Soundtrack Central The best classic game music and more

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Arcubalis Jun 30, 2006

It's finally up.  Did this interview at E3.  Dale North, Mazedude, and Mustin were all present for the third segment of the interview.  Also, Jack Wall and Gerard Marino showed up at the end, which was cool, and surprising. 

Anyway, I thought the interview went well, it was very interesting.  It's about an hour long, or 18 pages of reading if you read the transcript.  He's a good guy.  He did manage to say "Bleeps and Bloops" twice, but again, he used it when talking about the mainstream's view of VGM.  He says that "gamers get it," and know that the music is more than that.  Anyway, MP3 format and transcript.  Enjoy!

http://www.entdepot.com/features/interv … e_1495.php

Zane Jun 30, 2006 (edited Jun 30, 2006)

"TT:  You have to show your colors, or else I’ll bust a cap in your ass."

That's about as far down as I made it. I want my 30 seconds back.

Ordim Jun 30, 2006

Zane wrote:

"TT:  You have to show your colors, or else I’ll bust a cap in your ass."

That's about as far down as I made it. I want my 30 seconds back.

Read one of his interviews and you know them all.
He is the best, he knows all video game composers of the world, he has the support of everybody, he is TEH MAN!!!

CHz Jun 30, 2006

Finally. I've been waiting for this interview since it was plugged in the GMR entry for the album.

Arcubalis Jun 30, 2006

CHz wrote:

Finally. I've been waiting for this interview since it was plugged in the GMR entry for the album.

Haha, yes.  You can thank my editor for that.  Entdepot is a pretty small site, and the main focus is on reviews.  Therefore, special thinsg like this take awhile to get up.

Anyway, his bust a cap in your ass comment was only made in response to my comment about GANG, and so I thought it was pretty appropriate.  While he may be a tad self-glorifying, he definitely has a passion for what he does, and it was great hearing him talk about the vg remixing community in particular.

brandonk Jul 1, 2006

Arcubalis wrote:

It's finally up.  Did this interview at E3.  Dale North, Mazedude, and Mustin were all present for the third segment of the interview.  Also, Jack Wall and Gerard Marino showed up at the end, which was cool, and surprising. 

Anyway, I thought the interview went well, it was very interesting.  It's about an hour long, or 18 pages of reading if you read the transcript.  He's a good guy.  He did manage to say "Bleeps and Bloops" twice, but again, he used it when talking about the mainstream's view of VGM.  He says that "gamers get it," and know that the music is more than that.  Anyway, MP3 format and transcript.  Enjoy!

http://www.entdepot.com/features/interv … e_1495.php

For what it was..sounds like it was a cool interview.  Great to hear about Steve Vai making the next rounds...Need to get that on a produced High Def DVD, or Blue Ray, or HD DVD...whatever they use nowadays...

Msia Jul 1, 2006

Zane wrote:

"TT:  You have to show your colors, or else I’ll bust a cap in your ass."

That's about as far down as I made it. I want my 30 seconds back.

lol QFT.  I cant tell whats worse, this interview or that awful thread on GFF.

GoldfishX Jul 1, 2006 (edited Jul 1, 2006)

Msia wrote:

lol QFT.  I cant tell whats worse, this interview or that awful thread on GFF.

Well, I'd say the interview...If someone wanted to, they could call him mean names and tell him how much he loves to feed his own ego in the GFF thread and he'd probably have to respond to it (or otherwise, not look so cool). Him and his little GANG aren't worth the trouble to me, personally, but I'd love to see it.

Mind you, GOOD interview overall...Very good questions. It's the subject matter that isn't so good.

Dais Sep 2, 2007

I am bumping an old topic with something that is only vaguely related. I am doing this because I did not want to create a new topic. I did not want to create a new topic because what I going to talk about is something Tallarico something. It's just something I want to point out, because....well, it's my nature to point out this kind of thing. Please forgive me.

http://www.n-sider.com/articleview.php? … 617&page=3

Max: What was the first CD-ROM game you did the music for?

Tommy: That was the Terminator, on the Sega CD. And that was actually the very first video game to ever use a live guitar, in… 1993.

Is it just me, or is quite likely that his statement there would most likely be truly only if taken completely literally? You know, considering the Turbo CD and all.

Qui-Gon Joe Sep 2, 2007

Dais wrote:

Is it just me, or is quite likely that his statement there would most likely be truly only if taken completely literally? You know, considering the Turbo CD and all.

I was just thinking the exact same thing.  Since I believe the CD add-on for the PC Engine came out in 1989, I think the chances of there not having been any guitar in redbook tracks prior to Tallarico's efforts are pretty slim.

GoldfishX Sep 2, 2007 (edited Sep 2, 2007)

That's...good god, I don't know where to begin saying how stupid that is. Maybe he meant among western game soundtracks, it was the first...given his slant in that direction, it wouldn't surprise me...I'm not sure if it's true or not, but that's giving him the benefit of the doubt.

Edit: Joe, let's forget Falcom and Gate/Lords of Thunder (the usual redbook audio rock references) existed for a second...My "Download 2" CD-ROM was made in 1991, a game few people have heard of or care about. Tallarico's not even close to being in the right ballpark here (again, assuming he means among western composers...and only if that's true).

Edit Edit: Prepare to vomit (as usual)

Tommy Boy wrote:

Well, when I first got involved in 1990 the first game I worked on was Prince of Persia, the original Prince of Persia. Back then it was just a bunch of bleeps and bloops. The technology really limited what we could create, and how we could create it. Then in the mid 90s, 94ish, CD-ROMs came out as a storage medium and all the walls were broken down. And we were now able to create real music and use live musicians and use live orchestras, and that’s when the quality really started to change.

Nice interview, Dais. Lots of nice little nuggets in there.

TerraEpon Sep 2, 2007

Well the number of times I've seen Giacchino's The Lost World quoted as the first game soundtrack recorded with an orchestra, and THAT obviously isn't true (see: Arc the Lad, Sakura Wars, and hell, Heart of Darkness)


-Joshua

Zane Sep 2, 2007

Max: What was the first CD-ROM game you did the music for?

Tommy: That was the Terminator, on the Sega CD. And that was actually the very first video game to ever use a total f---ing douchebag, in… 1993.

There we go. Typo fixed.

Kirin Lemon Sep 2, 2007

Zane wrote:

Max: What was the first CD-ROM game you did the music for?

Tommy: That was the Terminator, on the Sega CD. And that was actually the very first video game to ever use a total f---ing douchebag, in… 1993.

There we go. Typo fixed.

MUCH more accurate now, thank you.

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