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By Peter Swimm, on March 26th, 2011 Upon discovering what
the program was capable of,
the scientists took immediate percautions,
securing it inside of the nearest electronic
device they could find: A nintendo Game Boy.
They feared its power yet could not bring
themselves to destroy it. Trapped inside the machine
with no way to escape and return to its own time,
the program began expressing itself through
the sound chip of the Game Boy.
Eons passed…
An exploration vessel near a
planet called earth recorded
the following transmissions –
code-named: L-tron
credits
released 01 May 2010
All songs written and arranged by: L-tron
Engineered and mastered by: Logan Erickson
Recorded and mastered @ little bit studios (Studio B)
Artwork By: Ree
LBR003
Copyright 2010
L-tron + little bit records
By Pause, on March 25th, 2011
Download MP3
Buy Special Edition
The origin of Famicom Sessions dates back to September 2009. On a chilly autumn evening, MisfitChris was introduced to Famitracker by fellow musician Tristendo Corrales. It was on this evening that Chris began writing what is now known as Famicom Sessions. A collection of experimental NES jams that document Chris’s first year of composing Chipmusic.
01 Welcome to Famicom Sessions (2A03, added Text To Speech)
02 Basement Dweller (2A03)
03 Legend of Tristendo (VRC6)
04 Saving the Shy Librarian (MMC5)
05 Med Pack (MMC5)
06 Rainy Day Recess (MMC5)
07 French Whores (MMC5)
08 Sleep Vacation 7 (MMC5)
09 Tokyo Midnight (VRC6)
10 Asteroid Night (VRC6)
11 Love is a Sickness (2A03)
12 Leaving Home (2A03)
13 The Graveyard Club (2A03)
14 Goodbye from Famicom Sessions (2A03 for intro, added Text To Speech; MMC5 for outro)
Artwork by Gabrielle Shea and Tristan Corrales.
By tctdbot, on March 24th, 2011 “Although attempted numerous times before, Pterodactyl Squad have finally done the original album justice with the definitive 8-bit interpretation of Pink Floyd’s progressive rock classic. Produced as an 8-bit mirror of the original, the music on this release was created using sounds from various old games consoles including the Sega Mega Drive and Nintendo Game Boy.”
1. Speak to Me/Breathe – Bit_Rat
2. On the Run – EvilWezil
3. Time – khades
4. The Great Gig in the Sky – Rabato
5. Money – sergeeo
6. Us and Them – Videogame Orchestra
7. Any Colour You Like – Jason Vincion
8. Brain Damage – echosignal
9. Eclipse – Temp Sound Solutions
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By Peter Swimm, on March 24th, 2011
OK. First of all, I had nothing to do with this.
Last October on my birthday, my roommate Mike Lerman (a.k.a. Fuckjazzforaminute, and the man at the wheel of Austin’s killer Datapop event series) handed me a giftwrapped object of the size and shape typical of what you’d expect from a standard CD jewel case. So far so good. But unwrapping it I realized that there was nothing typical or standard about it, AT ALL. The tracklist on the back of the CD had stuff in there like “Saskrotch: Paper Chase Init_” and “nordloef: Activation Theme” and “IAYD: Reformat The Planet.” OBVIOUS JOKE, right? A well-meant prank. Well Mike put it on to prove to me otherwise, and sure enough he had, in fact, who knows how long ago, hatched a secret plan to be revealed on my birthday, to enlist nearly two dozen people from the chip community, for some unfathomable reason, to cover songs from Information Chase, a saccharine and sophomoric EP I’d put out five years ago. And the tracklisting was like a who’s-who of the chipmusicians I respect and admire the most, like Random, cTrix, Bud Melvin, nordloef, Sievert, Henry Homesweet, little-scale, Saskrotch, and so on and so on. So it took some time for me to wrap my brain around it, but ultimately I came around to accepting that this thing was real. Five months later, I still am no closer to finding the words to express my awed gratitude, or the mixture of emotions I’ve been experiencing ever since. It’s POSSIBLE that when we got to Coova’s track on the comp (“Reformat The Planet”), that I MIGHT have shed a tear. But it was just watery eyes from allergies. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.
Tracklisting after the jump
Continue reading Reformat – V/A
By Peter Swimm, on March 23rd, 2011
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