music & sound
Video Games Live Gets CD Release
Posted by Mike Fahey at 2:20 AM on July 8, 2008
Soon appearing on the souvenir tables at Video Games Live events around the world, EMI has announced the first CD release for the video game music event, Video Games Live: Volume One. No longer will fans be forced to choose between a crappy t-shirt or an overpriced program guide (*eyes program guide on the shelf with spite*)! The full CD should be appearing on iTunes soon (perhaps today), with the full CD release and bonus tracks spaced out to coincide with concert events in San Diego later this month and Leipzig in August.
So what's on the tracklist? Eleven games are represented, from the whimsical Tetris Piano Opus, to the moving Medal of Honour suite. Myst, Warcraft, God of War, Kingdom Hearts...hell, they've even got Advent Rising on there, which goes to show that your game doesn't have to be successful to make it on the Video Games Live CD...it just has to have music composed by Tommy Tallarico. The track that really makes the disc for me? Wendy Carlos' Tron Montage. Makes me feel like I am 10 years old wearing a cardboard Tron helmet all over again. Hit the jump for the full track listing and sketchy details about availability!
EMI CLASSICS RELEASES - VIDEO GAMES LIVE: VOLUME ONE
First Video Game Music Compilation Album to be Released Worldwide on a Major Label
Recorded and Mixed at the World Famous Abbey Road Studios in London
LONDON, UK - JULY 7, 2008 - In an exciting collaboration with Video Games Live, EMI Classics will release a CD celebrating some of the best known, most popular video game music of all time. The first worldwide campaign of its kind by EMI is linked to the Video Games Live events planned in North and South America, Europe and Asia over the coming months and aims to appeal to a broad audience of gamers, non-gamers and music lovers of all kinds. Video Games Live: Volume One showcases some of the more popular segments that currently appear in Video Games Live. The album contains several unique arrangements that were created along with the original composers exclusively for the show, and have never previously been released.
Video games are arguably today's most popular entertainment of choice for the 21st century, and the music is central to their attraction. The EMI Classics CD, compiled by Video Games Live co-creators Tommy Tallarico and Jack Wall, who also conducts the recording, features the Slovak National Orchestra, The Crouch End Festival Chorus and The Video Game Pianist, Martin Leung in medleys from hit game franchises such as Halo, Warcraft, Kingdom Hearts, Tetris, Castlevania, Myst and Tron.
Video Games Live: Volume One will be released in two stages: The digital release will be downloadable in the UK from July 7th, 2008, with the option to pre-order from a week before that on iTunes and other DSP's (Digital Service Providers) with that capability; the release of the CD and iTunes exclusive, including digital bonus tracks, will be staggered to coincide with Video Games Live events, beginning in San Diego, California on July 24th (North America) and Leipzig, Germany on August 20th (Europe and worldwide).
Music in the interactive entertainment industry has come far in the past 35 years, from beeps and electrical impulses to early digital synthesis and sampling to pre-recorded soundtracks. As the games themselves have become more sophisticated, so has the music that drives them and a generation of composers are devoting their energies to writing for the video game medium.
Video Games Live is the largest and most successful video game concert in the world having already performed around the globe to over 250,000 people. The debut performance took place on July 6th, 2005 at the world famous Hollywood Bowl with the LA Philharmonic. Over 11,000 people attended making it the biggest video game concert in the world. Most of the game music played (Halo, Sonic, Metal Gear Solid, Warcraft, Tomb Raider, Myst, Kingdom Hearts, Tron, Medal of Honour, Advent Rising, etc.) had never been performed live. Video Games Live followed with groundbreaking first ever game concert performances in countries such as Brazil, England, New Zealand, Spain, Mexico, Canada, Scotland, Taiwan and Portugal. Video Games Live was also the very first American video game concert to perform in Asia (Korea). In 2007 they were recipients of a major industry award in Brazil for "Special Breakthrough Achievement" following their sold out performances in Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo. Video Games Live concerts have since taken place around the world, selling out multi-thousand-seat venues within hours or days of being announced.
The live concert experience features music from the biggest games of all time. Top orchestras and choirs around the world perform along with exclusive video footage and music arrangements, synchronized lighting, solo performers, electronic percussion, live action and unique interactive segments to create an explosive one-of-a-kind entertainment experience. Special events surround the show, including pre- and post-show festivals.
In the coming months, Video Games Live will perform more concerts throughout the world. Forthcoming dates include: Houston and Austin, TX; Louisville, KY; San Diego and San Jose, CA; Indianapolis, IN; Brookville, NY; Birmingham, AL; Kansas City, MO; Chicago, IL; Newark, NJ; Burlington, VT; Seattle, WA; Kalamazoo, MI; Sarasota, FL and Richmond, VA; Vancouver, BC; Kitchener, ON; Calgary; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Leipzig, Germany; Glasgow, Scotland; Paris, France; Lisbon, Portugal; London, UK; Taipei, Taiwan; Beijing, China. Visit www.videogameslive.com for regular updates of the performance dates.
"If Beethoven were alive today, he would probably be a video-game composer... he was always ahead of the curve. One of his goals in creating music was to control the emotions of the person listening to it. This is exactly what we as game composers are constantly trying to accomplish." (Video Games Live co-creator Tommy Tallarico)
"A touring multimedia show that has already been seen by more than 250,000 people is playing at the world's finest concert halls -- with the world's finest orchestras powering through some of the world's most popular video-game music. And it's attracting a decidedly different audience. There were more than children and teenage gamers ... [there were] a lot of grandmas out there." (NPR - National Public Radio, U.S.)
TRACKLISTING
1. Kingdom Hearts®
KINGDOM HEARTS © Disney • Developed by Square-Enix Co., Ltd. • "Kingdom" written by Utada Hikaru • Orchestrator: Kaoru WadaThe KINGDOM HEARTS® franchise is the result of a collaboration between Disney and Square-Enix. The ground-breaking fantasy action role-playing game received numerous awards and was a dominating presence upon its release in 2002. The single, Hikari (to which the instrumental version "Kingdom" was based) has sold over 1 million copies in Japan. Female songwriter Utada Hikaru's first official album became the best-selling album of all time in Japan with over 10 million copies sold. Currently, three of her albums rank in the Top 10 all-time best-selling albums list in Japan.
2. Warcraft® Suite
Composer: Jason Hayes • Orchestrator: Benoît GreyCreated by the development team at Blizzard Entertainment®, Inc. Warcraft® is an award-winning fantasy series that is one of the fastest selling PC games ever. Blizzard's release of World of Warcraft®, the massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) based on the Warcraft series, has shattered all sales records for an online game, and is currently the biggest subscription-based online game in the world.
3. Myst® Medley
Myst® Theme composed by Robyn Miller; Gallery Theme composed by Tim Larkin (BMI) • Myst® III Main Theme and Myst® IV Main Theme composed by Jack Wall (ASCAP) • Orchestrated by Steve ZuckermanThe Myst® phenomenon catapulted the world of computer games to the forefront of consumer entertainment and broke many boundaries as the best-selling CD-ROM game. It appealed to many demographics and featured beautifully rendered environments and intricate puzzle-solving quests.
4. Medal of Honor™ (LIVE)
"Operation Market Garden" from Medal of Honor: Frontline™ published by Electronic Arts, Inc. Composed and orchestrated by Michael Giacchino • Recorded Live in Brazil, South AmericaCreated and inspired by Steven Spielberg, the award-winning Medal of Honour series is one of the most convincing and well established wartime simulation game franchises, blending cinematic visuals with intense sound and music. Award-winning composer Michael Giacchino started in the video game industry and has since added films and television to his impressive list of credits which include TV shows Lost and Alias, motion pictures such as The Incredibles, Mission: Impossible III, Ratatouille, Speed Racer and even Space Mountain in Disneyland.
5. Civilization IV Medley
Composer: Christopher Tin (BMI) • Orchestrator: Christopher Tin • Alto solo: Nathania Reid • Tenor solo: Ron Ragin • Soprano solo: Nicole Bonsol • Choir: Stanford TalismanOver the course of 15 years, Sid Meier's Civilization series has come to define turn-based strategy games. Few games have managed to combine the sheer addictive depth that the Civilization series commands, and fewer have had such universal appeal. With unprecedented critical acclaim from fans and press around the world, Sid Meier's Civilization game is recognised as one of the greatest PC game franchises of all time.
6. Tetris® Piano Opus No. 1
Tetris® is a trademark of The Tetris Company and Blue Planet Software. Tetris® theme (Music A) originally adapted and arranged from the Russian folk song "Korobeiniki" • Piano Arrangement: Martin Leung • Performed by: Martin LeungTetris is arguably the most beloved and biggest selling video game in the world. It was originally conceived and designed in 1985 by Alexey Pajitnov while working for the Soviet government in Moscow, Russia. "Music A" in the Nintendo Game Boy® edition of Tetris is one of the most recognisable and popular songs from a video game. It is an instrumental arrangement of a vocal Russian folk tune called "Korobeiniki" which was based on a poem with the same name written in 1861. The first line of the translated lyrics read... ""Oy, the box is full, so full".
7. God of War™ Montage (LIVE)
Published by Sony Computer Entertainment America, Inc. • Composed by Gerard Marino • Recorded Live in Brazil, South AmericaGod of War is a high-energy action-adventure game based on Greek mythology. It was extremely well received by critics and fans alike and was the recipient of many "Game of the Year" awards. It has been called the greatest PlayStation® 2 game of all time by many top gaming magazines and websites. The award-winning score by Gerard Marino was his first credit as a game composer.
8. Advent Rising Suite
Composers: Tommy Tallarico, Michael Plowman, Emmanuel Fratianni, Laurie Robinson • Orchestrated by Emmanuel Fratianni, Laurie Robinson and Christopher NickelAdvent Rising is a third-person, intergalactic action/adventure wrapped in a visually imaginative universe that plays like a fast action movie. Famed science fiction novelist, Orson Scott Card, co-wrote the gripping storyline behind the game. The multi award-winning Advent Rising soundtrack has been noted as "one of the greatest musical scores of all time" by websites such as Yahoo, Gamespot and others.
9. Tron Montage
Composed by Wendy Carlos; Orchestrated and adapted for Video Games Live by David Kates • Synthesizers programmed and performed by Matt RobertsonDisney's 1982 action sci-fi cult classic masterpiece embraced video game aesthetics and has since inspired numerous blockbuster films and video games alike. Harnessing the latest technology available at the time, Tron was the first motion picture to ever use computer graphics and animation.
10. Halo® Suite
Composers: Martin O'Donnell and Michael Salvatori • Orchestrated by Emmanuel Fratianni, Laurie Robinson, Martin O'Donnell and Michael Salvatori • Guitars: Tommy Tallarico, Steve Vai, Chris Kline and Marcus Henderson • Voiceover: Cindy ShapiroHalo is the blockbuster XBOX game developed by Bungie Studios that reinvented the first person shooter experience with action packed gameplay, an epic science fiction storyline and a multi award-winning soundtrack. The first Halo soundtrack received countless accolades including The Rolling Stone award for best original video game soundtrack, and its sequel Halo 2 became the #1 selling original video game soundtrack album in North America.
11 Castlevania® Rock (LIVE)
Castlevania® series owned and published by Konami Digital Entertainment Co., Ltd. • Composers: Kinuyo Yamashita (Castlevania®), Club Kukeiha (Castlevania® III) and Michiru Yamane (Castlevania: Symphony of the Night®) • Arranged by Tommy Tallarico • Guitars: Tommy Tallarico and Dweezil Zappa • Keyboards: Martin Leung • Drums: Joe Travers • Bass: Peter Griffin • Recorded at Plaza Calafia Bullring - Mexicali, MexicoThe Castlevania series is one of Konami's most famous franchises and is a recognised landmark in the design of action-platforming games. The earliest games borrowed from motifs in iconic horror cinema, though the series later developed a more artistic and dramatic direction drawn from Gothic fiction and dark romanticism. This classic adventure series features some of the most addictive gameplay, beautiful graphical effects and contagious musical scores ever witnessed in a platform game. The musical styles for the Castlevania series range from Gothic and operatic rock to classical symphonia.
The album was engineered at EMI's famous Abbey Road recording studios in London.
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Comments (AU Comments · US Comments)
There are currently no AU comments for this post.
Bort
Posted 3:28 AM 8/7/08
Civilization IV Medley + Tetris Piano Opus. That's a buy.
Bort
Pombar
Posted 3:27 AM 8/7/08
They did about 4 FF tracks (and an FF piano medley that faded through themes from each game in order), the MGS2 theme and Chrono Cross when I saw it in London in October. I'm sure they're just saving a big gun for each album so there isn't just one awesome one and a few crappy ones. Balance makes the monies!
Pombar
Jesse Mrozowski
Posted 3:26 AM 8/7/08
That's such a shame. All the good tracks I saw live it's like they chose the ones I had no interest in and put them on a CD. Aside from Castlevania I don't care about any of those tracks. This CD needs more Grim Fandango.
Jesse Mrozowski
MGSchick
Posted 3:23 AM 8/7/08
@biznatch:
I know! I thought the same thing. I know that they've done MGS before because I've seen videos of it. Grrr...
MGSchick
stargateheaven
Posted 3:22 AM 8/7/08
@biznatch:
i'm guessing it's the same reason why the mgs theme is not even in mgs4.. legal reasons!
stargateheaven
Spiffyness
Posted 3:16 AM 8/7/08
@bkchurch: Yeah, you're right. That IS why it's on there, but why are we complaining? It's fantastic music! You're wrong about the point of the concert: it IS to play good music. And MOST importantly, I think that the concert should prove to outsiders (you'd be surprised how many non-gamers have attended VFL) that games can have artistic significance in multiple ways, including their music.
Spiffyness
crdbrdbox
Posted 3:11 AM 8/7/08
@RedRaptor: I completely agree
crdbrdbox
karamashi
Posted 3:10 AM 8/7/08
I'll take Play over this any day.
karamashi
Clarke
Posted 3:02 AM 8/7/08
Well it's not really Video Games "Live" now is it?
Clarke
Phantasos
Posted 3:02 AM 8/7/08
@Shiryu:
Same here. Never thought i´d get a chance to hear them live.
Phantasos
RedRaptor
Posted 2:58 AM 8/7/08
No Metal Gear music. Time to punch babies.
RedRaptor
kidko
Posted 2:57 AM 8/7/08
get your games symphonies without the hollywood vibe: PLAY!
kidko
Chalice
Posted 2:57 AM 8/7/08
I really wish the album wasn't so short, 11 tracks isn't too much and the only one I'm really fond of is the Castlevania piece. I liked the Myst/Civilization pieces too but they're not really must owns for me.
Chalice
Nickatiah
Posted 2:54 AM 8/7/08
What on Chrono Suite? I'll get it anyway but now I have to wait till the second volume.
Nickatiah
DigitalHero
Posted 2:52 AM 8/7/08
What do you guys think? Actual Original Soundtracks or Videogames Live? I'm leaning toward the original stuff, no crowd noise and you get the actual sound. The woman they used for the Halo theme was horrible. =P
DigitalHero
cio
Posted 2:51 AM 8/7/08
I'd much rather the Advantage put out another album. I saw video games live a a month or so ago, and I have to admit, I didn't really like it.
cio
xat
Posted 2:49 AM 8/7/08
In before Eminence.
xat
Mechapixel
Posted 2:46 AM 8/7/08
I went to video games live in buffalo once got a bunch of autographs
Mechapixel
JonSnow
Posted 2:43 AM 8/7/08
eh, it's all right. operation market garden is tremendous, but i already own multiple halo soundtracks, and some of the rest. it's aimed at the core gaming demographic, but the tracks are pretty much those the core gaming market would likely already own.
so i wonder they "why".
JonSnow
bkchurch
Posted 2:43 AM 8/7/08
@Spiffyness: O come on, do you really think if Tallarico hadn't composed the games soundtrack it would really be on the set list? Whether it was phenomenal or complete crap doesn't matter the game itself was terrible and most people either don't remember it or don't want to remember it. The point of doing a concert of songs from video games isn't just to play great music but great music from games and game series that are near and dear to many gamers hearts. Face it, Advent Rising is on there because Tallarico runs the show, not because it's a great soundtrack.
bkchurch
Willy105
Posted 2:43 AM 8/7/08
Well, actually, it's a pretty mediocre list of tracks. So I guess I can hold out until a better collection arises.
Willy105
Willy105
Posted 2:42 AM 8/7/08
Do want!
Willy105
Mike Fahey
Posted 2:40 AM 8/7/08
@Spiffyness: Oh I love TOmmy. He is tiny little awesome, and I am on record as loving Advent Rising as well, no matter what anyone else says. ;)
Mike Fahey
Spiffyness
Posted 2:36 AM 8/7/08
@Mommar: Well, actually Steve Vai did the guitar for the theme in the actual Halo 2 soundtrack as well, so it wasn't THAT much of a stretch. He's already done the gig once before.
Spiffyness
QualityJeverage
Posted 2:34 AM 8/7/08
Glad to see the Advent Rising suite on there. The game itself was mediocre, but the music was beautiful.
QualityJeverage
biznatch
Posted 2:33 AM 8/7/08
WHAT? No MGS? GAH!
biznatch
Mommar
Posted 2:32 AM 8/7/08
Holy shit, they got Steve Vai to do the guitars for the Halo theme? That's a pretty damn big gun to pull out. And Dweezil Zappa did guitars for "Castlevania Rock" too?
Mommar
Shiryu
Posted 2:31 AM 8/7/08
They will be in Portugal this December! I can hardly wait!
^________^
Shiryu
Spiffyness
Posted 2:30 AM 8/7/08
Hey now, was the Tallarico jab really necessary? He might not be just plugging his own music, y'know, 'cause Advent Rising really DOES have a phenomenal soundtrack (the three pieces played at the concert especially). Even if someone else was putting together the concerts, I'd hope the music was still present.
Spiffyness
vanlingo
Posted 2:30 AM 8/7/08
Awesome.
vanlingo
Orionsaint
Posted 4:02 AM 8/7/08
I have the t-shirt and program guide and love them!
Orionsaint
PsycheE
Posted 3:50 AM 8/7/08
"If Beethoven were alive today, he would probably be a video-game composer... he was always ahead of the curve. One of his goals in creating music was to control the emotions of the person listening to it. This is exactly what we as game composers are constantly trying to accomplish." (Video Games Live co-creator Tommy Tallarico)
Lawl @ Mr Tallarico. Beethoven's genius came from creating a space for people to come and play in. We are not in GRA, there is no mechanical bunny to follow or a linear path of rollercoast emotions. Not many had such talent, Marlon Brando and L. Armstrong comes to mind.
Not to be condescending to video games, but it is a far cry from conservatories and musical theory that is enduced by the auditory system
Yes, the two can be in concordance, but to tie videogames to Beethoven's wavelength is just lawl.
What the hell is a game composer?, Does Uemetsu-san consider himeself as a composer or a game composer. Obviously Mr Tallarico and his associates wants to create music to control the emotions of the people listenting to it. Sounds like something out of my junior high textbook.
PsycheE
forcetrainer
Posted 3:49 AM 8/7/08
Amazon lists the album available for download on July 22nd. iTunes (and the store) may be slick, but I'll take my MP3s without DRM please :)
---------------
ForceTrainer
Check out how two geeks get in shape without killing themselves at [www.hardbodygeeks.com]
forcetrainer
Actaeus
Posted 3:37 AM 8/7/08
For a WWII FPS, I played the crap out of MoH: Frontline. And it appears that the track comes from the Arnhem level, which was my favorite.
tl;dr: awesome
Actaeus
GreyFoxV1
Posted 4:17 AM 8/7/08
No Metal Gear? :(
GreyFoxV1
Surek
Posted 4:16 AM 8/7/08
@forcetrainer:
It actually is DRM-free on iTunes as well. Was released as iTunes plus (but at the usual 9,99 price)
I actually bought the album off the German iTunes about a week ago. Been listening to it pretty much non-stop since then. Yes, the songlist seems a little meh at first sight, but the music is VERY awesome, even if you don't know the game that well. I totally got into the whole symphony orchestra thing, so what other orchestras are playing video game themes? I got the Play link from above, but theit CD doesn't seem to be out yet.
Oh and I think especially for the older titles, that were never recorded with an orchestra, the VGL versions are at least worth the price, if not better than the original. On the other hand I just ordered the Seiken Densetsu 2 OST from Japan, I just love the music in that game.
Surek
rinerdar
Posted 4:15 AM 8/7/08
no nintendo or Everquest (Eq in my opinion has the best original classical soundtrack of any game) makes me sad
rinerdar
Surek
Posted 5:32 AM 8/7/08
There also is no Nintendo at all really. I think this is because of licensing. Or because Volume 2 is full of those songs! A man can dream....
Surek
MartinX
Posted 5:18 AM 8/7/08
I saw VGL at the Blizzard WWI, it was let down a little by the soundsystem in the Hall, but it was still awesome.
I'm definitely planning on seeing them when they play their own gig near where I live later in the year.
MartinX
El-Suave
Posted 5:10 AM 8/7/08
Publishers who make CD's with their own music seemingly won't have their soundtracks on there - no Metal Gear, no Final Fantasy, no Mario... :-(
El-Suave
WK016
Posted 4:57 AM 8/7/08
"No longer will fans be forced to choose between a crappy t-shirt or an overpriced program guide (*eyes program guide on the shelf with spite*)!"
I chose the poster.
I'm highly disappointed that the Metal Gear Solid theme isn't there. It better not be because of plagiarism shenanigans.
WK016
panzerjedi
Posted 4:57 AM 8/7/08
Is the rabid fanboy screaming/cheering on each track? If so, pass.
panzerjedi
Logician
Posted 6:57 AM 8/7/08
@libbybee:
Well, at least you got the oppotunity to choose...
I found out about Distant Worlds on the national newspaper on the same day the concert was due in Stockholm, two hours car drive from where i was...
That day will always be remembered as a sucky day... Sucky indeed.
Logician
Gagaman
Posted 6:54 AM 8/7/08
What, no Sonic music with that fantastic opera-esque "SEEEGAAA!"? =(
Gagaman
libbybee
Posted 6:35 AM 8/7/08
Still not disappointed about my choice to see the FF: Distant Worlds concert instead of VGL (scheduled the same night in two different, relatively-close cities) but I might give the CD a listen.
libbybee
.em.
Posted 7:41 AM 8/7/08
Tommy Tallarico, lol. I remember him from G4/techTV.
Yay, Utada! :D I know it's not "Hikari" itself, but it is based on it, and that's pretty cool.
.em.
J.A.
Posted 7:18 AM 8/7/08
Have these guys ever performed Resident Evil stuff?
J.A.
Tiger-Fever
Posted 9:15 AM 8/7/08
Hmm, Video Games Live without the live or the light/TV show but also without stupid fanboys and my stupid friends screaming. Tough decision, might have to look into it. I did enjoy the show (glad to see the Civilization medley makes an appearence as it was my surprise favourite of the night) but it might be one of those things you need to be at to really appreciate.
Tiger-Fever
BigDanG
Posted 8:58 AM 8/7/08
I remember seeing ScrewAttack.com getting kicked out of Video Games Live, because they're so funny and cool...or just immature dickwads.
BigDanG
HT Tenrai
Posted 9:39 AM 8/7/08
Aw, maaaan! It just HAD to be iTunes, didn't it? Damn!
HT Tenrai
munniec
Posted 9:31 AM 8/7/08
Mario?
munniec
dady5000
Posted 10:07 AM 8/7/08
What? No Metal Gear?
dady5000
ender424
Posted 12:31 PM 8/7/08
Weaksauce. Play! video game symphony had a waaaaay better playlist. Hopefully those guys come out with a DVD or something.
ender424
Zero_
Posted 1:09 PM 8/7/08
Yep, I've been to both Eminence and Video Games Live, and Eminence's performance and quality is just miles above Video Games Live.
Zero_
DARTH_TIGRIS
Posted 12:59 PM 8/7/08
@Mike Fahey:
Advent Rising, yeah, so much potential and what they actually REALIZED was enough for me to enjoy it too. But the music was amazing in and out of game. Thus ...
@bkchurch:
... it deserves to be here. Its a shining example of GREAT gaming music that crosses over well into simply great MUSIC. I sure thought that this show was about the music, not the hit games.
DARTH_TIGRIS