okey has shown some of the little bit of
truly good taste in this thread-
anyone who appreciates the Follin bros., as I said, has
truly good taste.
If you want more Follin, I recommend checking out his work from the computer era- ZX Spectrum, C64, Amiga... He was quite the genius.
Personal favorites being
LED Storm,
Ghouls n' Ghosts, and
Chronos (amazing considering the extreme limitations of the ZX Spectrum Beeper soundchip!)
Follin and his bros couldn't make a bad piece of music if they tried!
I kind of held off posting in this topic here because A) I knew the responses would be kind of blase, and B) I knew I would totally hijack the thread because VGM is one of the few areas I truly shine with large [useless] knowledge.
Anyhoo, PART UNUS:
c64:
Best composers: Rob Hubbard, Jeroen Tel, Ben Daglish, Tim Follin
EX:
Rob Hubbard:
Monty on the RunQuite possibly one of the best C64 tunes out there. Game was all right, but what really made it was the music. Rob Hubbard is the king (lol) of British composers, to me, anyhow.
Light ForceHere Rob gets a little fancy with his instrument use. Some nice phasing here and there- all really awesome.
Ace IIIf you like bass at all, you owe it to yourself to listen.
Jeroen Tel:
I could post every C64 Tel song and still not begin to state my appreciation for this guy. Fucking GREAT use of the SID chip. One of the chip's finest users.
CYBERNOIDCYBERNOID 2HAWKEYEROBOCOP 3Each one of these songs is like a rock-concert blaring out of a 3-channel SID chip.
Listen to them, if you want to stop being
lame.
It will also show without a doubt that the SID chip was a far more versatile chip than the NES (or ZX or Amiga or Atari ST's, for that matter) soundchip. But that goes without saying- a computer is always better in that regard. Just the nature of things (though Tim Follin once again pushes the NES to its limits in
Solstice and
Silver Surfer. Also check
Journey to Silius for more non-Follin NES-greatness).
Ben Daglish:
Personal Favorite
The Last Ninja.
Probably the best VGM ninja song ever, up until Ninja Gaiden's
Basilisk Minefield stage.
Tim Follin:
Already posted Ghouls n' Ghosts, but here are some other gems:
Bionic Commandonot technically c64, but the ZX version is far superior (which is a rarity, I think, for the ZX- generally C64 sounds better)
Use this post, if you will, to discover the wide range of VG music you guys are just simply MISSING.
I mean, there are other composers out there whose names don't end in Kondo, Uematsu, or Yamamoto.