top | item 30299888

Little Sound Dj

71 points| Tomte | 4 years ago |littlesounddj.com | reply

42 comments

order
[+] risingsubmarine|4 years ago|reply
Love these live LSDJ sets. 2x DMG gameboy through an amp = incredible bass.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t6t2FENK7KQ - Chipzel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHV-0VZ33LA - Monodeer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TKQmAtcQWbA - Monodeer

[+] mvkel|4 years ago|reply
The first track on that second Monodeer mix is outrageous. Wild that he can pull that sound from a Gameboy!
[+] 3np|4 years ago|reply
LSDJ, war-dialing and dumpster-diving on the front page - are we feeling nostalgic today, HN? (:
[+] aaaaaaaaata|4 years ago|reply
Another era is coming to a close!

You can't feel it?!

[+] devin|4 years ago|reply
If you’re into this kind of thing check out the Dirtywave M8. LSDJ-like but includes some nice improvements like a nice 4op FM synth, some nice FX, etc. In addition, the sole developer has been incredibly responsive on rolling out fixes and features. Highly recommended. One of my favorite pieces of gear I own.
[+] drakythe|4 years ago|reply
And if the price tag and availability puts you off there is a headless version that costs around $30-$40. I played with the headless for a few months before I committed to the purchase of the actual M8. But LSDJ was my gateway drug to this whole thing and I love it too.
[+] 999900000999|4 years ago|reply
I get this is HN.

But an Ipad Mini costs less , and has more than enough to make a full album.

[+] alxmdev|4 years ago|reply
I didn't have a Game Boy, but I did have a GP2X and had lots of fun with the LSDJ-inspired tracker, LittleGPTracker, worth checking out for all sorts of platforms: http://www.littlegptracker.com/
[+] mastazi|4 years ago|reply
Oh nice, it seems the interface is a pattern based tracker interface, similar to Jeskola Buzz or Psychle, meaning you have a multi track table with patterns, then once you click on a pattern you get to a traditional tracker interface, like OctaMed or FastTracker. See from around 7:30 in this video: https://youtu.be/V9ZxN240lr8?t=450
[+] tobr|4 years ago|reply
Still have a cartridge and printed manual for LSDJ somewhere. Unfortunately I don’t have a working GameBoy to use it with any more.

The guy behind it also made one of my absolute favorite chip music records as Role Model, En tyst minut, but it looks like it’s completely impossible to find in a digital format.

[+] epilys|4 years ago|reply
Huh, perhaps you'd be willing to part with it? (I got a working gameboy!) Will pay for package and handling of course!
[+] 3np|4 years ago|reply
You got me really curious but I came up short.. Have you tried contacting him? The label is no more.
[+] arittr|4 years ago|reply
a long time ago i bought a r/w GB cart for LSDj and played with it on an original GameBoy. it sounds awesome, but at the time i found it really hard to use. it would be pretty great if there was a way to use a standard keyboard with it.

made me smile to see this on HN

[+] DrBoring|4 years ago|reply
I still have my Mr. Flash 64M cart. Sadly it requires Windows 95 or 98 to run the flashing software and a PC with a parallel port.
[+] oblak|4 years ago|reply
Was too poor to have a GameBoy and don't really remember what they sounded like. It's been 30 years since I've touched one. NES sound was pretty bad, honestly. Yes, I love the handful of Dr. Mario tunes but there were like 64 samples or something. Not bad but nowhere near the actual techno tunes from Streets of Rage 2/3.

Can't remember if the legend was SNES had the better audio than Mega Drive. I certainly don't remember things being this way.

[+] flobosg|4 years ago|reply
> Can't remember if the legend was SNES had the better audio than Mega Drive. I certainly don't remember things being this way.

While the soundchip of the SNES is technically superior (sample-based versus the Mega Drive’s FM synthesis), some people prefer the sound of the Sega console. Personally I lean towards the SNES, but some Mega Drive games (like the Streets of Rage examples you mentioned) can have real bangers. In the end it’s a matter of taste.

[+] ninjin|4 years ago|reply
> NES sound was pretty bad, honestly.

“Pretty bad”, I will have to disagree greatly with you there. Yes, there is plenty of awful music composed for the NES sound chip, but the same goes for the SID, YM2612, etc. As with any instrument, you need talent.

For heaven’s sake, what about Takashi Tateishi’s amazing soundtrack for Mega Man 2? As an example, here is the Woodman stage theme [1].

[1]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lDC4X8Dgxr4&t=477s

Admittedly the Japanese release of Castlevania III: Dracula’s Curse was helped by the addition of the VRC6 chip when it comes to sound, but the depth of the notes is astonishing [2].

[2]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KqyoTvZ5cOE&t=2050s

Let us head west then, what about Jeroen Tel’s Overlord theme for the NES? [3] Or what many consider some of the best sound ever extracted from the NES: Tim Follin’s work for Silver Surfer [4].

[3]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w5vccpl9hd8

[4]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQlLl2j5THQ&t=231s

Heck, the NES sound chip brings us great tunes to this day. Listen for example to Rainbowdragoneyes’s first half of the soundtrack for The Messenger (2018) [5]. Track 8, “Bamboo Boogaloo (Bamboo Creek)”, never fails to put a smile on my face.

[5]: https://rainbowdragoneyes.bandcamp.com/album/the-messenger-o...

Yes, the Mega Drive sound is great (despite some finding it having a bit too much “twang”). Personally, I really like the Battletoads soundtrack on the Mega Drive [6]. However, using the word “bad” anywhere in a sentence with the NES sound chip is not something I can stand hearing without speaking up – it is objectively wrong.

[6]: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bdHsKEv87rY

[+] swimfar|4 years ago|reply
There was a DJ called Fuckstorm that used to do some live PAs with this. I used to have some mp3s of his. I can't find any examples of his music online anymore, unfortunately.
[+] WalterGR|4 years ago|reply
PA? Public address?
[+] Gys|4 years ago|reply
Unfortunately no samples. I once had a Game Boy and was hoping for some nostalgia ;-)