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Screamager
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: Screamager Group: Kosmic Free Music Foundation, Radical Rhythms, Traxx Date of birth: 20/09/77 A long time ago, when I was around 6 years old and a graphical clock program on a ZX81 was considered 'cool'. ZX81 (brick), ZX Spectrum (real keys!), XT, 386 DX-25, 486DX-33, P100 and for the past 5 years, a P2-450 (yeah I need to upgrade, it's 2003:) I've always been interested in music as a means of artistic expression. Plus I didn't have much talent for graphics, much less for coding. Quite a clear choice, then. Started off with ModEdit and quickly moved to FastTracker. When FT2 came out in 1994 it was like WOW, I was breaking the 8 channel limit and using envelopes etc. I moved to Impulse Tracker in 1997 when I saw it had great support from the tracking community and really pushed the boundaries of what tracking was supposed to do (well, compared to Protracker on the Amiga anyway). I always wanted to write a track that I was technically very proud of. I know most people will say that it's the end result that's important (i.e. how a module sounds), and of course they're right, but the composer listens for all those little sounds 'between the musical lines' in his own tunes, which others may not be able to hear, and a lot of that depends on getting the tune just right from a technical standpoint. 'Mister Invisible' (for the Return to Stage 9 disk), while it's not my best song musically, is surely my best technically. All these facts are rather geeky, but I managed to get an entirely 16-bit 44Khz sample set into less than a meg (so effectively the module is CD quality) and exploited IT's envelopes and filters to get the exact sound I wanted. I'm quite proud of Pandorra's Box (for the Valhalla intro 'Brighten the Corners', which won the X'97 party), both musically and technically. I worked very hard on this tune and I think it paid off. Musically, Pretenders (winner of the Trackering 29 competition) or Innuendo (3rd place in GroovyCompo 2) stick out in my mind. One type of music I could always write relatively easily was poppy melodic chord-stabbing stuff, but with a moody and pensive undertone. These two tracks are the best example of this. Plug: All these tunes are available on my website (http://www.scandal.org) Of the tunes that were put out (which is a very small percentage of the tunes I wrote), I would say 'Dreamer's Domain' on Traxx in '94 was very forgettable and pretty tuneless. Priceless! Who wants a silent demo or a game with just sound effects? The same applies to the role of music in movies. Tell me American Beauty would still be a classic without the Thomas Newman score and I'll change my name. No. The last time I finished a track was in August 1999 (As Numb As, released on Kosmic). Tracking was a big part of my life and I will never forget it, but the scene isn't what it used to be and it's hard to motivate yourself when you're essentially on your own. MP3 is great but there's a lot of scope for abuse, and a lot of poor tracks are slapped out and spread around the net in mp3 format. The problem is basically that you can't see how the track was made because mp3, of course, is just a recording of audio output. I liked it when you could analyse a module that someone had written, pattern by pattern in a tracker, and learn how they wrote it, see whether or not they had good technique, incorporate their tricks into your own pieces.... With MP3 and wave, this is all gone. As for MIDI, I have no experience with it so I can't really comment. Cheezmobile by Sequencer for The Trackering (15? can't remember). Technically this is an amazing tune. Just take a look at the patterns in FT2 and you'll see what I mean - it really pays off because the tune achieves a tight, clean and well-processed sound from a poor sample set (that's the idea of this competition btw). For overall sound, I still listen to Romeo Knight's 'Cream of the Earth' (OLD Amiga demo tune from 1990) in the car. Jak (MD) made some nice elektronica on his musicdisk called 'Disk', and Brothomstates (aka Dune) has a few remarkable tracks like 'Mr Y'. No. All my music is already out there on the web (http://www.scandal.org), and more and more people are just downloading their music nowadays, whether legally or illegally. A certain friend of mine had a CD published quite recently which got a lot of media attention, yet he barely made 500$ on it. There's no longer any point, neither financially nor artistically, to spread your music on a CD. Currently = June 2003. Robbie Williams has some very catchy tunes, although I'm not sure he writes them himself. Coldplay perhaps. For Electronica... still the old favorites like Orbital but also Jakatta. Also, anything that makes it onto Ministry chillout CD's is normally good enough for me. I was never in the Amiga or C64 scenes as I always had a PC. Perhaps I missed out? Nope, but I'm still alive, which is always good :). I miss the scene. The rest is history. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- please note: this interview is ©opyrighted in 2003 by crown of cryptoburners ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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