OverClocked ReMix , also known as OC ReMix and OCR , is a non-commercial organization dedicated to maintaining and respecting video game music through setting and interpreting repeated songs, both with new technologies and software and in many traditional ways. The main focus of OC ReMix is ââits website, ocremix.org , which freely hosts over 3,000 customized fan video game arrangements, information about games and game composers, and resources for candidates artist. In addition to individual work, called "ReMixes", the site hosts more than 70 music albums, including both setting albums centered on specific video games, series, or themes, and original compositions albums for video games. The OC ReMix community created the soundtrack of SuperChighter II's Turbo HD Remix for Capcom in 2008, and began publishing licensed commercial albums in 2013.
The founder of OverClocked ReMix and its parent company OverClocked ReMix, LLC is David W. Lloyd (aka djpretzel), who coined the word "ReMix" to refer to a typical and interpretive setting, as opposed to a remix that usually involves a less transformative change to the original work. Lloyd initially curated all submissions to the site, but since 2002, filings are judged by a panel of community members for quality and originality. This site has been received positively by critics and video game industry professionals, and some video game composers have sent their own ReMix. Some of OC ReMix's contributors have gone on to have a professional video game composition career.
Video OverClocked ReMix
Histori
OverClocked ReMix was founded by David W. Lloyd, using the djpretzel screen name, as a video game hosting website for music on December 11, 1999. Lloyd, who recently made the theme setting of the title of Phantasy Star III: Generations of Doom titled "Legacy", created the "DJ Pretzel's OverClocked ReMix" database as a way to host and share it and other settings and remixes. The name was taken from OverClocked , webcomic about playing and emulating Lloyd's video game. "ReMix" is a term he created to distinguish interpretative settings from remixes that typically involve less transformative changes to master records. Over the next few months, Lloyd began adding arrangements from other artists.
The website format comes from Commodore 64's C64Audio.com settings site, then hosted to many fan settings; Lloyd chose to have OverClocked ReMix which expanded the focus to all games regardless of the game system. Originally encoded in basic HTML and sporting an orange color scheme, and located on remix.overclocked.org, Lloyd's webcomic subdomain, the site underwent some visual redesign before moving to www.ocremix.org in July 2003 and its current design in 2004 the site is hosted by ZTNet and run directly by Lloyd; in 2006, became independent and moved into dedicated hosting, and, in 2007, Lloyd listed OverClocked ReMix as a limited company.
At its founding, music delivery to the site was evaluated for inclusion only by Lloyd, which required that all settings meet its quality bar and also display the original interpretation of the music, rather than minimally changing the original song. In early 2002, however, to better accommodate the volume of music submissions and improve consistency of selection, Lloyd instituted a panel of judges, composed of artists and qualified contributors to the community, to assist him in music selection, even though he was still providing early evaluations. of all shipping to meet the minimum quality bar. Judge Larry Oji (a.k.a. Liontamer) became head of the submision evaluator for the organization in June 2006, taking over most of Lloyd's evaluation work and releasing it to focus on the site and the company itself.
Maps OverClocked ReMix
Key features
The main focus of OverClocked ReMix is ââhosting and distributing video game music settings. The site has over 3,000 "ReMixes" of various genres, submitted by over 900 "ReMixers". ReMixes is available for individual downloads and through bundled BitTorrent distributions, and can be searched through game databases, composers, companies, systems, and the Creator. ReMixes is released under a non-commercial content policy, which requires attribution.
ReMix is ââadded to the site once submitted by the author and passed by a panel of judges by standards and guidelines that encourage regulatory creativity and high production quality. Since the establishment of the site, more than 150 works have been removed after initially received, generally due to strict enforcement of site standards upon receipt of employment. To meet inclusion standards, the work must show significant regulatory work rather than "MIDI rip", a term used for the work that takes the transcription of source material and makes only slight modifications to it. Other obstacles to include include stolen or unoriginal records, cover versions that change performance but not the music itself, different arrangements so far from unrecognizable source material, and clear sub-nominal execution. The site also has a database of the skills of its community members to encourage artist collaboration. Lloyd and other staff also conducted interviews with productive ReMixers Producers, music video game composers, and celebrities about making music video games.
Albums
In addition to individual ReMix, OC ReMix is ââalso home to original album and music settings. These albums are usually created as a collaboration among ReMixers groups; OC ReMix has released more than 70 albums. The majority of these are album settings, although it also hosts and distributes original soundtrack albums for indie games. These albums are released for free, and are generally created by members of the ReMix community. Titles include iOS games Trench , Xbox Live Arcade games Revert All Robots! , and Master Missile, Episode 1: Invasion .
In 2008, OverClocked ReMix musicians were selected to handle the soundtrack of Super Street Fighter II Turbo HD Remix after Capcom USA associate producer Rey Jimenez heard the 2006 2006 Super Street Fighter II Turbo album < i> Blood on the Asphalt . Titled OC ReMix: Super Street Fighter II Official Turbo HD Remix Soundtrack , the full 66-track album was released freely in OverClocked ReMix. This album includes a new setting, an edited version of the Blood on the Asphalt track, and previous remixes from the site. Remixers organize music based on the knowledge of the Street Fighter II series only, since the music for the game has been completed before the visual and gameplay. Founder of OC ReMix David "djpretzel" Lloyd directs the soundtrack and serves as organizational contact with Capcom "to ensure that working with a large fan community is as close as possible to Capcom to working with a single composer". Jimenez praised HD Remix as "above and beyond our expectations" and OC ReMix's efforts as "one of the most rewarding aspects of working on SF HD Remix ". Capcom is then Vice President of Strategic Planning & amp; Business Development, Christian Svensson, described the soundtrack as "impacting" and claimed in an interview that in a demo the remix music game was praised before any other aspect. In his review of HD Remix , IGN praised OC ReMix's work as a "great respect for the original soundtrack". Other entities with favorable reviews of the soundtrack include Eurogamer, GameSpot, Official Xbox Magazine, and GamesRadar, as well as old game composer "The Fat Man" George Sanger, referring to Capcom-OC ReMix Collaboration as "Game Audio 2.0 ".
In addition to its free album, the site partnered with Capcom in 2013 to release OC ReMix's first commercial album, For Everlasting Peace: 25 Years Mega Man , featuring licensed settings from various Mega Man soundtrack. In 2014, OverClocked ReMix expanded its public wing into an associated record label, OverClocked Records, where it sold licensed songs and albums. In July 2015, the label published the first officially licensed remix, setting "Song of the Ancients" from Nier for streaming or purchasing.
Reception
According to Lloyd, OC ReMix has grown steadily over the years, both in terms of visitor and delivery. The entry of new visitors occurs when an article about the site is published on news sites like Slashdot and Monthly Electronic Games . This site has been covered by sites like Electronic Monthly Magazine , G4techTV, PC Gamer , 1UP.com, Game Informer , Ars Technica, Minnesota Public Radio, Hyper , and more. OC ReMix does not advertise or market itself, though OverClocked ReMix makes an appearance at fan conventions; the first is Otakon 2006 in Baltimore, Maryland. In April 2008, Lloyd and Oji joined Six Apart's Anil Dash, MetaFilter's Matt Haughey, Reddit's Alexis Ohanian, and Drew Curtis from FARK.com for a panel discussion about a virtual community at the Internet memorization convention ROFLCon sponsored by Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Starting in 2008, OC ReMix's promotional CD has been awarded as a contest prize in every performance of the game orchestra series, Live Video Games at the invitation of the composer and co-creator of the Tommy Tallarico series; ReMixes played in the concert hall before the show on June 29 and June 30, 2007, the Kennedy Center show in Washington, D.C.
According to a 2005 interview, the organization never received negative feedback from a game composer or game publisher, and Lloyd stated, "Like all the communities around fans, we come out first and foremost in honor of what we love, and I thought concepts and goals have been well received all around. "Some professional video game composers commented positively about OC ReMix, such as Tommy Tallarico, Jeremy Soule, George" The Fat "Sanger, Hiroki Kikuta, Alexander Brandon, Barry Leitch, Nicholas Varley, and David Wise. OverClocked ReMix has also been praised for its work by non-composer industry figures including Doom mainstream designer John Romero and Contra 4 partner producer Tomm Hulett, who said he hopes the music of this game, rated by Jake "virt" Kaufman, will be set to OC ReMix in the future.
In addition to praising OC ReMix and its work, some professional game composers have sent their own ReMix to the site. The first was at the end of 2002 by George Sanger, "Fat Dance", mixing his own compositions from The 7th Guest. In early 2004, this was followed by the second ReMix of its kind, "Squaresoft Variation" ( Final Fantasy VI ) by Jeremy Soule, dedicated to the founding of OC ReMix David W. Lloyd and Final Fantasy composer of the Nobuo Uematsu series. In 2005, Sanger provided another ReMix of his own work done with Fat Team colleagues and game composers Dave Govett, Joe McDermott and K. Weston Phelan, titled "Wing Theme Surf" ( Wing Commander). Composer Tommy Tallarico released Earthworm Jim Anthology , a music album from the Earthworm Jim series , in 2006, which included songs originally sent to OC ReMix by another arranger. In October 2009, composer Alexander Brandon and ReMixer Jimmy "Big Giant Circles" Hinson collaborated to organize songs made by Brandon for the game Deus Ex, which expanded in 2013 into an eight-track album collaboration between OC ReMix and Brandon. In March 2010, OC ReMix released the album Donmy Kong Country 2 ReMix, Serious Monkey Business, featuring a cover song performed by original game composer, David Wise, with Grant Kirkhope and Robin Beanland, three composers who have links with Rare's Donkey Kong Country Land franchise.
Several submires of OM ReMix amateurs and community members have turned to the career of professional video game compositions. These include Dain "Beatdrop" Olsen (Dance Dance Revolution SuperNOVA 2), Jillian "pixietricks" Aversa ( Civilization IV: Out of the Sword ), Andrew "zirkon" Aversa (< i> Monkey Island 2 Special Edition: LeChuck's Revenge ), Christopher "Mazedude" Getman (7th Visitors: Infection ), Jimmy "Big Giant Circle" Hinson ( Mass Effect 2 ), Jake "virt" Kaufman ( Shovel Knight ), and Danny Baranowsky ( Super Meat Boy ).
References
External links
- Official website (RSS)
- OverClocked Podcasts - OffCocalized OverClocked Podcasts
- OCR Radio - Official ReCix OverClocked radio streaming
- OverClocked Record - OverClocked ReMix's sister music label
- ReMix OverClocked Discography in MusicBrainz
- ReMix OverClocked publishing catalog in MusicBrainz
Source of the article : Wikipedia