I assume you mean the sound that appears at 1:04 and will repeat during later bars. Yes, that is via electronic keyboard and specific "soundfont" or "tone". Everything in this song was either done with an electronic/midi keyboard or a live guitar. No samples from other songs were used.
Guitar does come in at :03. I think maybe that's what you're talking about...although piano is present throughout too. I've not really uploaded a video to Youtube before (so I hope this works)...but I deconstructed the song so you can kinda see the different parts in my workstation. Link below.
I on the regular like to go back and listen to stsrcraft’s soundtrack. So many hours spent in that game, oh the memories. I’m definitely going to listen to this!
Good job! I han hear some artifacts here and there (those fast guitar and bass parts especially) but it’s not distracting and compared to the originals side-by-side much more enjoyable.
I‘d love it if you could take a swing at the Zerg. Which AI did you use and for what, if you don’t mind me asking.
For the instruments I have a private plugin originally based on spleeter and I have LALAL.ai. Some tracks (like the drums) which it’s not as good for, I get my buddy to extract in FL studio (its implementation is surprisingly not terrible) since I use ableton. Sometimes the result is good, sometimes it’s not. There’s only so much you can pull out of these old tracks but the fact we can do it at all is pretty mind-blowing.
From what source? To be a remaster you’d need access to the original tracks or even higher quality ones. If you used the in-game music it’s not a remaster, at best it’s a remix.
That’s what I thought too. But then again, there’s no “The Starcraft Band” which could record a new master. So I think that in the case of video games soundtracks which are not attributed to specific artists, “remaster” becomes a bit of a fuzzy term. You mention remix, but it could also be a cover or it could be accepted as a remaster (if it would be something official).
All of the above, including my original question is just curiosity and not meant to diminish the effort put into creating the audio tracks.
Every instrument has been separated out and reconstructed by AI so technically it’s more of a “remaster” than most of the commercially released “remasters” of older music. Or the best we’re ever gonna get anyway. That other comment is just salty.
If you’re in doubt just listen to the new one and old one side by side - it’s not even close.
From the description he put on the per track pages he just added a bunch of equalizers, compressors, stereo imaging shapers and increased the BPM because why not. Oh and also he added “audiophile grade” to the title for good measure.
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