I am not well oriented in NES-music, and I was wondering if there are any lists of "2A03-hacking" over the years? Soundchip hacking is of course a relative term, but I have a generous approach: both CPU-intensive and hardware oriented, delicate or apparent, new or old.
At the moment I am especially interested in older examples, since I am writing a text (actually, a master thesis on chipmusic) where I want to give examples of 'transgressive' uses of soundchips also in the 1980s. There is more than the croak in Fester's Quest, right?
It seems like many NES-composers in the 80s were pretty much following the the 'proposed' uses of lead/backing/bass/perc/ussion of the 5 channels. I hope I am wrong!
Would be very grateful for any suggestions.
What do you call a transgressive use of soundchip ?
I'd guess anything that uses the NES's built-in sound channels for things other than what the Super Mario Bros. series most often used them for.
Triangle channel used as something other than bass: Pipe Dream (used as lead in all background music selections), Super Mario Bros. 3 (used as lead in Boom Boom's theme), Kirby's Adventure (used as backing throughout)
Triangle channel used for most sound effects: Crystal Mines and Exodus by Color Dreams, probably because they hadn't figured out "interrupting"
Really crazy stuff done with low notes on square channels: Klax by Tengen, trying to do thrash metal. It uses hardware sweep to detune the first and second square waves relative to each other, and it uses the looped hardware envelopes for what appear to be rapid strumming and rapid hi-hat hits.
Bass on sample channel: Numerous later Sunsoft games
Sample playback clocked by scanline IRQ: Gauntlet II
Attempt at animating part of the screen while playing uncompressed samples through timed writes to DAC: Title screen of Skate or Die 2
@bregalad: transgressive uses of soundchips is for example finding/inventing (depends on your philosophical bias hehe) new waveforms, such as soundemon's noise-trick on the SID, saw tooth or 2-tone filter on the Pokey, little-scale's TIA-stuff. or new tunings for a soundchip, like tlr's vic20-stuff or little-scale's TIA-stuff again. using sampled sounds in new ways, such as soundemon/thcm's C64-stuff, geir tjelta's delay/reverb effect. doing PWM where it's not supposed to be made (tlr on the vic20, someone on the Pokey, someone on the gameboy). or maybe just introducing "soft synthesis" stuff such as very fast envelopes in LSDj. things like that...
@tepples: ...but this is very interesting too! i like the sound of klax a lot. the hi hat sounds make me think of the gameboy. does the NES have the same freaky noise channel as the gameboy?
Well the only "trick" on the NES that comes to mind is the Saw Wave Blargg made out of the DMC channel (and he was able to make a triangle wave exactly like the triangle channel too if I remember well).
Another trick was to use the sweeps for doing vibrato without ticks in the sounds.
Well in short, ask Blargg.
PS : Fester's Quest / Blaster Master 's frog sound isn't a undoccumented trick, it just uses really short timed triangle notes at 60Hz.
I guess there's not of an example of this other than on the cart, but on Garage Cart when turned on immediately does a strange beep through the DAC, using the address pattern generated by CHR-RAM clearing.
I wrote a phoneme-based speech synthesizer that uses the DPCM channel. There's no trick to that, the chip has an option to trigger an IRQ when a sample ends. So it can even run in the background (the NSF version has to poll $4015 though, as NSFs don't include IRQ).
The trick blargg did with the DPCM saw wave is awesome, I'm surprised no-one has used it.
There's also my Squeedo synth. It uses the DAC of the NES for it's controls and sound output, but it's a separate chip running a soft synth. Not really released though in a way to show it off.
Howdy goto80!
In addition to the great suggestions from tepple's list, you may be interested in The Immortal by Rob Hubbard. It's the only classic NES soundtrack I know of that uses a tiny looped sample to create a sustaining melodic pitch. It creates a deep saw or pulse-like sounding bass line.
Melodic DPCM lines were pretty rare. Not sure if they'd qualify for you as transgressive, but out-of-the-norm they were. There are the later Sunsoft titles which (imho) did it best, with titles like Journey to Silius, Batman Return of the Joker, Gremlins 2, Gimmick!, and some others. A couple non-sunsoft examples would be Fire 'n Ice (didn't repitch the samples at all, every different note is a different sample!) and Zombie Nation.
I really liked "Normydian Star" (original entry 31) from
Famicompo mini vol. 4. Nothing groundbreaking maybe, but it produces lots of cool waveforms.
thanx for all the tips everybody! good stuff. nyrmodian star sounds really great, it really has a modern feel to it with the cutup-style, 'time-stretching', and what not. does anyone know which tracker he used?
@bucky: hello!
which subtune is it that you mean in the immortal? it plays a melody with a tiny sample, like on the amiga...?
@bregalad: i think tricks based on documented features is also interesting. it's difficult to draw a line between intended/unintended uses, so i am also interested in the things that 'just' sound new aswell, like nyrmodian star. and NES-frogs!
Ah, let me take a look-
nsf tracks 2, 8, 17, 18, 20 & 25 all have those long bass notes. like some amiga music, it's a very short sample that creates that sound.
Some ideas from stuff I've done:
When I was starting on SMS music, I got frustrated with how it only has 50% squares, so I tried playing them at octaves at varying volumes, and bam, new approximation of a different waveform.
The part near the end of this song is kind of like a NES version of this technique (past 2:30). Never actually did a lot more than that.
http://nsf.4x86.com/nsfs/The_Battle_Continues.nsf
Also, using DPCM to make triangle "echo"
http://4x86.com/reef.nsf
and triangle "echo" without using DPCM for it (past 0:40):
http://nsf.4x86.com/nsfs/Aerial_Assault.nsf
and last but not least, a happy accident song, where the premise was cooked up almost entirely with a MML glitch (the "chords" are .. um, vibrato)
http://nsf.4x86.com/nsfs/1-X-0.nsf
for those who care, i've started a wiki about 'soundchip hacking' and it would be great if any of you wanted to join in!
http://8bitcollective.com/wiki/index.ph ... ip_Hacking
@rushjet1: that's some very nice stuff! i like how you use that new waveform for like 10 seconds and then just stop
also, if you feel like adding some info at that wiki, that would be great!
goto80 wrote:
for those who care, i've started a wiki about 'soundchip hacking' and it would be great if any of you wanted to join in!
http://8bitcollective.com/wiki/index.ph ... ip_Hacking
cool will be an interesting read
OT: btw. your godzilla performance in malmö was excellent :D