out with material: some you may be overly aware of, some you may not be so aware of. By no means is this a definitive list of all of the good music out from this past week, but it’s at least what I myself have been aware of. Please drop any questions or comments you may have my way on anything you see here. Let’s get to pimpin’:

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VG Frequency’s May 15, 2004 Pimp Section

Sunday, May 16th, 2004

Since I don’t have the pulpit of my radio show until September to promote stuff from around the community, I wish to encourage others to continue searching around the community for quality music. How much time I have during the week to find tracks (on a dial-up connection) will vary, but I’ll do my best to stay active doing a short list each week of tracks I’d play and stuff going on in the community. We start off by pimping for the week ending on 5/15:

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VG Frequency #009 Playlist

Sunday, November 2nd, 2003

VG Frequency #009: No Taxation Without Commercialization
Larry Oji - WMRE (Emory University Student Radio; Atlanta, GA)
Saturday, November 1, 2003 / 10 PM - 12 AM EST
Liontamer f/JigginJonT & Jared Hudson

1. John Pee - “Piano Skill Level 1″ [Treasure Hunter G OST]
2. John Pee - “Piano Skill Level 2″ [Treasure Hunter G OST]
3. John Pee - “Piano Skill Level 3″ [Treasure Hunter G OST]
4. John Pee - “Piano Skill Level 4″ [Treasure Hunter G OST]
5. Jared Hudson - VG Frequency “Break Loose” Bumper
6. John Pee - “Just Like the Mountain, He Will Not Move” [Treasure Hunter G OST]
7. Mythril Nazgul - Doom 1 “Doom, Despair and Dread” [The People’s Remix Competition 1]
8. Dj Abjurator - Doom 1 “DbD (Death by Distortion)” [The People’s Remix Competition 1]
9. JigginJonT - VG Frequency “Be As One” Bumper
10. JigginJonT - Final Fantasy 6 “Anthem of Exile” [VGMix2 #49]
11. JigginJonT - Xenogears “Live from the Yggdrasil” [OC ReMix #1062]
12. JigginJonT gives us the gift of gab on his disappointment in Larry’s level of geekdom, the satisfaction and money rollin’ in from releases on OCR & VGMix the same week, the trials and tribulations of creating and retooling “Enter the Frog”, the potential for doing a funk remix, a band project (”Solid Grey”) he recently made himself a part of, the developing Mega Man III ska remix of Magnetman’s theme with zyko, the instances where he accepts criticism, what style of remixing he prefers, Mustin freaking out on him and calling him a lying liar who lies when he posted “Anthem of Exile” on VGMix, Ailsean finally calming Mustin down, upcoming mixes including a collab with Pixelated for the StarFox Ultimate Collaboration project, checking out Kill Bill, and threatening to buy out VG Frequency [http://pixelated.myrmid.com/users/jigginjont]
13. JigginJonT - F-Zero 1 “Mute Fusion” (Concept WIP 4) [http://pixelated.myrmid.com/users/jigginjont]
14. JigginJonT - Chrono Trigger “Enter the Frog” [OC ReMix #948]
15. Kenji Ito - “Booby Trap” [SaGa Frontier OST]
16. Mark Vera - “Star Orion (Airplay Edit)” [http://www.mikseri.net/markvera]
17. Blak Omen - Doom 1 “Easy Listening to Frag To” [The People’s Remix Competition 1]
18. Wave Theory - “The BBoy Files” [http://www.planetskill.com]
19. Koji Kondo - “Underground BGM” [Super Mario World 2 OSV]
20. OverCoat - “Closet Getaway Truth (Angst Whore)” [http://rks.no-ip.com/~seattleovercoat]
21. Lobescoper - Doom 1 “Caesar Salad” [The People’s Remix Competition 1]
22. Fumie Kumatani - “Image of Hero” [Phantasy Star Online: Songs of Ragol Odyssey: Soundtrack Episode 1]
23. analoq - Doom 1 “Doom is Still My Favorite FPS” [The People’s Remix Competition 1]
24. Star Salzman - VG Frequency “WMRE Jingle” Bumper
25. reelmojo - Doom 1 “Acoustic Mustic” [The People’s Remix Competition 1]
26. aluminum - Doom 1 “A Common Neurosis” [The People’s Remix Competition 1]
27. Noriyuki Iwadare - “It’s Me!” [Lunar: The Silver Star Story Complete OST]
28. Jared Hudson w/Andrea Hudson - “Kromm the Headhunter” [Kromm the Headhunter Trailer]
29. Jared Hudson w/Abram McCalment - Final Fantasy 10 “The Final Summoning” [OC ReMix #1017 / VGMix2 #94]
30. Jared Hudson takes a break from the daily grind to talk about finally completing “The Final Summoning”, how he found Abram McCalment to lay the guitar track for it after zyko couldn’t, the reopening and new layout of VGMix, a comparison of the reviews on OCR & VGMix, getting hired to do “Kromm the Headhunter” by Digital World Effects, traveling to San Diego for Siggraph 2003 this past July, receiving his first paid music job for an Archvision demo CD available at the convention, an emerging game project by Digital World Effects for [censored], brushing up on his Latin language skills, his decision to not go back to Ball State University and apply to the Berkeley School of Music next fall, the origins of his interest in music composition, how he chose film scoring as his potential career choice, the cinematic style of his remixes, the music projects that test his versatility and Danny Elfman’s versatile nature in film scoring, Larry trapped in the WMRE studios while the fire alarm goes off, possible upcoming work including [censored], an earlier version of “Kromm the Headhunter” transforming into a Halo remix, and the judges of OverClocked ReMix [http://www.hudsonstudios.net]
31. Jared Hudson - “Special Ops Menu” [Special Ops OST]
32. Jared Hudson - “Colliding Worlds” [Ira OST]
33. Jared Hudson - Metal Gear Solid 2 “Metal Gear May Cry (Remastered)” [OC ReMix #690]
34. Jared Hudson - Rainbow Six: Rogue Spear “Mystery of a Planet” [OC ReMix #803]
35. Rayza f/Paige - VG Frequency “Scary Larry” Bumper
36. The Coop - Halloween “Hallomix” [http://www.geocities.com/arforfaborb/TheCoop]
37. The Wingless - Rygar “The Seven Cities of Troy” [http://www.thewingless.com]
38. Charles Blachly - “I Miss You” [http://www.mp3.com/blachly]
39. Injury f/EXTX - “Symphonic Decon (EXTX’s Overhaul Mix)” [http://www.mp3.com/injure]
40. Disco Dan - Mega Man 3 “Needleman by Night” [Megaman III Remixes]
41. John Pee - “Peaceful Sleep” [Treasure Hunter G OST]