|
Post by Malev on Aug 20, 2012 3:00:04 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by rorshacma on Aug 21, 2012 11:47:41 GMT -5
The ones I always noticed is the "Some Dance, wanna put you in a trance!" line that was in both P3 and Star Ocean 3. Star Ocean 3 - Bitter DancePersona 3 - Iwatodai StationBitter Dance also contains the "Feel the fire with the burnin' desire" and "Move that body, move that body, make sure you dont' hurt nobody!" lines at around 26 seconds.
|
|
|
Post by TangoBunny on Aug 31, 2012 9:46:34 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by Malev on Aug 31, 2012 19:24:14 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by TangoBunny on Aug 31, 2012 21:34:59 GMT -5
Oh jeez, three seperate songs in the same game? That's crazy! Adding it to the ever-growing opening post now!
Thanks for the tip, once again, I doubt I'd have ever noticed that myself as I've never played the IIDX games. ^.^
|
|
|
Post by TangoBunny on Sept 3, 2012 2:42:27 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by TangoBunny on Sept 7, 2012 12:43:59 GMT -5
Once again, playing soundtracks on random pays off! The 'check one, check one, when I come down, I come down right to the sun!', 'put the boogie in your body!', and the 'magical mystery scene' raps are used in 'CD Shop' from Persona 2 Innocent Sin
|
|
|
Post by codeman38 on Jun 1, 2013 17:13:47 GMT -5
An additional data point for "let's party, put the boogie in your body"-- see around 1:25 in the options theme from The Flintstones for SNES. Predates the other uses of the clip by nearly a decade--this one came out in 1995! Edited to add: Also, I'm almost certain that the "five, four, three, two, one, do it!" in Hideki Naganuma's Get It 2 Win It is the same "do it!" sample as above, just chopped up. (But of course Naganuma would use it, wouldn't he? )
|
|
|
Post by Allie on Jun 1, 2013 22:22:55 GMT -5
Not surprising that a lot of these samples seem to have wormed their way through Konami's output, really.
A lot of their sound people were synth/sample nerds to begin with. And it seems common to Japanese doujin (for lack of a better term) composers (higher profile ones like Cranky, EarBreaker, or onoken come to mind) or to be all over common samples, even if they're not common to the rest of us at first glance.
|
|
|
Post by cambertian on Jun 2, 2013 11:05:00 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by codeman38 on Jun 8, 2013 21:11:39 GMT -5
Was just listening through the samples of Masterbits' other sample collections on a whim, and found the source of the rap from the KOF Maximum Impact opening. www.masterbits.com/sounds/jukebox/vocal3_s.mp3 - Skip to about 2:44 and you'll hear it loud and clear... Edited to add: The title of this sample CD is "Add Lips". And apparently judging from this page of reviews, this may be where the NASA samples were found as well.
|
|
iwant
Full Member
erotic enka funk breaks
Posts: 225
|
Post by iwant on Jun 17, 2013 19:04:18 GMT -5
I've come accross a somewhat surprising "reused rap" in a video game track. It's probably common knowledge already, and most likley my surprise came from the fact that I didn't grow up in the US, but I'll mention it anyway - who knows. So, I was playing MadWorld, and there is that awesome ain't that funny track by Sick YG. Then, something struck me in its lyrics. "Jack, Jack, he's a psycho maniac!" (1:07) I kind of like the Nostalgia Critic, so I immediatly remembered one of his video covering '80s/'90s commercials. And there was that one Lego ad. "Zack, Zack, he's a Lego maniac!" (0:18) It even has the same flow! Incidentally, the Critic used the exact same idea in its parody (the "psycho maniac" bit). I'm just wondering if this actually is a hidden nod to the ad on Sick YG's part, or an obvious reference that all American players instantly get. I'm not sure of how much this ad is remembered by the public.
|
|
|
Post by strizzuth on Nov 15, 2013 13:03:04 GMT -5
That Apollo 11 sample was used in a commercial song that I have. It's called 31 Seconds and it's by Dirt Bros. It's pretty obscure so I can't find any samples of it online except for this record store. I guess it's not even well liked enough in the dance music community to get onto youtube.
|
|
|
Post by farraman on Dec 7, 2013 12:38:53 GMT -5
I was listening to archives of my favorite radio show, and they had played the sample in one of their bits, and I couldn't believe it. That reminded me of 'Funky Dealer' and set me on a mission to find that sample. The sample can be found in the Mark and Brian show's Historical Inaccuracies part 2 and starts at about 1:45. This bit seemed to have the raw sample from wherever it came from. Although I didn't think I would get any result, I decided to shazam search the audio and surprisingly came up with a result. This sample is in the start of the song 'Timequake' by Sonus Umbra. Unfortunately I could not find an audio sample without signing up to any websites. It may not be gaming music, but I just wanted to let you guys know two more instance of this sound sample, and hopefully help find where it came from.
|
|
|
Post by superspindash on Dec 16, 2013 16:55:43 GMT -5
I was listening to archives of my favorite radio show, and they had played the sample in one of their bits, and I couldn't believe it. That reminded me of 'Funky Dealer' and set me on a mission to find that sample. The sample can be found in the Mark and Brian show's Historical Inaccuracies part 2 and starts at about 1:45. This bit seemed to have the raw sample from wherever it came from. Although I didn't think I would get any result, I decided to shazam search the audio and surprisingly came up with a result. This sample is in the start of the song 'Timequake' by Sonus Umbra. Unfortunately I could not find an audio sample without signing up to any websites. It may not be gaming music, but I just wanted to let you guys know two more instance of this sound sample, and hopefully help find where it came from. You sir, are my hero. I've been hunting for the origin of Funky Dealer's sample for two months now-- I've heard it's from a CD named Masterbits RAPsody, but can't find a download... therefore, this is the closest to a clean rip I have. "Got a hot hand", "place your bets ladies n' gentlemen", "six to point" and "place six" seem to be missing in that radio show, though... is there a chance that's an actual reading of a Thanksgiving story?
|
|