97

(96 replies, posted in General Discussion)

This thread is amazing.

Invisible Robot Hands wrote:

Thank you, based Torres

TYBT is now a meme.

This blog needs more Triforce and Sky Crawlers.

(find out about them here: http://gameboyaustralia.com/2011/04/tri … ip-in.html)

100

(39 replies, posted in General Discussion)

Moombah minusbaby self-remixes on the cards?

101

(39 replies, posted in General Discussion)

The Sky Is Black Not Blue wrote:
godinpants wrote:

dot.ay

These are some of his moombahchip traxx/demos/experiments:

http://soundcloud.com/dotay/megahton
http://weeklybeats.com/#/dot.ay/music/mosbahton
http://weeklybeats.com/#/dot.ay/music/brktheworld
http://weeklybeats.com/#/dot.ay/music/nononodont

I have a few suggestions/responses/etc. I don't want any of them to seem condescending, but some of them might, especially as we both create music in the same kinda niche.

1) The Vocal

I think part of what you're coming up against with your vocal (the space between where we can tell you want it to be and where it is) is your age. I am not really a pro when it comes to screaming (I can barely make it through my own shows) but goddamn, getting anywhere with it took me quite a while and having a broken voice really helped (I think you might be quite young judging by your soundcloud profile picture - forgive me if you're not). As someone who mumbles constantly, projecting my voice has always been a really important factor to remember. If you're screaming from below your lungs, you can go lower in pitch, louder in volume and do it for much longer. Practicing it (in a soundproof room, or out somewhere far from people - you're bound to have the latter in Armidale) really helps. Most of the genres you've listed as the soundcloud tags have screamed lyrics, but they are (for the most part) understandable - understanding yours was difficult at times. Watching the level of distortion and your diction in delivery will help on that front, unless you're going for the shitbird vibe (which does have its own sexy place in the genre - but it is more breakcore than anything else you're referencing).

2) The Game Boy

You're actually getting better on the Game Boy, in my opinion. You're adding more elements to your songs and that is a good thing. However, it isn't quite there. In my experience, in order to create a song that sounds "hardcore" or like a band that plays in the style of your desired genre tags, you tend to need to think about replacing each element in a "hardcore" or "emocore" song with instruments on the Game Boy. That means, you need to essentially create a band in a game boy - or at least that is how I see it with my music. I create as much of a drum kit as I can (a kick in pulse... a snare with a sample and noise, or pulse and noise, or just noise if I have no space... hi-hats with noise and crash cymbals...), bass guitar (I like using wav best for this - it sounds best pitched down low out of all the instruments on the game boy in this context) and a guitar (I like using chords on the pulse channel to fill the harmonic/chord instrument of the band). It takes time to place all of these elements across four channels, but it can be done - chances are to start with it will take more than four hours (songs off -what I call- my first EP took me many, many nights work to write on Game Boy). Think about how hardcore songs work. Usually the riff from an intro, is not the riff in the chorus. Perhaps ask yourself which instruments would play what in each section and emulate it with your game boy.

3) Your release structure

This is very general and not specifically about your song, but something I wish someone told me. I literally released the first few songs I wrote on a Game Boy as an EP and later asked to have it removed from the web because I hated it so much on reflection. You will get better and better and once you break the initial barriers of composition and the learning curve gets much easier, you will not like the initial stuff you've put together. Show them to your friends, or upload them on sites like this to talk about it... learn from them. You're not going to want to have released them when you've written another 20 songs. Finally, it seems like you're already getting some hostility here for over posting in this section. Perhaps work on five songs and bring the best one or two back to this section of the forums. You are making progress, but it is a gradual change that we'll see more clearly if you're making bigger jumps between asking for help - the people here are some of your most likely audience if you don't encourage them to dislike you.

Listen to Kool Skull, godinpants (imagining vocals), Nullsleep's collapsed desires tour live recordings (again, imagine some vocals) and just more chip in general to understand the things that appeal to chip music listeners.

Remember, egg whites for strength in the pit. Keep it up, keep it brutal. Sorry if shit dudn't make sense - I am not reading this back to check. haha.

abrasive wrote:

The boards are coming out of the factory soon, and the shells will be coming in not long after.

I'd say a date but I don't want to spawn yet another deluge of 'hey you said it would be out by now where's the secret cart sales market' emails.

They're not just going to up and disappear. I spent every last dollar of my liquid funds to get this batch fabricated, and have been squeezing hard to make the rent for the last couple of weeks. They will come, and they will be announced, and even if you miss the first batch there will be plenty for everyone.

Thank you for your patience.

You are a god. I now understand why you've been so busy.

104

(7 replies, posted in Releases)

I think you might need a bit less repetition, or to sing/scream more to overcome some of the repetition.

THIS THREAD IS NOW CLOSED.

106

(208 replies, posted in Bugs and Requests)

Wait! Before I get back to work I should mention that the way I find music on this site is clicking the names of people who say interesting things in their posts in this forum.

This is the first time I've listened to your music in a long while - this new shit of yours is really good Jae Mae.

/me gracefully retires.

107

(208 replies, posted in Bugs and Requests)

What's random about them being the latest songs uploaded?

The last thing I want here is a flame war. But that is not random. It is very specific.

If you listen to some of them, you might find something new that you'll like.

AND NOW, I take leave to work my day job and bow out of this discussion forever.

108

(14 replies, posted in Releases)

"like"

109

(208 replies, posted in Bugs and Requests)

Doesn't this thread is a bit silly?

If you wanna hear new artists (which I think is the argument that was actually presented as the need for some kind of popularity-based system) listen to the music section. Just do it. You shouldn't need someone to tell you what is good.

The 8bc likes system was a joke - if a "name" artist in the community liked something dozens of people followed. There were multiple account problems and spamming and so on. We were all part of that mess. Lots of us opted out and came here. It was mostly people moaning that people wouldn't like their tunes.

If you need a curated feed, go to http://micromusic.net/ - they have the QFS and let's face it, it works. But also remember it sucks to not get your music on a site because someone on the other side of the internet doesn't like it.

If you want 8bc as it was, go to http://ucollective.org/ - it looks like the same system is set up. Live it love it?

Derris-Kharlan wrote:

Wow, this documentary is super negative. Seriously, it makes these artists seem like whiney incompetent kids. And why is an "ex-chip musician" interviewed". Yeah this genre that you haven't heard of is pretty cool and all but I quit because it was too limiting.

I'd say he might also be an "ex-chiptune musician" because he is in Bang! Bang! Eche! which are of decent-stage-at-Big-Day-Out size in NZ. He is a rad bro, mates with all those fellas and the interviewer has spoken to him before.

It is a bit of a negative piece generally. But we were totally like that in Aus years back. It's part of the cycle, I think.

This lil docco is a uni project and as such falls into a few traps that student productions tend to fall into. It could have been led away from the neg, but it wasn't - it is a learning experience.

It is great that something, whatever it is, has shed light on NZ chip. They're doing some unique stuff.

herr_prof wrote:

I think the problem is not having one place to view everything, but finding the gems amongst the flood.. it would be cool to track links and likes and have some sort of web metric social voting for the stuff you should try and check out.

...and you've just designed a chip only hype machine.

112

(89 replies, posted in General Discussion)

Me. :-(