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JOE
Interview
`n. .rP' `qb ,dP' 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.. dNP `Yb. ,NN' `b. · i n t e r v i e w · ___________ ______dP _____________ \ / \ ,N'\____ _____________. _____ \ \_____. ____\ / \___P___/ .\--\__ __/__ |--\____)---\ _____/__ |--\_ \ _/ | | | \ | | \__| | _ \ / | \__| | /\ | | _| | | _l_ | | \ / _l_ | ___| l___/=l___|====l____/===\______|==l______|\ /l___/===\______l____/ \/ Handle: J.o.e. (old scenehandle) F6 (projectname) Group: (ex?) TRSI now F6 (haha) Date of birth: 19/07/71 Oh boy, that was in 1984. I got a VIC-20 as a christmas present. My parents had no choice - if I wouldn't have gotten that thing I sure would've gone c r a z y. But there it was, all new, with a Datasette tape drive! Oh boy, all that high-tech. Over the course of my 'career' I had the following machines: VIC-20, C-64, Amiga 1000, Amiga 500, Amiga 2000, a crappy 286, a Mac Centris, a Pentium 120 and now a Mac G3. At the beginning I did lots of gfx with the C64 and then the Amigas. I did three(?) slideshows on the Amiga, hundreds of logos and three games that were asctually released. Later, I felt the urge to make music, til one day, I sat down loaded up soundtracker and made my first tune. I released one music-disk, called "Drums & Pipes" under the banner of TRSI. I got tired of making gfx, and really wanted to do music in my sparetime. Since I started to work as a digital artist professionally, first in Austria, then in the US, I didn't feel the urge to do visual stuff for fun. I'm still having fun in my job of course, I love it, but music has become my counterweight to the job. Oh, and I never tried coding anyway. I got in the scene right when everything split up, meaning, there was a coder, a musician, a gfx-artist, swapper, etc. ... Shit, I can't believe that's more than 10 years ago! Noisetracker, Protracker ... a little bit of Huelsbeck's TFMX, but that one turned out to be a little bit too timeconsuming. It took a while til you had everything set up correctly. Oh, jeez, I really liked making chip-tunes, because I missed the old SID flavour, and back then the whole retro-wave hadn't kicked in yet. Listening to my old mods makes me smile, because I remembered what I tried to achieve and the attempts were quite often clumsy, but I like them. Can't really give you a favourite though ... No, not really. I did and still do it all for fun and nothing else. No regrets. Like music in a movie: extremly important. It sets the whole flavour. I mean, the Cebit 90 demo by RSI was great, but Romeo Knights kickass tune propelled it even further, same with some Rebels demos where Static did the music. Just awesome. Yeah, I'm still making music. More than ever I've got to say. I've got a pretty nifty setup at home and do it still just for fun. I'm totally into electronica of course, Drum&Bass/Jungle, Goa and Ambient. But I don't restrict myself doing a specific style. I do whatever feels cool at the moment. The next morning I might listen to it and decide it's crap. That's ok too. Most importantly, I don't have to do music, because somebody pays me to do it, like in my job. That keeps the fun alive! Well, the mod-standard has survived for a long time, which is amazing. The biggest revolution in my opinion though, is the MP3 format. It already became a standard in some way and will become more so. The advantage it has is that it's not tied to any programs, platforms, etc. Since the audioquality nowadays is 44.1Khz/16-bit, it's the ideal format to swap stuff around. No matter if someone does guitar-music, electronice or a capella. And the increasing throughput of the Internet supports that. It's no biggy anymore to send 5MB files around. Hmm. I don't know the actual names of their tunes, but these were my heroes: Romeo Knight, Static and Uncle Tom ... We'll see. If I run into the right person who wants to release it. I'm already trying to have a high standard in my recordings - but I still have to learn a lot ... All electronica across the board. Cool memories and my career too. If I hadn't started painting so much on the Amiga, I would've never ended up in Hollywood. No. Kinda miss it, but I don't have the time and the contacts. That time's over. Oh boy. Whatever you want to do, music, gfx, etc. - DO IT! Without any regrets. Go for it! Have fun. It might get you to places you would never have imagined (like Hawaii). ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- please note: this interview is ©opyrighted in 2001 by crown of cryptoburners ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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