Quantcast

Retro consoles spawn modern music

These awesome bands brandish hardware from gaming’s past to rock the future

Words: Nathan Meunier, GamesRadar US

With every new generation of über-sexy, high-powered gaming consoles, another wave of outdated machines are inducted into the videogame hardware hall of fame – a graveyard of wires and small cartridges destined to gather dust on the top shelf of countless closets. It’s a grim fate for these once-beloved devices. But some old-school game consoles are being resurrected from the dead by the power of rock.


Above: 8-bit musician Nullsleep (aka Jeremiah Johnson) performs onstage

Not content to let classic gaming gear from decades past go to waste, a tech-savvy array of underground musicians are digging out their retro consoles, dusting them off, and firing them up for a new purpose: to rock the living hell out of them. We’ve rounded up a tasty sampling of bands and artists who work their dark magic on once-deceased gaming hardware to blast your eardrums into a state of blippy bliss.


Anamanaguchi

This quartet of young, 8-bit punk rockers unleashes a guitar-driven assault of turbocharged instrumental pop with the support of a hacked NES console. With a high-octane sound that’s influenced as much by the indie music scene as it is by 80s videogame culture, Anamanaguchi’s melodic punk/chiptune hybrid riffs are super energetic and contagiously catchy.


Above: The art for Anamanaguchi’s first album (download link below)

The band writes its rhythms and 8-bit melodies using the Nerdtracker II program, and arranges layered guitar, bass, and drum parts over them. The basic chiptune tracks are then burned to a ROM chip, plopped into a modded cartridge, and played through the NES onstage while the band members shred along on their various instruments. Having successfully embarked on tours in the U.S. and the U.K. in the few years they’ve been around, the group keeps gigging relentlessly and will return to play the 2009 Penny Arcade Expo this fall.


Above: Anamanaguchi’s fifth member


Above: The video for Helix Nebula, also known as the TalkRadar theme song

Links:

Anamanaguchi’s first album, Power Supply (free download)

Anamanaguchi’s new album, Metropolis (Flash site)

Anamanaguchi’s MySpace 


Above: Anamanaguchi rock onstage at the Penny Arcade Expo


The Guitar Zeros

For a band that doesn’t use any actual guitars, The Guitar Zeros still manage to bring the rock in a big way. Consisting of a drummer, a singer and two guys who play hacked Guitar Hero controllers like they were real instruments, the band delivers an audio assault of fuzzed-out electro rock that’s part novelty and part innovation.

They’ve created their own software that lets them run their repurposed Guitar Hero controllers through a laptop, a distortion pedal and an amplifier, allowing each “guitarist” to produce 32 different note combinations and some far-out noise effects with only five buttons. The resulting musical mayhem is highly original, very peculiar, and oddly captivating.

Links:

Official site

The Guitar Zeros’ MySpace


Tree Wave

This Texas-based electro-pop group creates a lush, almost organic sound with an unlikely collection of antiquated electronic hardware from the late ‘70s and early ‘80s. Using two Commodore 64s, an Atari 2600, a Compaq Portable II, a hacked Epson dot matrix printer and lovely female vocals, Tree Wave’s densely layered tracks are complex, melodic, and highly experimental.


Above: Tree Wave onstage in New York City

Band member and tech guru Paul Slocum writes his own code to drive the music and visuals from the devices. Live performances are accompanied by video feeds created on an Atari 2600 and hacked cartridges. Tweaking knobs, turning dials, and playing the Commodore 64 keyboard like a musical instrument, Slocum coaxes electronic beauty from what might otherwise sound to the casual observer like hypnotic, computerized cacophony.


Above: Video for Tree Wave’s SLEEP

Links:

Official site

Tree Wave’s MySpace


Nullsleep

Though Nullsleep (aka Jeremiah Johnson) also composes music on the NES, his weapon of choice is a Game Boy cranked through a sound system at high volume. He creates intensely dynamic pop tunes using the Little Sound DJ homebrew software.


Above: Nullsleep performs at Blip Festivel ‘07

Shifting between introspective, sad melodies and driving, upbeat Game Boy rock anthems, Johnson gets the dance floor moving and pushes the handheld unit’s four sound channels to the limit with his techno-inspired chiptune rock. Onstage, he wields the Game Boy with a ferocious energy, head banging, pumping his fists in the air, and giving in to the thrall of undulating beats and bytes.

A decade ago, Johnson co-founded 8bitpeoples, a DIY record label and collective of musicians who focus on rocking out with early home computers and retro gaming hardware. Johnson also helped organize and sponsor the annual Blip Festival in NYC, which draws scores of chiptune musicians from all over the world to engage in a four-day revelry of fresh music made with outdated computer and videogame consoles. On his own, he continues his ongoing quest to coax increasingly complex sounds from the small devices.


Above: Nullsleep at Blip Festival ‘06

Links:

Official site

Nullsleep’s MySpace

ALL of Nullsleep’s albums (free download)


 
47 Comments
Order Comments: Newest First | Oldest First
GamesRadarBrettElston  - 4 months 8 days ago 
Let's not forget ComputeHer:

http://www.computeher.net/
CapnCrotchPunch  - 4 months 8 days ago 
cool ill d-load all of this music, really cool shit
GamesRadarJoeMcNeilly  - 4 months 8 days ago 
and let us not forget the oft-unlistenable Nintendo Teenage Robots

http://www.myspace.com/nintendoteenagerobots
helloimgaydo  - 4 months 8 days ago 
there is a web site for all this type of synthesis, it is mp3death.us shitloads of stuff to download, and its legal too.
TURbo  - 4 months 8 days ago 
I love videogame music articles. More artists to dload.
helloimgaydo  - 4 months 8 days ago 
oh, and there is an album there called "disco hitler", its bloody hilarious.
averagejoe  - 4 months 8 days ago 
ComputHer? I barely even know her.
planet5421  - 4 months 8 days ago 
Good article.
hiyohi55  - 4 months 8 days ago 
i honestly hate everything about this nintendocore shit.
this is not real music.
this will never be real music.
sorry
helloimgaydo  - 4 months 8 days ago 
GamesRadarJoeMcNeilly, I remember when that album was released. Alec Empire, what a crazy german fruit cake he was/is/will always be.
grappler51  - 4 months 8 days ago 
I love anamanaguchi, everyone go download their songs right now!!
Genericide  - 4 months 8 days ago 
@hiyohi55
Just curious, but if you hate this type of music, why are you commenting in this article to say so? You can see the name of the article before you open it, so why did you do so if you hate this and think it isn't real music? Do you buy tickets to sports teams you don't like or visit concerts of bands you hate? No? Then shut up.
TrIp13G  - 4 months 8 days ago 
I'm surprised Crystal Castles wasn't on here.
435  - 4 months 8 days ago 
Animal Style really has a good Genesis-like feel for being routed through an NES, aside from the bassline.

I dig it.
Silvermech  - 4 months 8 days ago 
If it wasn't for the fact that A Nightmare Before Christmas is starting right now, I'd check all of these people out.
DEFAULT  - 4 months 8 days ago 
Wow, this is a great collection of new interesting sounds to check out. I think I've spent the past two or three hours going through all the links and stuff looking up the artists. Thanks!
BTW, Guitar Zero's program for playing with GH or RB guitars is pretty fun to play with.
understudybass  - 4 months 8 days ago 
This sounds like something Brett masterbates to late into the night.
abetterplayer  - 4 months 8 days ago 
theres a guy that hangs outside hmv in dundee playing awsome cover tunes... he played his game boy version of "hey ya/2 by outkast fucking genious
hiyohi55  - 4 months 8 days ago 
@genericide
if you think this is music (let alone good music) be my fuckin guest dude. i am voicing my opinion. you all love this bleeping blopping mario cumstain shit. i do not. people can comment on which bands they like (like computher or some shit) and i comment on the ones i dont. it just so happens that i dislike every band on this article and consider this "genre" to be a bunch of horseshit. i am just trying to comment (hence the name of this "comment section") on how i feel about the article. that's what i'm supposed to do right? you just got to understand, i'm passionate about this sshit
RooringRA  - 4 months 7 days ago 
@ hiyohi55 If you don't have anything positive to say about the article then there is no point in posting a comment, seriously no one cares that you don't like so stfu.
Related Games
PC
PC
Wii
Wii
PSP
PSP
Xbox 360
Xbox 360