I'm currently listening to Fox Amoore's #score for The Signal, last year's #Eurofurence#Pawpet (puppet) play — more than sixty minutes of excellent #NeoClassic#music that works even independently of the show.
The “#comic with a #soundtrack” thing is interesting. This obviously works best for #webcomics, that have a natural advantage when it comes to #multimedia. In fact, some platforms like #Webtoons have built-in support for this, allowing the reader to read chapters with specifically-designed background music. Other comics, or webcomics published on other platforms or intended for a wider distribution, usually take a more “conservative” approach.
Now, the #comic that is the target of this quiz has a different approach to the #soundtrack, one that feels almost #cinematic: not all scenes in the comic have a soundtrack, but those that do (and you're told when one does) track the music with the sequence of panels in a very distinctive way, leading you to actually reading the scene at the speed and rhythm dictated by the music.
⚔️⚔️⚔️ Battle Theme from Final Fantasy ⚔️⚔️⚔️ (FFV Piano Collections - Battle with Gilgamesh) 🎹🎵🎮
I think I saw this piece first performed by a guy called Calbee219 or something over on Youtube, which was about 15 years ago, and I immediately knew I had to play it as well. Enjoy!
#videogame#song of the day: Rik Schaffer - VT:M - Bloodlines OST - Festival
If I were to pick what is the most comfy video game song for me, this one would be a strong contender.
This track fills me with such insane amounts of nostalgia (despite me playing the game for the first time like, 4 years ago). Whenever I replay the game and reach the Santa Monica Pier location I just end up walking around and listening to it, wondering how dreamy it would be to be a queer, Toreador vampire... :gothsparkleheart: :blobCatComfySoff: 🧛
Did you know you can buy Star Trek soundtracks on Bandcamp? They've got Disco and Picard there.
I am listening to Picard's season 3 soundtrack right now. 👌
Take a little trip back in time --to the late '80s, maybe early '90s-- with "Dread," a fine little track from @fennifith that sounds like the soundtrack to a lost VHS fantasy horror classic. After a piano intro, it takes a dark turn (for the better) into a land of spookily tinkly arpeggios contrasted with raw patches of synthetic timbre and shifting soundscape.In another reality, this is the opening theme from a classic Bad Moon film.