
Rainbowdragoneyes: The Messenger Soundtrack (Colored Vinyl) Vinyl 2LP
The Messenger is an action/platforming gaming that encapsulates both the 80ās and 90ās console gaming aesthetics into one time-traveling adventure. The first disc is based in the 8-Bit era, a faithful contemporary recreation of the limited sonic output of the original NES. The NES could only output audio in 5 channels - two square waves (the bleeps and bloops), one triangle wave (bass tones), a noise channel (basically static), and a rarely used fifth channel that held sampled audio. In a digital audio recording landscape that allows for nearly infinite virtual instruments, recording channels, etc., itās refreshing to hear music so vibrant, exciting, and varied made under such harsh restrictions. The second disc maintains the general retro style, but updates it to the polyphonic 16 bit era, ruled by the Sega Genesis. The Genesis had exceptional audio qualities of the time, thanks to the inclusion of the Yamaha YM212, aka the OPN2 - the console even had a separate processor just for audio output. With the average track clocking in at just around 2 minutes long, you can listen to this LP like youād demolish a bag of potato chips. (I thought of a pretty good āpotato chiptuneā joke, but will save you the groan.) The LPs are pressed on blue and purple vinyl and housed in one of the more charmingly designed gatefolds Iāve seen in a long time. Recommended!Ā
- purple and blue vinyl pressing
- gatefold sleeve
- limited edition
- music label: iam8bit
reviewed by SIMON SEZ 07/2019
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Rainbowdragoneyes: The Messenger Soundtrack (Colored Vinyl) Vinyl 2LP
The Messenger is an action/platforming gaming that encapsulates both the 80ās and 90ās console gaming aesthetics into one time-traveling adventure. The first disc is based in the 8-Bit era, a faithful contemporary recreation of the limited sonic output of the original NES. The NES could only output audio in 5 channels - two square waves (the bleeps and bloops), one triangle wave (bass tones), a noise channel (basically static), and a rarely used fifth channel that held sampled audio. In a digital audio recording landscape that allows for nearly infinite virtual instruments, recording channels, etc., itās refreshing to hear music so vibrant, exciting, and varied made under such harsh restrictions. The second disc maintains the general retro style, but updates it to the polyphonic 16 bit era, ruled by the Sega Genesis. The Genesis had exceptional audio qualities of the time, thanks to the inclusion of the Yamaha YM212, aka the OPN2 - the console even had a separate processor just for audio output. With the average track clocking in at just around 2 minutes long, you can listen to this LP like youād demolish a bag of potato chips. (I thought of a pretty good āpotato chiptuneā joke, but will save you the groan.) The LPs are pressed on blue and purple vinyl and housed in one of the more charmingly designed gatefolds Iāve seen in a long time. Recommended!Ā
- purple and blue vinyl pressing
- gatefold sleeve
- limited edition
- music label: iam8bit
reviewed by SIMON SEZ 07/2019
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Description
The Messenger is an action/platforming gaming that encapsulates both the 80ās and 90ās console gaming aesthetics into one time-traveling adventure. The first disc is based in the 8-Bit era, a faithful contemporary recreation of the limited sonic output of the original NES. The NES could only output audio in 5 channels - two square waves (the bleeps and bloops), one triangle wave (bass tones), a noise channel (basically static), and a rarely used fifth channel that held sampled audio. In a digital audio recording landscape that allows for nearly infinite virtual instruments, recording channels, etc., itās refreshing to hear music so vibrant, exciting, and varied made under such harsh restrictions. The second disc maintains the general retro style, but updates it to the polyphonic 16 bit era, ruled by the Sega Genesis. The Genesis had exceptional audio qualities of the time, thanks to the inclusion of the Yamaha YM212, aka the OPN2 - the console even had a separate processor just for audio output. With the average track clocking in at just around 2 minutes long, you can listen to this LP like youād demolish a bag of potato chips. (I thought of a pretty good āpotato chiptuneā joke, but will save you the groan.) The LPs are pressed on blue and purple vinyl and housed in one of the more charmingly designed gatefolds Iāve seen in a long time. Recommended!Ā
- purple and blue vinyl pressing
- gatefold sleeve
- limited edition
- music label: iam8bit











