Theme song
Posted: Sun Mar 17, 2013 3:26 pm
I feel that we need a factorio theme song something we can hum to when we are deep into creating our factories, mods, and ideas for the games
Aza-Industries wrote:I always think of this song when playing..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tEuwAh3LFvM
Can't seem to find a full recording of Carl Stalling's version on youtube. =(
This one also comes to mind...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gyCDLW7n53A
Hehe
Although these are more like theme songs and not something you want to hear repeatedly during game play.
I've been wanting to make a fan made trailer for factorio using one of these songs, as the music picks up I slowly zoom out while I'm heading on a conveyer belt into the heart of production..
You don't want levers, buttons, pressure plates and lamps?Lukasecicek wrote:Having music ingame, OR playing my own music from winamp/whatever else people use is enough i suppose...
No more minecraft stuff please
http://musicforprogramming.net/?c=manifestoAesthetic
Through years of trial and error - skipping around internet radio stations, playing our entire music collections on shuffle, or just hammering single albums on repeat, we have found that the most effective music to aid prolonged periods of intense concentration tends to have a mixture of the following qualities:
Drones
Noise
Fuzz
Field recordings
Vagueness (Hypnagogia)
Textures without rhythm
Minor complex chords
Early music (Baroque, lute, harpsichord)
Very few drums or vocals
Synth arpeggios
Awesome
Walls of reverb
Music possessing these qualities can often provide just the right amount of interest to occupy the parts of your brain that would otherwise be left free to wander and lead to distraction during your work.
I mean, it's all explained. We just need music like that or implement a web player, which links to that pageWarning: Pretentiousness.
While concentrating on complex tasks or creative work, we often feed ourselves streams of musical information in an attempt to occupy the parts of our minds that would otherwise be left relatively idle. Without this, over prolonged periods of concentration, those underactive brain centers create a sense of imbalance. Whether this imbalance is real or merely perceived, it can often create distracting interjections from powerfully oblique thoughts about food, memories, desires, and emotions.
Using music in this way is nothing new, but with the wrong choices, we can often find ourselves fighting against thematic intent to such a degree as to almost denigrate the music itself. We train ourselves to 'tune out' and demote what we've chosen to mere background noise.
The goal of this series is to provide listening experiences that can be fully appreciated for their artistic intent despite sometimes having only partial attention paid to them. That is to not to say that the music is not worthy of exclusive attention, but that it contains themes or textures of a certain type that the problem-solving brain centers won't have trouble processing, and fully appreciating, while attempting to code, write, or draw.
In other words, the music itself should not task the listener with too much 'problem solving' of its own. The musical ideas develop and cover large thematic and emotional distances, but rarely in such a short space of time as to sound dramatic.
The back-and-forth motion between contemplation on the next stage of your work, and the subsequent actions to realise it will necessarily create peaks and troughs of brain activity. This series attempts to provide a soundtrack that can be fully appreciated over that entire gamut.
More importantly, the episodes have been lovingly crafted by people who've invested huge chunks of their lives finding all this beautiful stuff. For you.