March 17, 2011

Chip In: Japan


Pixelh8 and True Chip Till Death have banded the chip community together to create the "Chip In: Japan" project, which is one of the most commendable things I've ever seen the community do. Over two thousand dollars have already been raised to assist the still-struggling earthquake and tsunami victims over in Japan, with a target goal of five thousand. In addition, music is being contributed for an accompanying compilation by many artists, including 8 Bit Weapon, Peter Swimm and Comptroller. Please consider donating and contributing music by visiting the link below.

March 7, 2011

Interview - Pixelh8


British chip musician Matthew Applegate, otherwise known as Pixelh8, has been one of my favorite artists since 2009, when I first listened to his commendably original release "The Boy with the Digital Heart". Holding a special place in my heart, Matthew's sophomore album was programmed completely from scratch and in code on the original machines. That references his unique philosophy of the genre: take it where no one else will, stay faithful to the original ideas and programming, and just have fun being yourself with the music. There is truly no one else in the community quite like him.

Mr. Applegate graciously participated in a brief, six-question interview with me today, through which he manifests his continually evolving style and outlook on the remarkable world of 8-bit music.

1. Though you got started with chip music pretty modestly with a bottle of milk spilled into an old Nintendo, you’re now an internationally-recognized chip musician with three full studio albums and a fourth in the works. What has been the driving force behind your constantly evolving style, which is usually quite structured but also very unique?
"I have always simply wanted to do interesting things, I learned early on I didn't want to be a famous musician on a major label, I wanted to have freedom above everything else. Freedom to sometimes to not make music and teach, to do workshops to study, get back to music when I was ready, not when a company wanted a new product. All of my heroes have evolved  over their careers Aphex twin, Schoenberg, John Cage I think you have  to eventually or you run the risk of boring yourself and the listeners if you don't. I love chip tune music, I want it to stay and that is why I am prepared to evolve it, instead of serving up another album that  sounds a lot like my old one."
2. Your 2007 release “The Boy with the Digital Heart” is a personal favorite of mine. Besides being written entirely in code, the music itself is also particularly recognizable with its varying emotions and quirky beats. Can you tell us a little about how the sad-themed track “A Party without You” came about?
"The whole album is based around the relationship of me and my girlfriend when we were teenagers, they are all stories from when I was around 16 years old and people do feel the emotion in them even though they are very electronic, probably because they were real stories. I used a Commodore 64 for the main melody I think it was a sine-wave variation it gives it that sweet sad feel to it. With 'The Boy with the Digital  Heart' I consciously wanted to show various emotions and genres in chip tune as I thought chip tune at the time was sounding a bit samey, I did want just dance related pop-ish music[;] I wanted a story."
3. Your numerous workshops and lectures have kept you quite busy over the years. What gives you the greatest pleasure while teaching a room full of kids about computers and video games?
"That they go away and make and break stuff and they tweet me with how they are progressing, I love to hear that they have taken something small that I have taught them and put it with their other knowledge and  have used it to progress what they want. It is just another way of ensuing that chip tune isn't just a passing fad. I am quite happy to talk about chip tune music in person and I think a lot of people are shocked when they do find out I'll teach them, via email is another matter[;] though I get maybe just under a hundred emails a day about 'how do you do this' in chip tune music and I just can't answer them all."
4. What do you think of the chip music community as a whole right now?
"I think I am generally concerned that a lot of them aren't getting involved in computer programming, that is fine, you don't have to be a programmer to be a chip tuner but it helps. It really helps to design individual sounds, learning about the quirks and limitation of different machines often help me write the music. If not [you're] gonna use the same sounds as everyone else and the same presets and then things might run into trouble. The greatest game composers people like Rob Hubbard were also amazing coders[;] I say it's a 50/50 music/coding thing for me. Make and break is what I always say."
5. “The Schematic”, your new double-album, is set for release later this year. How are you continuing to evolve your compositional style with this record, and what is your number-one goal with it?
"Instead of having one large album with a schizophrenic happy/sad feel I am splitting them up. 'Software' is happy pop chip tune, 'Hardware' is avant garde noise chip tune, both I feel or at least hope will progress the genre albeit in very different directions. I am using a special recording technique on 'Hardware' which is both expensive and time consuming but hopefully it will make people think, 'wow I didn't know you could do that with those machines' and maybe even freak people out a little."
6. Lastly, what does the future hold for Pixelh8?
"Well I have just finished my Masters Degree and [I am] planning out my PhD, when that gets the green light I will have a few months to finish all the demos for the album and hopefully finish 'Obverse' (non-chiptune) which is an album about drumming, and two game soundtracks are already in production (chip tune / electronica), so yeah as always busy."
[Pixelh8's work can be viewed at his official website: http://pixelh8.co.uk/]

March 1, 2011

Feryl - "Before the Day Fades"


After over two years of chip music composition, Feryl presents "Before the Day Fades", one of his finest efforts to date. Written in the familiar XM format, this brief, nine-track album will whisk you away to a simple and melodic landscape in the form of accessible module chip music. From the happy tunes of "Raindrops and Sunshine" to the heavy, dance-floor beats of "Irreversible", Feryl's album is a pleasant step forward from the typical music of the genre.

February 20, 2011

Review - "Surrender" (4mat)


4mat is a genius.

Just check out "Surrender", his sophomore chip music album. Listening to this work of art for the first time, I was blessed with the single most powerful experience I've ever had with an 8-bit album. Throughout the eleven magnificent tracks of the record, you'll discover that this humble genre can become something simply masterful in the right hands. Matthew Simmonds, commonly known under his artist handle 4mat, knows exactly what he's doing here in the fullest sense of the phrase, and provides lo-fi electronica fans with an exquisite form of musical bliss to "Surrender" to.

The album opens with the beautifully-titled "La Pluie Tombe Dans Mon Coeur" (French for "Rain Falls in My Heart"), which introduces the record on a uniquely symphonic note, with ethereal saw waves playing in harmony with subtle, yet effective, orchestration in the background. From there we are led directly into "Montreux"--a brilliantly danceable tune with heavy drum beats and a riveting bassline that sounds best when played loudly.

"Porcelaine", track four, is another winner with its beautiful melody and harmonic work, while "Surrender", the title track, left me thoroughly impressed with its mesmerizing intro and wondrous main theme that serves the title well. In addition to his thoughtful melodies, Simmonds has always striven for a remarkably high level of polish and coherence with his work, and "Surrender" is no exception. Tracks lead intro subsequent tracks quite cleverly, such as with the mellow "Starfields".

"Chipmusic Is Dead" should be regarded as one of the finest chiptunes ever composed. The bold, yet somewhat true, title serves to enhance the tune's beautiful recurring theme, which is played loud, low, high, and soft at different intervals, to great effect. After the heavy beats of the first eight tracks, Simmonds tones the album down to a mellow level with tracks like the fittingly-titled "Pretty Prairie", which includes a well-chosen sample of birds chirping. The record closes off with "Vilette", a short track that, while not 4mat's best, does include some further polish and high production values to enjoy.

Overall, "Surrender" is an excellent album that is not to be missed by the true chip music fan. The production values are high, the mastering is expertly handled, and the polish is extraordinary. Do yourself a favor and pick up a copy as soon as you can--you may find yourself pleasantly dumbfounded by just what your hear in the next half-hour.

SCORE: 9.4 out of 10 - "Outstanding"

[4mat's "Surrender" can be purchased from BandCamp here:  http://4mat.bandcamp.com/album/surrender]

February 16, 2011

Brother Android - "Hero Core OST (Expanded)"


If you had the pleasure of playing Daniel Remar's excellent "Hero Core" last year, you undoubtedly noticed Brother Android's distinguished soundtrack, which compliments the experience with simple and catchy retro vibes. The artist has just released a revised, reworked, and stereo-expanded edition of the official soundtrack, now available in its entirety, complete with spiffy new white cover art. Even if you didn't played the game, there are plenty of solid tunes here to satisfy your lo-fi adventure cravings. Highlights include "Light Factory", "New Caves", and "Tetron".

The seventeen-track release can be downloaded for free here:  http://brotherandroid.bandcamp.com/album/hero-core-ost-stereo-expanded-edition

January 31, 2011

Brother Android - "I Wish I Were Your Derivative"


Brother Android's long-overdue "I Wish I Were Your Derivative" EP has finally been released in both free and three-dollar bonus versions. The six-track concept record marks a departure from the artist's gentle, ethereal music in favor of a mathematics theme and simplistic palette of lo-fi samples. Although not among Brother Android's finest works, "Derivative" still provides a uniquely charming look into the world of conceptual chip music. Highlights include "Vector Sum", "Polyhedral Funk", and "Slowfade (Bonus)".

Download/stream the release here: http://brotherandroid.bandcamp.com/ The free version is available here: http://brotherandroid.110mb.com/derivative.html

January 25, 2011

The Greatest Bits - "Mega Man 2"


From the official press release:

"Back in the late 80‘s and early 90‘s, The Greatest Bits blistered his thumbs haunting Dr. Wily and his evil 8-bit companions like Airman, Heatman and Bubbleman. But it’s quite hard concentrating on the levels when the music is so bloody brilliant... The music of the game inspired The Greatest Bits so much that he released a tribute album to the game in 2010. The Greatest Bits combines 21st century top class sound production with the unique sound and feel of the original 'chipsounds' from the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). The result is the sound of the year 200X - to say it in Mega Man terminology."

The thirteen-track album is available from Amazon and iTunes. You can get a preview at the artist's website: http://www.thegreatestbits.com/Music.html