Plus, I can sidestep my premise by pointing to the remaster - not the same, okay. All this time, I thought the Devil Daggers soundtrack was the dynamic hellnoises of skulls and teeth and the screams of my blade-spitting fingertips - and I loved that. nope, apparently a proper soundtrack too? Half is in secret areas, mind. I knew it had a wee musical sting at the loading screen but. This might be against the 'no music from games' premise because turns out, this soundtrack actually is in Devil Daggers? I hadn't noticed. And the video.! Sorath: Devil Daggers (Remastered) And I say that as someone who listens to Christmas radio all December. It is one of the best Christmas songs, of all the Christmas songs. That's also on Bandcamp but this is a Chowder Man song not in the game, a Christmas song with Dave Pino. You might know Hot Dad and his music from performing as a faded musician named The Chowder Man in Hypnospace Outlaw. Hot Dad: Christmas Pain In Christmas Town Or sometimes just a quiet time hanging out around wet machinery. I dig the end result too, the looping of world sounds mixed with steady footsteps and sporadic intensity of violence, and those telltale Half-Life environmental audio filters. The idea alone is so cool that I bought it. It's a fascinating process, turning Half-Life into improvised music. I've written before about how Dunning replaced all of Half-Life's sounds with samples from "90s rave tracks and sample CDs", then recorded music by playing. Manage cookie settings Graham Dunning: Panopticon Neotokyo GSDF by Ed Harrison To see this content please enable targeting cookies. You might also know his music from Deus Ex: Mankind Divided's Breach mode. Then he released work-in-progress scraps from figuring it out. Some of Ed Harrison's music appeared in the Half-Life 2 mod Neotokyo, but he made a whole double album's worth. Alright, on with a few reccies to get this listening party started. As well as letting you stream music in your browser and from an app, you can download in a variety of formats: MP3 V0, MP3 320, FLAC, AAC, Ogg Vorbis, ALAC, Wav, and AIFF. It's about the only way I buy music these days. But please, do share your hot reccies (recommendations) with us all too.Ä«andcamp, if you don't know it, is-if I may make a bad comparison-kinda a musical equivalent of Itch.io (kinda). Me, I can offer a few tips for music that's kinda video game music but not necessarily, music that's inspired by games or even recorded inside games. It's a good day to buy music! But which music? Plenty of video game soundtracks are on Bandcamp, so you can go looking for your faves. Today is another Bandcamp Friday, a monthly event where the DRM-free music store waives its cut of sales to put more cash in artists' pockets.
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