I've decided to upload this onto my youtube page instead of newgrounds. Anyways, here it is:
As always, Enjoy!
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Moderators: MetalBeast, Capm
You need to play them with a midi player that can load different sound fonts and download a font matching the original sound card that you played D1 on, then it'll sound the same. (I forget what sound cards exactly the D1 music was written on, but someone should be able to track down sound fonts for them, there were a couple.)Valin Halcyon wrote:The original music files were a form of MIDI, and used a soundbank. There was an old program (16bit) called DTX that could extract the music into MIDI format, though it never sounds *quite* the same as it does in-game.
I've got a few of thoseAvder wrote:I wish I could find some kickass versions of the levels 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 15, 16, 17, 19, and 20 musics.
Some of these are actually really good. I'm very impressed.Alter-Fox wrote:I've got a few of thoseAvder wrote:I wish I could find some kickass versions of the levels 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 15, 16, 17, 19, and 20 musics.
http://www.planetdescent.net/index.php? ... tem;in=827
http://www.planetdescent.net/index.php? ... tem;in=657
http://www.planetdescent.net/index.php? ... tem;in=825
You need to sign up on PD.net to download, but if you haven't signed up there yet... well it's aboot time
@Blade I just noticed that the polysynth pad lines from the MIDI the are missing entirely from your mix as well. This sounds like it's supposed be a direct conversion of the MIDI score to different synths&instruments; not a reinterpretation; so you might want to put them back in.
Oh neat, you are a professional? Cool, I didn't know that. Musician? Engineer? Producer? Where can I check out your stuff?Alter-Fox wrote:The song sounds impressive but it's my professional opinion that in this modern age orchestral-sounding-soundtracks are a dime a dozen in videogames and at this point a soundtrack with even an emphasis on electronic elements is far more original.
Well, I did say "progressive rock orchestra." In my mind I was thinking something like Trans-Siberian Orchestra or maybe Yes - Symphonic, or Deep Purple, thus electric bass and organ and... bongos? Either way, I just wanted a juxtaposition between the original crude sounds of early sound-blaster technology with modern, professional-level sampling software, but staying away from synthesizers. I shouldn't expect anyone to like it, I should expect people to be shocked, haha. My goal was to make something interesting and unexpected. Also, which drums are quiet and synthetic/electronica? I don't understand what you are saying there and I want to. I will say that before I went this the current direction I was doing something completely abstract with the MIDI file and the result would have been even less recognizable.Alter-Fox wrote:The drums are far too quiet and the obvious sample/synthness of them doesn't really fit with everything orchestral -- not to mention the drum track itself is far too electronica for an orchestral mix no matter what you play it with.