Jodo Kast Sep 6, 2008
We all know that video game music is to be swept under the aural rug, as it is neither normal nor popular. It's not really music because the medium matters. Never mind that video game systems are arguably more advanced than what people normally use to listen to music. It would be logical for me to consider music not made for video games to not be real. But I found something quite interesting recently. There is a video game called 'Rock Band' that has lots of music that is not real. This was music that used to be played on the radio and is now in a video game. This means that the throngs may no longer listen to those songs because they are from a video game. For example, if someone were to hear Green Grass & High Tides on the radio, then they should be disgusted and start convulsing horribly until their cerebral matter coats the windshield.
I was really taken by that song by the Outlaws and if it weren't for Rock Band, then I never would've heard it. I knew it was an older song and I went to amazon.com and put their greatest hits album on my wish list. I also clicked on the related albums and discovered some more songs of interest by Molly Hatchet, Edgar Winter, America, and The Animals. I never knew the names of those groups, but I was familiar with some of their songs. So because of a video game, at least 5 more CDs will be sold by amazon.com. I also recalled hearing a song I liked on a commercal for a game called 'Lost Odyssey'. I eventually tracked down the song name to White Rabbit, by Jefferson Airplane.
My cerebral matter will be saved because many songs are becoming normalized, or being used in video games or associated with them in some way.