Welcome to Amiga Music Preservation - Forum. Please log in or sign up. |
Magnar
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: Lizard Group: The Black Lotus Date of birth: 24-10-74 Electronic devices always interested me in my childhood. I remember at the age of 7-8 years, I managed to talk my mother into buying a very small and simple game module. It had 4 buttons, and you could control a wood-man chopping trees on a small grey'n'black screen. In the mid 80s I got my first computer, a Vic20. Vic20: Garbage dump somewhere. God bless it. After the Vic20, I got a Commodore 64 in 1986-87. I bought a Amiga500 in 1988, and a Amiga1200 in 1992. Today, both the old C64 and the A1200 are still working and running classic games for the kids at my home-office. Actually, I programmed and made gfx on the C64. But when I got the Amiga 500, I couldn't stand the thought of learning assembly all over again on a new CPU. SEI, LDA#$00, STA$d01a,lda#$00, STA$0314.. blabla.. just made much more sence to me than the move #00,xxx and the big memory register of the Amiga. So I tried a couple of music-trackers and got stuck with the 4 channels and my noiseless 8 bit samples. ;) During the periode of 1990-97 I probably made about 500 songs. On the C64 I used Geir Tjeltas editor+player for Moz(ic)art. Also made some c64 music on Rob Hubbards old player with Geirs RH editor and the old Chris Huelsbeck's SoundMonitor. I even made my own SID-player, which was pure M/C editable. ;) However, most of my songs are made on the Amiga in ProTracker. Before Protracker came, I used Soundtracker, Noisetracker and early versions of Impulsetracker. For midi-stuff, I used OctaMed and Music-X on the Amiga. On the PC I still use mainly Cakewalk to make midi stuff. I've also made some few songs in Futuretracker. On the C64, I made a tune called Funkydashtown or something like that which I think summarized my SID-scratching skills back in 1992. On the Amiga, I made a module for the TBL demo called "Darkside". This tune also is one of my last works on the Amiga, and I kinda feel it finalized my goal in a tracked song with 4 channels 8bit sample limitations. There was also a follow-up demo from TBL called "Panacea" where I think my last (goodbye) Amiga song was release. On the PC, I still havent reached my goals.. ;) My amiga module from 1990 called "Darkside of the moon" - I just hate it for some odd reason. Tho, it was considered by friends of mine to be one of my best songs at that time... Music itselfs enlighten the joy and the experience in what you watch. - Just imagine how boring a movie would be without the movie music... ;) I often sit by the piano when I have a spare moment and compose a song. But it usually ends there. Last year I became a father to my dearest little son, Amadeus. And being part of a family doesn't leave much room for sitting alone in my home office and compose music all night. However, I have a dream about releasing my own CD someday - and I still clutch to that dream... someday! ;) The music file format doesn't really matter. Most songs are compressed into MP3 after being finalized recorded, and before that it probably was a load of wavefiles in a midi-project. ;) But commercial (radio) music release in general are often the same over and over again. I find very little varity in what I listen to, so I mainly doesn't search for new music released by others. Don't remember any module or sid-song in particular. I don't have any plans of remaster my old songs as I find them far to experimental to anything else than trying to understand the way of composing technics like syncope and force. If anyone find a old module that they would like to have remaster with my new midi-gear, don't hestitate to write me an email and tell me which song.. .. and maybe I'll be so inspired by the feedback that I'll do it. ;) Hans Zimmer for the movie music he makes. Songs made by Sting like "Ten summer tales" and "Fields of Gold" are good examples of breaking traditional music styles like country, jazz, pop, rock into new inspiring mixtures on each track on the CD. Red hot chili peppers for the kinda guitar funk I love. Seigmen (norwegian band) or Nightwish for the love of musical metal/hard rock. Toto for bringing the best out of traditional rock. Neural Network (norwegian band) for the ambient mood songs on their first cd. Prodigy for the sub-industial-techno kinda beats I love. And many other of the commercial artists going over and over again on the radio.. ;) Atleast 10 years of fun in the scene, and the chance to meet new exciting people on huge LANs year after year. Also gave me the work I still have at my current employeer, WM-data. Not really. Except answering interviews or contribute with a song now and then. Geir Tjelta, Einar Ingebrigtsen, Glenn Jacobsen, Svein Vareberg, Jogeir Liljedahl, Olav Rasmus V. (shorty), Kim Jensen, [B0]clan counter-strike dudes, [BaF]prydwen Dark Age of Camelot (midgard) guild, all old Spaceballs, Lemon., Andromeda, TBL members on the Amiga. And all old Megastyle Inc. Members on the C-64. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- please note: this interview is ©opyrighted in 2003 by crown of cryptoburners ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
who's online?
Processing Time: 0.0636 Secs