Chipmusic • Music Artists

Final Cartridge: Final Area BGM

Tiny Catridge is quickly becoming my favorite non chipmusic chip blog. They found a series of tracks from ultra talented musican Bucky.

from Tiny Cartidge:

“Final Area BGM” from the Exorcist NES game that never was. The brilliant concept behind this song is that it’s for a never-created game based on the 1973 horror film.

Chiptune artist Bucky sets the scene:

“You’ve reached the final stretch and it’s up to you to free Regan from Satan. Just be sure to open that bottle of ‘No Ghost’ BEFORE you open that door in the hallway…”

Im personally digging the Wicker Man one. Maybe some Werner Herzong next?

Animation • Chipmusic • In the News

Tiny Cartridge on “Wrestle Game Challange”

[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/VJqFc5KeQmE" width="425" height="344" allowfullscreen="true" fvars="fs=1" /]

“I haven’t seen The Wrestler, but I understand it’s a very sad movie about a washed-up pro wrestler. For me, though, it’s always going to be a very sad movie about the washed-up NES Pro Wrestling, thanks to the appearance of this lookalike game.

Surprisingly, motion graphics artist Kristyn Hume and programmer Randall Furino created a real game for the movie’s video game sequence.”

Read more at Tiny Cartridge:

EDIT Kotaku has a great behind the scenes on how the game was made:

“It reminded me to keep everything simple, not to ‘over-write’ the track. I think I made about 6 completely different versions, each one more simplified than the previous arrangement and different sound events.”

“The director opted for the the most simplified version i believe.”

That track, titled “8-bit Wrestler,” is barely audible in the final cut, but Feinberg has made a version available on YouTube.

While Wrestle Jam may not be a technical marvel, a month’s worth of work from its two creators, plus Feinberg’s score, went into making the NES game convincing as a narrative device.

“Given the prevalence of video games, you would think you’d see more of it,” commented Robert Denerstein, former film critic at the Rocky Mountain News. “Advances in technology, like the introduction of the cell phone, have made things possible in storytelling that weren’t possible before.”

“I think it’s something you’ll see more of,” Denerstein added. In the case of The Wrestler, the film critic says the references to the NES and Call of Duty 4 add a sort of poignancy, helping to make narrative leaps.”