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Azo 
Handle: Azo
Real Name: Jesse Worley
Lived in: USA
Ex.Handles: n/a
Was a member of: n/a

Modules: 2  online
Interview: Read!
Pictures: n/a

Interview


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            TLb.  ,dMP'          all rite, now you get the chance to read
             TML.dMMP            some facts about some of the major amiga
          ,nmm`XXMPX              musicians. read about their history in 
       ,#MP'~~XNXYNXTb.          the scene and their plans in future.yes, 
     ,d~'     dNNP `YNTb.       that's meant to be read while listening to  
    ,~       ,NN'     `YNb   their modules. read 'em over and over and over..
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    Handle: Azo

    Group: None

    Date of birth: 10/10/77


  • 1-How did your interest for computers start? Which year was that?

  • I started composing seriously in 1992, and in 1993 I rigged up my first
    computer composition system. My interest in computer composition was fueled
    by a program called Encore and a Baldwin digital piano. I discovered tracking
    in late 1994 and moved exclusively to Scream Tracker, dropping Encore
    completely.


  • 2-What machines did you previously have? What did you do with them?

  • I started with a Packard Bell 486SX-25 with an 80Mb hard drive. With that
    computer I discovered MIDI. It was also with that computer I started tracking.
    My first real computer was a home-built Pentium 133. Since then I've gone
    through several dozen PC's to my current setup, a P4 2Ghz and a dual Athlon
    MP 1800. I still track today, but 99% of my work is done via MIDI at this
    time.


  • 3-For what specific reason did you end up making music rather than gfx, coding?

  • Music has been with me for as long as I can remember. I started playing the
    piano at a very young age, and composing came quite naturally. From the
    instant I get up in the morning to the instant I fall into the dreamtime a
    part of my mind is making music. I live life to a score I'm always trying
    to reproduce. I was also never any good at gfx. I tried several times, to no
    avail. I did take a heavy interest in coding, but it was due to my job as a
    UNIX engineer.


  • 4-Which composing programs have you been using? Which one in particular?

  • I started with Scream Tracker, moved to Impulse Tracker, then took a shot at
    ModPlug. Today my key programs are Sonar XL for composition, Cubase 5.0 for
    live audio, SoundForge for WAV work, and Opticom MP3 Producer for final
    compression. i probably spend 95% of my time in front of Sonar when I'm
    writing.


  • 5-With which module did you feel you had reached your goal?

  • "Living Score" probably has the most to say about me. While I've yet to
    produce a piece that I felt needed no work, its constant motion is precisely
    the thing I try to produce in a work. An unreleased and incomplete module,
    "Trips and Fairytales," most certainly contains the best tracking work I've
    ever done by a long stretch. At the current pace it should be release
    somewhere around 2027.


  • 6-Is there a tune you would like not to remember? For what reason?

  • I know there have been several of these, but I've long since deleted and
    forgotten them.


  • 7-In your opinion, what's the value of a music in a demo, game?

  • I think music in a demo or game is paramount. The sole purpose of both of
    these are to entertain the mind, and that cannot be accomplished without
    entertaining the auditory experience as well.


  • 8-At present, are you still composing? For professional or leisure purposes?

  • I am still composing. Most of the work I do is leisure, but I do some
    professional work now and again.


  • 9-What do you think of today's pieces of music such as mpeg,wave,midi,etc...?

  • I think they are a natural progression for any would-be composer. While
    tracking is a fantastic pastime and can produce great results it simply cannot
    and will not compare to advanced methods, such as MIDI coupled with synths /
    hardware. There are still some trackers who come very close to producing
    unbelievably realistic MODs out there, but they're few and far between.


  • 10-Could you tell us some of your all times favourite tunes?

  • Novus - Revealing
    Homesick Alien - Sublimation of Effort
    DotSPF - Midnight Psyche
    Psylent Buddhi - Never found out the name of the track


  • 11-Are you planning to make an audio cd with some of your music remastered?

  • At this time I don't intend to remaster ay of my tracked works for inclusion
    on a CD. I am, however, working on two separate CD projects containing new
    music. One is a solo release, and the other is a compilation with Phil Brown.


  • 12-What bands are you currently listenning to?

  • The only "bands" I listen to are The Dave Matthews Band and Pink Floyd. Other than
    them I listen to a lot of David Arkenstone, Sarah Brightman, Maria Callas,
    Rachmaninoff, Dvorak, and Chopin.


  • 13-What does/did the amiga/c64 scene give you?

  • I was never active in the amiga/c64 scene, but the tracking scene hooked me
    up with some people I still talk to regularly today. It was also a lot of fun
    tracking day in and day out, with or without the scene.


  • 14-Are you still active in the scene these days?

  • Not really. I still talk to a few folks regularly, but I compose for different
    reasons today.


  • 15-Anyone to greet? Anything left to say? Feel free...

  • I always did love the greet sections. My one big greet is to Phil Brown, my
    composition partner and catalyst extraordinaire.


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    please note: this interview is ©opyrighted in 2002 by crown of cryptoburners
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