66487e034f73e

66487e034fc67
1 Guest is here.
 

66487e03502d5nintendoeats

66487e0350358
Hi! I am planning to do some work on a project involving the System Shock sound track, and I would like to have some understanding of how the interactive scoring system works. The only resource I have found on it thus far is a Looking Glass studio podcast which includes Greg LoPiccolo. I was wondering if anybody here has first hand knowledge or is aware of any other resources discussing how it works and behaves.

Thanks!
66487e0350715
I have only very basic information about it that you probably already know: It's based on MIDI tracks and IIRC it supposedly reacts to situations (like combat). Although to be fair I never noticed that in game, unlike in SS2.
Since the Mac source for SS1 is available now, you might be able to gather specific info from that.

66487e0350d2cZylonBane

66487e0350e03
Although to be fair I never noticed that in game, unlike in SS2.
SS2's music is not reactive.

66487e03512f6RoSoDude

66487e035136c
Doesn't the SS2 music respond to what area of the map you're in, at the least? I always recall different drum loops in different parts of Med/Sci (just as it goes away and comes back in different parts of the level), but maybe I'm full of crap.

66487e035146aZylonBane

66487e03514be
The music isn't responding to where you are. Triggers in some maps switch to completely different songs when the player passes over them.

66487e035156cnintendoeats

66487e03515b8
Thanks, I will try to parse the source code. If it is intelligible that would be the most direct route to figuring it out.

66487e03516c3JosiahJack

66487e035170e
GameSrc/MUSICAI.C Is where to start.

66487e03517a7nintendoeats

66487e03517f8
Ah yes, not the in very obvious sound folder :p. Danke

66487e0351f67nintendoeats

66487e0351fb4
I do have a further favor to ask. Reading that article and listening to the available files, I am clearly going to need the original MIDI files to work from. In short, I want to be able to rebuild the different gameplay states and fade between them. All of the files I can find online are tweaked, so I am trying to extract them myself. Unfortunately the XMI-MID programs will not run in 64-bit windows (I presume that they have a 16-bit launcher).  I am planning to install Windows XP mode tomorrow to try and sort this out, but given that's not exactly secure these days I would appreciate it if anybody who has them on hand could provide them. Again, thank you!

Edit: Scratch that, I found ssplayer. All is well.
« Last Edit: 26. April 2018, 06:03:16 by nintendoeats »

66487e0352070JosiahJack

66487e03520bb
Please note SSplayer doesn't have the transitional sequences and a few "tertiary" sequences.  There should be an xmi converter around here somewhere though.

66487e03528d1nintendoeats

66487e0352c5c
Please note SSplayer doesn't have the transitional sequences and a few "tertiary" sequences.  There should be an xmi converter around here somewhere though.

I was going to say "I can probably get away without those", but I decided to take another look around. I didn't appreciate how widespread the XMI format was; as it turns out foo_midi which I was already using will play them directly. However, there are things that ssplayer pulled out which foo_midi does not, and I think those may be the transitional riders. It's possible that ssplayer will extract them but not play them. Is this an example of the sorts of transitions you are talking about?
[SS Music Transition Test.wav expired]

66487e0352e14nintendoeats

66487e0352f62
Followup question: does anybody know what specific piece of Roland equipment was used to compose the soundtrack.  I'm experimenting with a variety of soundfonts to play this music (plus MUNT) and I am narrowing down which ones at least work, but if possible I would like to use something close to the equipment actually used to compose it. At present I'm thinking that I will have two versions, one using something like 8MBGMSFX to represent a typical player experience and one using something similar to LoPiccolo's gear.
66487e0353071
Just ask Greg LoPiccolo on facebook or something

66487e0353105JosiahJack

66487e0353154
Others on here seem to agree it was most likely Roland SC-55.

66487e0353576nintendoeats

66487e03535d3
Others on here seem to agree it was most likely Roland SC-55.

Thanks, I've been debating between that and the SC-1. Unfortunately the SC-55 soundfont I have sounds a bit odd in spots. I am going to look into emulators for it.

66487e0353a39nintendoeats

66487e0353b2f
Don't know if this helps, but there is an official VST for it https://www.roland.com/global/products/sound_canvas_va/

Yes, I'd seen that. $125 american exceeds it's value to me. I've been using the SC-1 soundfont to sort out the sections and it consistently sounds "right", so I've all but decided to use it. Luckily I can change my mind at more or less any time :p

Thanks though.

66487e0353c61nintendoeats

66487e0353caf
In case anybody comes here asking similar questions to mine, this pack contains the raw MIDIs labelled as best I can. I have educated guesses for all but 3 files. Each has a tag indicating what the file is named when first extracted from SSplayer.

After carefully combing over it I do not believe that there is anything missing. I was working from a lets play and at no point did I hear anything which did not exist in those files. The only exception would be sections which faded into each other over 4 bars, which isn't actually new data.
« Last Edit: 01. May 2018, 21:37:00 by Moderator »

66487e0353ea0nintendoeats

66487e0353eeb
Here is an updated version of the above MIDIs which is more accurate. Unfortunately the tags have not carried over.
« Last Edit: 09. July 2018, 22:36:02 by Moderator »
1 Guest is here.
Dr. Haley tells him to do whatever he must to get them out.
Contact SMF 2.0.19 | SMF © 2016, Simple Machines | Terms and Policies
FEEP
66487e0354012