When video games and music come together and create memories

Trit_warhol
Wednesday, August 08, 2012
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Rob Savillo

I guess I'm a little strange in that I've never listened to records while playing a video game, but Tristan shares a few of his favorite albums that evoke memories of past virtual experieces.

When my wife and I started dating, I began using the same cologne I wear today. It's to the point now where I can't even smell it anymore. I, apparently, exude a frangracne of apples and selected spices all the time. Either that or my olfactory senses are shot to hell.

My hearing, while dulled by decades worth of music turned up to 11, isn't quite as indifferent. I've shared at least one tale of sound driving me through the depths of emotion, but you can rest assured that music doesn't always drive me to tears. It often sparks a sense of nostalgia tied to games and places from the past, and I'd like to share some of those with you.

 

A Perfect Circle: Mer Der Noms vs. Vagrant Story

When I was in my mid-teens, I was an awkward beast. The closest I'd come to a romantic relationship were text-based conversations with Aeris Gainsborough, and most of you can guess how that turned out (sniff). I was, however, listening to music written by people who appeared to have the same predilection for the melodramatic that I had developed in my near isolation.

A Perfect Circle's debut album, Mer Der Noms was the perfect accompaniment for the years I spent with Vagrant Story. The brooding arrangements and lyrics loaded with sexual and spiritual undertones and even the album artwork were great matches for the darkened cellars, revealing costumes, and evil magic and intrigue that made Lea Monde such a memorable locale. The swaying rhythm of songs like "The Rose" seemed to perfectly match the game's combat system, which required precise inputs in time with the swing of Ashley Riot's blade. The instrumental piece, "Renholder," mirrored the beauty and mystery of the maze-like Snowfly Forest.

Both Mer Der Noms and Vagrant Story hold up pretty well today. Sure, the former may be linked to feelings of loneliness and desperation to which I can no longer fully relate, and the latter's technical brilliance may have been eclipsed (more on a hardware front than anything else), but I still indulge in the combination today. A few weeks ago, I tweeted that every time I hear vocalist Maynard James Keenan and co. that I have the burning desire to relive my days as a blacksmithing Riskbreaker. To my surprise and delight, a complete stranger replied that he enjoyed the same association.

Fucked Up: The Chemistry of Common Life vs. Blur

In the lead-up to what was a relatively stress-free wedding, I was given the opportunity to work in a senior role for a few weeks to gain some valuable experience and some extra cash. It was a pretty brutal month in an area that offered some truly eye-opening experiences, and with every weekend, there came a nervous energy that I needed to expel.

Unfortunately for me, the Grand Final for the National Rugby League's Telstra Premiership fell on the penultimate weekend of my secondment. My fiancé was watching that game and the day's worth of fanfare whether I needed to escape or not. It also meant the television was claimed to watch the action; it'd be hard to even get my game on. I was getting desperate, so I plunged into the abyss that was our spare room and found an old, tiny TV. Fucked Up on my iPod and Blur on my PlayStation 3: I was going to ram my way out of this feeling of helplessness.


Fucking carnage

As the raw, throbbing rage of "Magic Word" pulsed through my head, I collided with expensive cars and felt my anger rub off on my opponents along with a great deal of paint. Challenge me and be trashed; I raced ahead of everyone and everything...I was getting the wins I needed. In somewhat of a contradiction, "No Epiphany" was on repeat for the better part of the day; I could see the light at the end of the tunnel.

Beck: Guero vs. Mercenaries: Playground of Destruction

Despite an abundance of violence and destruction, Mercenaries turned out to be a reasonably light-hearted affair. The absence of color and the epic soundtrack may have had one believing that this was yet another generic sandbox action game, but when Mattias Nilsson mutters about his love for M67 frag grenades and threatens that the Korean DMZ will be even more dangerous upon his arrival, you know there'll be some laughs to be had.

After a few hours of hunting war criminals to a score of lofty orchestral pieces, I decided that Guero would be a more appropriate aural supplement for my adventures. I can remember "Missing" playing as I searched aimlessly for a "card" hidden in a treachorous North Korean valley. "Rental Car" blared through my speakers as I bundled over hillsides in an Allied Nations humvee. "Hell Yes" was a fitting match to some of my more beligerent helicopter flights that saw firey death rain on whomever pulled the short straw with regards to my mixed political interests.

Flushing out the odd warlord with a bunker buster sounds heavy enough, but with the help of Beck and some the best vehicle controls I've enjoyed in an action game, fun was always on the agenda.


Are there any albums you associate with some of your favorite games? Has anyone else tried mashing these combinations together with the same level of success?

 
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Comments (5)
Default_picture
August 08, 2012

Star Wars Duel of the Fates mixed with any action game. A few years ago while going to grad school and working full time, there were periods where I would become extremely frustrated or stressed. To remedy this I would play Call of Duty 4 and just rampage. One night as a joke my room mate put Duel of the Fates on the stereo, and for some cosmic reason the two mediums clicked. The music would strangely make me focus more than I ever had before with a FPS. It was the only time in my life where I was emotionally invested in a mulitplayer match. 

Another great mix is Podcasts and Minecraft. The two seem to go hand in hand.

Lolface
August 08, 2012

I remember playing the Lost Planet multiplayer demo a few years ago (around 2006), and it was right around then that I realized that I could stream my itunes music from my PC to my 360 wirelessly. I was kind of just testing it out, so I just hit the shuffle button, and honestly, Lost Planet wasn't really that great of a game. In fact, the demo glitched, and no one could win, even after the time limit expired.

Anyway, during the game, the song "In the Deep" by Bird York (the song from the movie Crash) started playing, and suddenly this mediocre third person shooter became almost surreal. In the Deep is a slow, quiet song that to me, for some reason, perfectly fit the snowy desolate landscape of the Lost Planet planet (what planet were they on anyway?). Those 6 minutes that the song played for will probably always be my most memorable multiplayer experience, and again, the game itself was only so-so.

Default_picture
August 08, 2012

Haha, I was actually thinking about writing another article about video games and custom playlists on my Xbox 360. Lol.

I tend to play lots of Battlefield 3. The trailers always have some annoying dubstep music, but the bass electronics always work incredibly well with the urban intensity of the game. So I actually like combining the Beastie Boys' "Hello Nasty" album with my Battlefield 3 sessions. Songs like "Super Disco Breakin'" can truly make for some hard-hitting sessions.

I also like using The Prodigy's "Fat of the Land" album, which has similar loud bass beeps and loud drum beats. The rap in "Diesel Power" works wonders in the Battlefield 3 world.

230340423
August 08, 2012

This is going to sound very strange, but when I was a teenager I played the first Tomb Raider while listening to Remember Two Things by Dave Matthews Band. (I was one of "those" kids.) It fit surprisingly well.

And like Mark, I've definitely combined podcasts and Minecraft as well as MMOs.

Trit_warhol
August 08, 2012

I think I can top that one, Layton. I used to play Shining Force to Madonna's "The Immaculate Collection". Like a Strategy RPG Virgin as it were. 

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