Cincinnati game developers are preparing to launch , an eSports-inspired party game, Thursday at . Not only is the team that created it local but so is the music composer who scored it, . Increasingly, people are noticing these computer game composers and are finding their music on Spotify.
This is veteran composer Brennan'sfirst video game score and he admits there were some challenges. "It's the first time I've had to write loopable music," he explains. "If they're just sitting on that menu screen the music just keeps on playing forever. Or if they're in a really long game the music will continue to play to that exact length."
Video game music so fascinated University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music Ph.D. candidate Sarah Pozderac-Chenevey she decided to do her dissertation on it. "I was born in the late '80s and we had an NES (Nintendo Entertainment System) and a N 64 and a Sega Genesis and I played a lot of Zelda as a kid."
She explains in the Super Mario days there wasn't much storage for music but today, with digital downloads and blue-ray discs, there is plenty of memory. "They were really constrained and a lot of creativity grew out of those constraints," she says. "We have a lot of really iconic tunes from that time period like Super Mario Brothers. Everybody knows the 'game over' music."
One of her more recent favorites is the cello and flute music scored by for the independent adventure game Journey.
, another one of Pozderac-Chenevey's favorites. Korb describes his sound as "an acoustic frontier trip hop."
Big budget video games have entire symphonic pieces composed like the Legend of Zelda series.
Pozderac-Chenevey doesn't expect video games and its music to slow down. There's even an