8 bit Bitpop (Chiptune with vocals and effects) of Justin Timberlake’s Can’t Stop the Feeling – Made with the sounds of the Commodore 64 home computer.
Every song a hit – every hit a smack! This song absolutely blew up on a massive scale when it first came out. It was quite fun to do although arduous at the same time. lol
Technical Brief I use a few core tools in creating these tracks. Some are new, some are old (and emulated). Let’s start with the old since this is where all the sound design happens. Ever since the 80’s, I have written in assembler my own C64 Music & Sound effect…
8 bit Bitpop (Chiptune) cover of an awesome 80s song – Made with the sounds of the Commodore 64 home computer.
I wanted that bangy-clangy sound so I’ve used a bit of ring-mod in this one. Kinda feels like how I did Kiss’ ‘I was made for loving you’ – but different. 👍
One (or two) of my most loved features of the 6581/8580 SID Chip is its Ring and Sync-Mod capabilities. I don’t use them often since they are hard beasts to master. I’ve gone for quite a bit of ring/sync in this one.
I’ve also done a nice little transition from a real whistle to a ring-modded SID generated one.
Made with the sounds of the Commodore 64 home computer.
Brown, blue, violet sky, hurtful, purple, green & mean – Anything you like. Spin the wheel, see if you win!
I don’t know how I wanted this one to sound but the way it turned out is exactly how I wanted it to sound – part carnival/funfair and part glorified ice cream van. 😁
I’ve been to the Brisbane City Amusement Centre and the Sunnybank Amusement Centre and noticed how more games are skills based carnival games rather than video games. I think that’s where my carnival inspiration came for this low-fidelity cover.
I’ve teamed up with @HeartBeatHero for this remake of Never Can Say Goodbye. This guy is awesome, just listen to what he’s done with this. He has been making Synthwave for years. Go check him out: https://www.facebook.com/heartbeatheromusic/
Part one of a three part article on how these Pop classics are deconstructed and remade with the sounds of my favourite 80’s computer, the Commodore 64, then layered with vocals. Introduction I’ve been seeing this comment quite a bit when I post new music up to Youtube, Soundcloud, Bandcamp…
Made with the sounds of the Commodore 64 home computer.
I had a fella leave a comment on Reddit after I asked what other Iconic Aussie songs I could consider doing and he came back with “How good are you at emulating bagpipes?”. That could only mean one thing. This song.
I actually tried doing this one a few months ago but it ended up on the cutting room floor because the vocals I have are, well, not the standard I wanted. But I really like this song and wanted to have a go at those 8-bit bagpipes!
Since I recently did ‘Lily Was Here’ and that is an instrumental. I thought “why the hell not?”. So I’ve picked up from where I left off with this one. I tried again to massage the vocals into the piece but, nope, it just wasn’t working for me.
Here’s ‘You’re the Voice’ – no vocals but still quite bitpop. Still using exclusively the sounds of the Commodore 64.
Made with the sounds of the Commodore 64 home computer.
I think I’ve mentioned that I love Sia. 😂
Her music is super expressive and heavily utilises moody & serious chord progressions. I like her as a performer too. She often compliments her singing with performance art – possibly as she doesn’t see herself as a performer – it works for me just the same whatever her reasons are. Her vocal capabilities are also amazing. I know I’m using cover singers but these cover singers have a tough job in doing one of her songs.
So here’s my go at ‘Elastic Heart’s in six SID channels. The percussion alone is two channels. I hope you like it.
Made with the sounds of the Commodore 64 home computer.
When this song came out in 1989, I couldn’t stop listening to it. I remember recording it onto a tape for my car stereo and playing it over and over again. There’s a few songs that I remember over time incessantly playing – The Obvious Child, Paul Simon, Elecktraglide, David Whittaker,
My plan for this song is to do multiple versions by targeting various sound chips from the 80s. I’m starting with my beloved C64 SID chip but I also plan to do a Amstrad/ZX Spectrum, NES & Gameboy version of this song. Over time, not straight away. It’s going to be a side project.
It’s strange, I used to do instrumental only pieces but now I’ve grown accustomed to doing these Bitpop songs with vocals, I’m a little scared to do a song without vocals as I have nowhere to hide the imperfections.
This remains to be Bitpop even though it doesn’t have any vocals as I am still using modern sound production techniques to aide the underlying chiptune.
Recollection C64
Scene-newbies appear to be lost about the past, confused, or even being totally ignorant about it. As in, how things worked back then, how it all came to be, the ‘unwritten rules’ etc.
Kick Assembler
A cross-platform assembler that works in a very high-level way if you to choose to use it as such. Supports 6510CPUs and the C64 in general.
SIDin Magazine
A Sid paper magazine for Sid people! Each issue has an editorial, a news section, an interview and 2 (technical) articles.
“The Zen master was asked the solemn question--what is Buddha? He took off his sandal, put it on his head, and walked away.”
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