Just to mention a few: Kenny did the music for the excellent One Must Fall:
2097. Several trackers (including Dan Nicholson, a.k.a Maelcum/KFMF) worked
with Toys for Bob on Star Control 2 and Archon Ultra.
Finally, Alexander Brandon (a.k.a Chromatic Dragon and later on Siren/FM)
did some amazing music for some amazing computer games, including but not
limited to Tyrian, Deus-Ex, Unreal (some of his best work!), Unreal
Tournament.
Also, who was it that did the music for Jazz Jackrabbit? To hell with it,
that entire GAME was made exclusively by ex-Ultraforce demosceners.
-----Original Message-----
From: cctech-admin(a)classiccmp.org
[mailto:cctech-admin@classiccmp.org]On
Behalf Of Paul Berger
Sent: Wednesday, February 05, 2003 7:40 AM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: Sierra Adventure Games
On Sun, 2003-02-02 at 14:46, Tomer Gabel wrote:
Regardless the phenomenon was indeed not
widespread in the
US; the major
demo groups were Hornet (Jim Leonard a.k.a
Trixter of
Hornet later went on
> to form
www.oldskool.org,
www.mobygames.com and
www.mindcandydvd.com) and
Reinnaisance (sp? some members went on to program or
do music for games).
I was too old to get involved much with the "demo scene" although the
local computer club we did do stuff like demos back in the late 70's
early 80's before computers became mainstream.
Kenny Chow (CC Catch) of Renissance went on to make game music for Epic
Mega games. I don't know of any recent projects he has done though.
Several better trackers from the early 90s went on to do lots of game
music.
Paul