Category: Chipmusic

Toons from various consoles.

  • This week at the Collective II

    For the Week of 10/28-11/03

    “Lets try out a new feature picking five tracks that grabbed our attention over here at TCTD from the 8BITCollective. Here they are in no particular order.” – The Boss

    This week, i will bring you what i found to be the most Slorricious of all the songs.  There were many songs that vied for the best five, but only four actually made it.  Yet there are some honorable mentions.  You’ll see what i mean in a moment.  This week seems to have been a slow week.  Don’t agree?  Post a comment.
    (more…)

  • She “Chiptek”

    A lil short on the d. tents. for my taste.
    A lil short on the d. tents. for my taste.

    The extremely slick gameboy musician She has released a new collection of smooth funk effected chip jams on his website. Streaming previews at his myspace. Based on his previous releases online and at 8bitpeoples this should be a good one.

  • Halloween is for children.

    Sorry kids, those costumes SUCK.
    Sorry kids, those costumes SUCK.

    As the summer gives way to the depths of fall, us Americans celebrate the best way we know how.

    The delightful egress of excessive capitlistic self induglance!

    So while are busy working on your “sexy princess peach costume” here are some tasty 8bit halloween tracks from our friends at 8bc.

    “Lich Dub” by FAILOTRON

    ‘Halloween IP” by Eat_Rabbit

    “Trick or Treat” by Nordloef

    “Haunted Candies” by TRASH80

    Add your own favorites to the comments

  • Atarimatt – “I Was A Teenage Metalhead”

    Atarimatt sends TCTD a cd-r of his new split “I Was A Teenage Metalhead”. Atarimatt, working entirely on two copies of synthcart on the Atari2600 makes probably the best use of the TIA chip outside Slocum’s own Treewave.  The first track on the disc, “Space Squid Shakedown” is its most succesful track,  with slow building tension and adept use of the 2600’s especially limited sonic palette.  Atarimatt does use some mixing and effects, but the use is subtle and does not detract from the song, rather reinforces it.

    After a track from other band, electro Proggers GUL, atarimatt second track “The Electric Monsters”,  is a jaunty well played tune, but perhaps falls victim to the shortcomings of the TIA with its limited pitch range.  Everything about the track is solid, it just did not grab me as strongly as the lead-off track.

    Finally the two artist take turns remixing the rad atarimatt tune, “Commuter”. The source song, on atarimatts myspace” , is itself a beautiful track, and the remixes are different enough to be unique pieces of work.  The disc itself comes packaged with artwork and stickers for the bands and label. At five bucks its a very low risk high reward proposition, and a great showcase of the potential of synthcart at its best.

    You can get it for $5 anywhere in the US at his myspace.

  • PopMatters reviews Nullsleep live

    Now accepting writers!
    Now accepting writers!

    PopMatters wrote a review of Nullsleep‘s Lit Lounge Show on Oct 3rd.  While its geat to see an lengthy article focusing on one of the live greats of the scene, the article falls short in a few ways. Some Excerpts:

    But back to the familiar part for a moment: Imagine he’s set up like a conventional DJ, with pulsating basslines reaching outward from a huge 4×12 speaker cabinet atop of which he has placed a mixer cabled to two turntables. Now scratch the turntables—instead, they’re Game Boys.

    Its a common conceit amongst many authors that chip music IS JUST like something you know very well, but MIND BLOWINGLY different. He goes on to overly complicate and mystify the process by describing artists using “expensive proprietary writers, others imported from Europe thanks to an industrious German” and making the logical leap that “it’s a lot like Tetris, but with square waves taking the place of those infernal L-shapes.”

    But while he gets the basic demoracy of the chip platform wrong, he does touch on the point of it all with the following:

    “There’s a minimalism in the equipment which you’d think would parallel the compositional philosophy, but in fact it seems to be the inverse. How much noise can we make with this?  How complex can the songs get with just two toys? With eight bits? Some say the absence of limitations is a mortal enemy of creativity; Johnson takes that philosophy and bites its head off as though it’s a dead bat.”

    So it still worth a read, as we still wait for the right author to speak evocatively about the scene from an outsiders perspective.  I would like to see in the future authors start judging the music on the merits of the compostion isntead of waxing pihlosopically at length about the boring technical details, all the while getting many parts of the process incorrect, or simply representing them in a way that further distances the artists from potential fans.

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