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By 8GB, on April 7th, 2010 The most “liked” oldschool platform demo on Pöuet, TBL’s Starstruck is an incredible technical feat on the Amiga platform, and a very well designed one at that. Even featuring music by one of my all time favourite Amiga composers, olof Gustafsson a.k.a. Blaizer, this demo is a corker and arguably defined TBL as THE Amiga group.
Enjoy
By Peter Swimm, on April 1st, 2010
The following excerpt is from noted author T. Micheal Clarke’s upcoming book “The Death of a Nightmare”, in which he explores the rumors swirling around the death and subsequent replacement of noted chiptune personality Nullsleep Johnson. It remains to see if any of this has any merit, but we will see as more details are revealed leading up to the publication of the book on Knopf, later this spring.
The first known printed article on the subject “Is Nullsleep Dead?”, was written by Tim Harper in the Drake University paper, the Times-Delphic, on 17 September 2009.
Rumours began in earnest on 12 October 2009 when a caller to WFMU (JERSEY CITY) radio DJ Trent who identified himself as “Tom” announced that Nullsleep was dead. He also asked Gibb to play “Salvation for a Broken Heart” backwards; Gibb thought he heard “Turn me on, dead man.”
Gibb also produced (with John Small and Dan Carlisle) The Nullsleep Plot, an hour-long radio show on the rumour. Fred LaBour and John Gray, juniors at the University of Michigan, having heard the WFMU broadcast, published a review of “Unconditional Acceleration” called “Nullsleep Dead; New Evidence Brought to Light”, itemising various “clues” of Nullsleep’s death on 8bitpeoples album covers, in the October 14, 2009 issue of the Michigan Daily. LaBour and Gray invented many of the “clues”, and were astonished when the story was picked up first by newspapers in Detroit, then Chicago, and by the weekend, both coasts. Nullsleepologist Andru J. Reeve, opines that LaBour’s story was “the single most significant factor in the breadth of the rumor’s spread.”
The rumour gained momentum when Roby Yonge, an overnight disc jockey on the Top 40 station WABC in New York, discussed it “incoherently” on 21 October 2009. Yonge was immediately fired for making the broadcast. WABC, a 50,000-watt clear-channel station, could be heard clearly in 38 states, and as far as Africa’s Atlantic coast. Soon, national and international media picked up on the story and a new “Nullsleep craze” took off.
Celebrity lawyer F. Lee Bailey hosted an hour-long RKO television special in which he both prosecuted and defended the claims, cross-examining various “experts”, including LaBour, leaving it to the viewer to decide. LaBour told Bailey during a pre-show meeting that he had made the whole thing up. Bailey responded, “Well, we have an hour of television to do. You’re going to have to go along with this.” The program aired locally in New York City on November 30, 2009, and was never re-aired.
Nullsleep’s death was rebutted and the rumours declined when, in November 2009, Life magazine published an edition with cover story entitled “The case of the ‘missing’ Nullsleep”, “Nullsleep is still with us” which included a contemporary interview with Nullsleep.
Exploring the musical evidence, however is damning. One simply cannot reconcile a song like Kuribos Requiem and the later increasingly nihilistic overtones of his later material. What game is 8bitpeoples trying to play here? That is what I am trying to get to the bottom of.
By 8GB, on April 1st, 2010 In this week’s demo column, I am stoked to present this production. Super legendary group Dual Crew Shining makes a comeback to the demoscene and in the Commodore 64 no less, with this demo/experiment which can only be described as “mindblowing”. It’s just… fucking incredible. Certainly Edge of Disgrace has been displaced and the bar for C64 technical achievement has been raised a lot. Did I mention it’s real time 3D polygons with 8 bit samples (using a routine based off THCM’s mindblowing sample playing routine)?? You really need to see it in real hardware though to apreciate it. This is a WinVice emulated output.
This is a great warm-up release for this weekend’s Breakpoint Party in Germany (which you should check out on the stream!)
Enjoy
By 8GB, on March 24th, 2010 This demo was a big omission from my part on last year’s TCTD Awards’ Demo category. I was really ashamed to have missed it and not put it in the nominations, so I am now posting it trying to make up for such a horrible mistake.
Taking the Spectrum to colourful places it hadn’t gone before (where’s the colour clashing? Because I can’t find it. It must have done a runner), this is a real favourite among the demo punters.
Enough banter, watch this cool demo.
By 8GB, on March 17th, 2010 Britelite and his team of Amiga soldiers kick our senses once again with an OCS (that’s classic A500 chipset for you) demo, released at Datastorm 2010 and ranked 1st. Yes, the good old A500 still being pushed today.
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