I only remember the arcade version's music, which I assume was composed by some Japanese guy originally before it was portedssdsa wrote:David Whittaker? Usually MobyGames lists the credits of any game for all platforms it was ported to. Check the MobyGames entry for Ghost 'n Goblins.eriktorbjorn wrote:The theme from Ghost 'n Goblins is pretty catchy, too. [...] I have no idea who composed it, though.
The Best Music in Video Games
Moderator: ScummVM Team
Exactly. Although it's quite difficult to get these running on a modern PC, "Mystic Square" (kaikidan) was one of the better ones.Kaminari wrote:Are you talking about the PC-98 games (Tōhō Kaikidan, etc) from Amusement Makers? Great FM tunes indeed.Dark-Star wrote:The music from the Touhou games is very nice too, although I'm probably the only one here who knows them
But I was more thinking about the "modern" ones, like "Mountain of Faith" (Touhou Fuujinroku -- sorry I con't have macrons set up on my keyboard here ) and "Imperishable Night" (Touhou Eiyashou). These have actually MP3 music and run on Windows. They're not easy to find outside of Japan though (got mine from a friend who was there and who knew I liked shooters)
Harry Gregson-Williams' part of the score is generic Hollywood stuff, most of which is based on TAPPY's work for MGS1 (which, as has been pointed out on numerous occasions is a note-for-note copy of Georgiy Sviridov's score for the old Russian movie "Metel'", which was released in the late 1960s). And I did list Norihiko Hibino in my listNoelemahc wrote:This is a nigh-infinite list, so instead of games I'll sound off the composers, if you don't mind.
<...>
Norihiko Hibino - Metal Gear Solid 2/3/4/TPO. Supposedly started out as a support for the guest-star of Harry Gregson-Williams, but quickly built his own vision of the soundtrack which made it quite popular out there.
Kazuki Muraoka - Metal Gear, Metal Gear Solid Ghost Babel. And probably even more stuff I've never even heard of. But this is the MEAT, the games that started it all. What Hibino and Williams do with the modern games by way of a sampler and an orchestra, he did with the 8-bit beepers of the NES and the GBC.
Please note that I do not list Akihiro Honda here because, while the MG AC!D musick is pretty, it is also blandly generic Hollywood-style stuff, pretty much like the linear near-identical grind that Inon Zur churns out at a superhuman rate.
Much of the credits should actually go to Iku Mizutani (MG1) and Masahiro Ikariko (MG2), who composed the original MSX versions. Muraoka was more of a sound engineer than a composer, but he made some great PSG arrangements for the PC Engine (Gradius, Salamander, Parodius, Snatcher...).Noelemahc wrote:Kazuki Muraoka - Metal Gear, Metal Gear Solid Ghost Babel. And probably even more stuff I've never even heard of. But this is the MEAT, the games that started it all. What Hibino and Williams do with the modern games by way of a sampler and an orchestra, he did with the 8-bit beepers of the NES and the GBC.
- doc labyrinth
- Posts: 43
- Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 8:44 am
- Location: Jersey
- Contact:
Guys, at this rate my narcissism will skyrocket once moreNoelemahc wrote:This is a nigh-infinite list, so instead of games I'll sound off the composers, if you don't mind.
Robert C. Prince III and his comrade-in-arms Lee Jackson - Duke Nukem 2, 3d, Manhattan Project; Doom 1-2; Rise of the Triad; Demon Star. The textbook definition of MIDI rock, ambiance and ambient rock And the crazy jazz of RoTT on top.
On a more related note, there's a video circulating on the Interweb listing all the various rock and metal songs by various bands that the music of Doom 1 and 2 borrowed from. Fun stuff. The main influences turned out to be Pantera and Slayer, although people have also spotted bits of Black Sabbath and Metallica.
- pinkfloyd789
- Posts: 63
- Joined: Sun Sep 09, 2007 10:35 pm
-
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Mon Sep 03, 2007 12:18 am
- eriktorbjorn
- ScummVM Developer
- Posts: 3561
- Joined: Mon Oct 31, 2005 7:39 am
-
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Mon Sep 03, 2007 12:18 am
I know, my dad actually plays these tracks in his car all the time. Pretty amazing for a fanatic "non-gamer"eriktorbjorn wrote:I actually bought a second-hand copy of that game only because I was curious about the music. (It's stored as audio tracks on the CDs.)DennisBergkamp wrote: -Outlaws (although all of those tracks do sound a lot like Ennio Morricone ripoffs, still really amazing stuff)