Bitmob Community Jukebox No. 18 -- Wily Edition

This edition has an unprecedented first for the Jukebox: two songs from the same franchise. Regardless of your own feelings about the Blue Bomber, Mega Man has definitely had his fair share of great tunes over the years.

Check out Burning Sorrow from Vandal Hearts. It's sung by Jandraka Stojakvić, and, to my knowledge, it's the only use of the Croatian language in a Japanese or American video game that exists (please, correct me if I'm wrong).

Also, make sure to listen to the surf and hip-hop tunes suggested by A. J. Minotti and Michael Pangelina; A Tribe Called Quest rules!

As always, newcomers should be sure to hit the jump to learn more about the submission guidelines.

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I've got two ways to set your nostalgia all aflutter:


Method 1: Pick and Choose


My Selections

1) Mega Man X -- Spark Mandrill

2) Vandal Hearts -- Burning Sorrow

3) Final Fantasy XII -- Final Fantasy

4) Rival Schools -- In a Classroom of Sunshine High School

5) Spider-Man and Venom: Maximum Carnage -- Boss Fight 2* (by Green Jellÿ)

Community Selections

6) Hunter Hunted -- The Taste of Flesh suggested by Bryan Harper

7) Mega Man -- Bomb Man suggested by Ryan Conway

8) Grim Fandango -- Bone Wagon suggested by A. J. Minotti

9) Darkwing Duck -- Title* suggested by Alex R. Cronk-Young

10) Bust a Groove -- 2 Bad suggested by Travis McReynolds

11) Phoenix Write: Ace Attorney -- Godot, The Fragrance of Dark Coffee suggested by David Matos

12) Thrasher: Skate and Destroy -- Award Tour (by A Tribe Called Quest) suggested by Michael Pangelina

13) Section Z -- Level 1* suggested by Jason Wilson

14) Assassin's Creed -- Ezio's Family suggested by J. Cosmo Cohen

15. Tekken 6 -- Anger of the Earth Theme suggested by Daniel Feit (++good)


Method 2: Let It Ride


(Click here to listen in a separate window.)

 


For all you newcomers, here's how it works. Even though I wrote a Meet the Mob post, you should know something important about me. For some reason, over the years my mind has acted as a sort of a Roledex for great videogame ditties. (For all you younger Bitmobbers, a Rolodex is an archaic device that people used to keep important contact information. I guess it's sort of like an abacus at this point.)

Because of this, every Monday I post 15 well-known and not-so-well-known video game songs for the Bitmob community.

It's got a catch, however -- I don't provide all of the songs. If the community doesn't fill out the roster of 15, I fill it out. Most of the songs come from you -- hopefully, they're pieces that I have never heard -- and only a few spring from my mental Rolodex.

Ultimately, I'd like enough suggestions that only five -- ideally, just one -- come from me, thus truly making this the Bitmob Community Jukebox.

It's important to note that community members receive credit for providing submissions.

The only guidelines are that any submission must be from a nonmusic game or from a music game with original content. Licensed songs are also OK, but they must be from something other than a music game.

This means that Fallout and Grand Theft Auto songs are fair game, but Guitar Hero and Rock Band songs are not. If licensed songs become too prolific, however, I may stop taking them as submissions.

Also, I will try my hardest to find the original names of every submission, but if I can't, I will give it a name and mark it with an asterisk. In addition, all songs are set to open in a new tab, so feel free to click away and have them play in the background as you surf Bitmob or get some work done.

Songs appear in no particular order whatsoever, but I do list community submissions at the end.

Each week, I choose my favorite submission, The Double-Plus Good Pick of the Week. The winner receives exactly nothing, other than his submission is the last song and gets the "++good" notation next to their entry.

As a small guideline, if you'd like to win the The Double-Plus Good Pick of the Week, try to pick something obscure or, at the very least, recent. We all know titles like Mega Man and Final Fantasy had great music in the 8-bit and 16-bit eras, and I feature songs like these every week (that's my bread and butter).

But in the interest of keeping the Jukebox new and surprising, if you can come up with a great song that I've forgotten or, better yet, have never heard, you'll have a leg up on the competition. Just keep in mind what I said at the top, and if you've read my Meet the Mob, the size of my game case.

Either way, feel free to submit whatever you like. Please. I can't reinforce this enough: All submissions are welcome.

As an added bonus, I also try to add an immediate comment about the awesomeness of the winner commenter's song and why everyone else should pay special attention to it. This will be an in-joke for those who keep up.

Most importantly, since I hope to keep doing this for awhile, only one submission per person per each edition of the Bitmob Community Jukebox. That way I'll have less to parse, and you will be able to submit for an extended period of time. If you submit multiple requests, I will not listen to any of them.

Again, only one submission response per person per post.


P.S. Apologies to Timothy Nellett. Ain't No Rest for the Wicked was chosen in Jukebox No. 14.

Comments (12)

I've been a Tekken player for many years. Even been in some tournaments (with no great result). Let me tell you, generally Tekken music sucks.

Most fighting game music does too. It's true that fighting games need music that is pretty amped, but at the same time ignorable, so that the participants get a sense of thrill while also not being distracted. This is the quandary of fighting game music.

It's actually a very fine line, and Daniel Feit's newest selection toes it well. The song is perfect background music when you think about it in a fighting game sense; but, at the same time, when you put it under focus, it's actually a very dense, smart track.

Fighting game developers should take note.THIS is how you do fighting game music.
James DeRosa , December 07, 2009
Sorry David. I experienced ninety technical difficulties while posting this article, and you posted your suggestion in the middle of that.

I did, however, save your comment, and here it is:
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Man, I'm really getting into this series of articles. I ignored it for awhile but I'm really loving some of the ones that are selected. Keep it up James

Xenosaga Episode 2 OST- "Labyrinthos"- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xUnM4ar94EY

For those who played through the Xenosaga series, this is one of the best music mathces to an area, Perfectly captures the atmosphere of Labrinthos.
James DeRosa , December 07, 2009
Haha, no worries James. I can imagine posting these in Myblog can be a pain in the ass.

Tekken does have good soundtracks, except Tekken 6 only had a few I liked. Tekken 4 and 5 had the best IMO.
David Matos , December 07, 2009
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8bMgUMj54dY

Blue Orb By Kahimi Karie, from the We Love Katamari Soundtrack. An unusual Katamari song but definitely influenced by Karie's early music which was composed by Momus.
Jasmine Maleficent Rea , December 07, 2009
www.youtube.com/watch?v=kGBdBg2o42Y

Might as well finish the Borderlands set: No Heaven by DJ Champion.
Evan Killham , December 07, 2009
Every jukebox surprises me. It seems there is a neverending flow of great video game music. Sadly, I cannot think of anything to suggest this second, so I will be back with my suggestion.
Lance Darnell , December 08, 2009
James, the new banner is great! Is it me, or did no one receive ++good this time? Like Lance, I'll be back with my suggestion. Hopefully.
J. Cosmo Cohen , December 08, 2009
This is suggestion may seem a little strange as it is more of an instrumental track and the game hasn't left Japan yet but it is still one of my favourites.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UznEZUIy5UA

It is the main theme for Professor Layton & The Last Time Travel
Ryan Conway , December 09, 2009
Ryan Conway , December 09, 2009
I'll have you someday, ++! Let's try some classic OutRun (no remix BS this time).
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yN29mw-ZNAE
Travis McReynolds , December 12, 2009
A Tribe Called Quest DOES rule. I disagree about the Tekken soundtracks, though. I've loved all of them (I haven't been able to play 6 on consoles, yet, so I won't comment about that one).
Michael Pangelina , December 13, 2009
Alex R. Cronk-Young , December 14, 2009

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