first have seen second reality in around 1994 with 486 /w 4mb ram. what purple motion did, is forever and ever burned in my brain. non removable. these times will never come back guys. when I think of it, dialing into a mailbox at 9.6k speed, loading doom, loading 2nd reality, loading warcraft, loading command´n´conquer, playing on local network with ipx protocol. man. this will never come back and it was so damn fucking cool.
In ’92 I got the Unreal demo, in one 720k or 1.44M disk. I had 286 and was deeply impressed by the effects and the music. Future Crew and Purple Motion was forever imprinted in my brain.
@@pelimies1818 every other month I listen to their music or watch a demo. Miss those days when all of this was new, but I'm glad that I was there to experience it
@@Ford.Prefect well said, Aristoteles :) Home Computer generation is much like a Hippie generation; magical time for a short time, but now most of the people are just bank managers and industry engineers.. not a trace of the days gone by. Luckily RUclips has brought the chance to revisit the memories!
Haha of course kids can make music! I was saying that in a positive way. However, music knowledge comes with time and requires a lot of practice, that's why the vast majorty of music masterpiece are written by more mature composers, and not teens. I have written music since I was 16/17 as well
It would actually surprise me if he wasn't 16! I composed most of my stuff (Amiga demo scene) between the ages of 16 and 19. By the time I got to mid 20s, I was already seriously in VFX / Game Development (as an Animator), that I never had enough time and energy to go back to music.. Unfortunately. :(
But many people also get stuck in certain way of doing as they get older. The younger you are, the less stuck in a rut, a way of doing, opinions, of thinking certain things are just not done etc. He combines so many elements, and in the most perfect ways.
It should be noted that Purple Motion (Jonne Valtonen) was already being educated in music back then, as far as my research about him indicated. Skaven (Peter Hajba) did not have any training in this field at all. Of course Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote an entire symphony when he was four years old, so Valtonen did not set a record. Don't get me wrong, I'm not bashing Valtonen down.... on the contrary, whenever I find a music piece I don't know credited to "Purple Motion", I put whatever I'm doing aside to listen, as I know that whatever it is I'm gonna hear, it'll be very very good. Although Valtonen was the youngest member of Future Crew, his fellow FC members were not that much older, and the coders did stunts that even professional coders never deemed possible, so we can say that the entire crew was very talented.
The Gravis Ultrasound was the top card for it's time. I had one and loved it compared to the Soundblasters that were just appearing on the markets. They were a pain to setup until you understood them, but they were well worth their weight in gold.
@@Boboche I come from the C64 background. What you seem not to understand in this case, is that this Demo signaled the end of Amiga domination in the graphics department, because PC finally could compete with Amiga on every field.
When a friend gave me a PC Format CD in 1996 with FastTracker II on it, it opened a new door to music writing for me. So many XMs, MODs and S3M files... Watching this brings back some very happy memories, writing tunes on a P100 machine with an AWE 32 soundcard. Then a few years later I fried my poor soundcard and FT2 never sounded the same, so I ended up discovering Jeskola Buzz and still use it...
SCREAM TRACKER!!!! OMG I spent my entire adolescant life addicted to this tracker. As we got older we moved onto impulse tracker and eventually we used to use cubic player to play our tracked music along side DJ's at drum'n'bass raves here in England. THE MEMORIES!!
Got into scream tracker because I played a fighting game back in the day; the soundtrack for it was made in st3.. and I just HAD to have the thing that made _that music_. The game? One Must Fall: 2097 ruclips.net/video/6fGM1cvUQv8/видео.html
It's probably that it's a bit "unpolished", rough around the edges compared to properly mixed electronic music. This is not to bash tracker music, but that probably gives it a certain sound.
When you think about it, tracker music is relatively limited in what you can do. Well, I suppose that technically speaking they would be completely limitless because you can create a sound sample containing an entire orchestral piece and just play that one sample (unless the tracker file format imposes some limit on sample size), but tracker music especially in the 90's aimed to optimize the size of the file in relation to the length and complexity of the music composition itself. Thus the _primary_ aim for the sound samples is not for them to contain the music itself, but to act as instruments. While not limited to merely an instrument playing a particular note (and many sound samples in many track files did contain more complex sounds than just one instrument playing one note), that was the common goal and trend, in order to optimize the size of the file. After all, back in the 90's you had only so much disk space to store hundreds of tracker files, and internet connections were extremely slow and, often, expensive so you really wanted to minimize the size of files. This even on PC. Of course in the actual origin of tracker music, the Commodore Amiga, limited RAM and disk space put a serious limitation on tracker file size, thus inducing this kind of "size optimization" into tracker music composition. Anyway, given that, tracker music is limited in that you have only a very limited amount of sound samples (one sample typically representing just one instrument, if you were generous you could have a few different sound samples for the same instrument, recorded at different octaves, for better sound quality), the number of samples you can play at a time was typically quite limited (in the original Amiga tracker music was originally limited to 4 tracks because of the sound hardware supporting 4 simultaneous PCM sounds, but later trackers doubled this to 8 tracks by using software sound mixing), and the _timing_ of each "note" is limited to discrete steps. (Of course you could speed up the tempo high enough to be able to start notes at whatever timing you need, but anyway.) So, in principle, in most tracker music you have a very limited number of sound samples, which are played over and over (at different pitches), and a very limited number of tracks (ie. sounds that can be played at the same time), and somewhat limited time slots where each sound can be started to play. Thus it's sometimes incredible what kind of music could be created taking into account these limitations. And in a way it could explain that somewhat distinctive "tracker music" feeling that may be otherwise hard to pinpoint.
idk i feel it sounds extremely experimental and artistic, so it really gives me indie game vibes for example, i was thinking that had to do with it but yeah youre prolly right
Great track! I live in St. Petersburg. every time driving into Finland on my own car for the raw I remember that I'm on the holy land of the creators of 2 HD reality and the Satellite ONE !!!
This is an alltime BIG ONE ... I cannot describe how much incredible feelings this tune generates... always goose bumps... I first listened to it in the 90s through the 2nd Reality Demo... and I always loved all of this. *bowing down*
I love this demo. It made me find out about trackers. It made me code audio software and then record something that looked like music :) Thanks to you I focused on studying image and sound programming. You are the best! forgive my English translation :)
Genius, fucking genius. This is incredibly hard, it requires you to have an exceptional ear and patience as you basically program everything into the computer. Playing it live in your mind as you slowly program the computer to do what you want. Course its samples. But its very short single note samples that are changed in various ways to make this whole sound. perhaps in all this is made with total 8 seconds of recording time. Frankly maybe less.
i dont mean to brag because i was shit at composing compared to Purple Motion but i never found it hard to work with trackers - it was fun, direct and quick working with those simple tools
That depended very much on the sounds "character" - soft synthie strings for example were very easy to set up properly for looping .. or you could create sounds out of simple tick sounds which would loop very fast - there it was not simple to find a nice balance between proper tuning and a good sound
Powermaennchen and the pitches of instruments? when i figured out that having different samples for a single instrument made it sound more faithful it felt like touching the finger of god. so enlightening.
I had no idea you were into this. I used to create music in Scream Tracker and later Fast Tracker 2 but was out of it well before Renoise came out. Skaven and Purple Motion made a lot of great music and the Future Crew demo's were incredibly good :)
I remember Impulse Tracker (I guess Shism tracker was a remake of that?) and Fast tracker, and how hard it was to try and make music on those trackers in general. And I remember in particular how Purple Motion and Skaven were just total masters everybody was in awe of. The whole Future Crew were a bunch of wizards that we imagined had figured out some sort of magic spells they put on our crappy 386's. Awesome time to get into computers!
Thanks for uploading! Truly a masterpiece. Back in the 90s I would play the demo just to listen to the music. Don't get me wrong the demo is visually amazing too, but that music!!
UnreaL ][ was the first plausible PC demo in the Amiga's heyday, the one that made us step back in awe, and this soundtrack is a huge part of that experience. Masterful composition from a 16-year old, one that truly captured the spirit of the demoscene. Congratulations from an Amiga aficionado.
I'd like to point out in the top left corner, that is the title Purple Motion himself put in the file.. As I said in a reply to a newer comment, the full title of the demo was "Unreal 2 : Second Reality"
Dude Future Crew rules. I was born in the late 90's so unfortunately I wasn't able to experience the tracker scene at its prime, I am envious because this must've been mind-blowing back in the days of the Amiga.
This is the thing which told me that PC is at the same level! We're old. We must be together!!!! OR else all is lost! I love demoscene!!!! Amiga /PC / C64 /Nintendo / Atari All !
Back in the 90's, it were the demos of the Future Crew that made me go buy me a Gravis UltraSound ACE, the affordable / low-budget model. Sound quality wasn't the slightest less that the original Gravis Ultrasound, though. I still got it (in original packaging, including the original receipt!). I even have the 486 computer I had it in, somewhere... Over a quarter of a century ago... Memories... How much different were computers back then... And the way they had to be operated...
this song absolutely floors me, I can’t even imagine how long it took to compose it, create or source samples and the enter and tweak the parameters into the tracker bar till their just right
I know I stopped being jealous of my amiga buddies when these guys came around. Classic shit and still as good as first time I heard it 20 something years ago ❤️
I remembered this track just as I've seen it here. Back, around 1995 I had it on my first PC, with Impulse Tracker. I was amazed by computer music at that instance. :) This track is amazing!
I accidentally left autoplay going after listening to War in Middle Earth by Skaven... this was on the same tape someone gave me with the former track and I couldn't remember what it was!! I heard the first notes and raced back over to this tab!
God this brings back memories. I remember marveling at all the Future Crew demos back in the 90's. Loved to poke around Skaven's and Purple Motion's music in Impulse Tracker and Scream Tracker.
I had an obsolete system and was so frustrated with not being able to do anything cool, I got a job in a bindery schlepping bundles of forms to make scholastic books and boxing them up. Butt busting work but I finally had enough to build a proper SVGA 486 system. This demo came out at that time, along with Doom and all the other fun stuff and my golden age of computing was awesome. Wish I could do it again.
a master piece. In october 1995, I thought i want this one to be played on the next party in my local disco and here the ones here in cologne. It tooks a few months....Yes, well, anyone dare call this dj avangarde? imitated... some nice replicas. sure, easy today
I must have listened to this hundreds of times back in the day. I liked to use it for a basis for plonking around making stupid loops, a ready to go sample set all tuned nice.
fucking classic some of these came up in my playlist from the 90s i still have alot of these old mods from mid 90s era bbs downloads , i have hundreds from that era
man this brings back memories of being a tracker back in the early 90's on my amiga 500/1200. Not sure if my music is still around or even if i could remember what i was using as name back then.
IMPRESIVE¡¡¡¡¡¡ La secuencia inicial es totalmente BRUTAL ¡¡¡¡¡ Playing on Gravis Ultrasound , of course ¡¡¡¡ Gravis Ultrasound RULEZZZZZ, feel the Powerrrr¡¡
Me >> making tea.
Song kicks in.
Me >> intergalactic super spy making tea.
first have seen second reality in around 1994 with 486 /w 4mb ram. what purple motion did, is forever and ever burned in my brain. non removable. these times will never come back guys. when I think of it, dialing into a mailbox at 9.6k speed, loading doom, loading 2nd reality, loading warcraft, loading command´n´conquer, playing on local network with ipx protocol. man. this will never come back and it was so damn fucking cool.
same here... those were the days, seriously...
You nailed it. But the ghosts we called for now are ruling mankind. It started as a game.
In ’92 I got the Unreal demo, in one 720k or 1.44M disk. I had 286 and was deeply impressed by the effects and the music.
Future Crew and Purple Motion was forever imprinted in my brain.
@@pelimies1818 every other month I listen to their music or watch a demo. Miss those days when all of this was new, but I'm glad that I was there to experience it
@@Ford.Prefect well said, Aristoteles :)
Home Computer generation is much like a Hippie generation; magical time for a short time, but now most of the people are just bank managers and industry engineers.. not a trace of the days gone by.
Luckily RUclips has brought the chance to revisit the memories!
Fun fact: "10 seconds to transmission" sample is from the 1989 film "Batman"
The funny thing is that Jonne Valtonen, aka Purple Motion, composed this at the age of 16.
Haha of course kids can make music! I was saying that in a positive way. However, music knowledge comes with time and requires a lot of practice, that's why the vast majorty of music masterpiece are written by more mature composers, and not teens. I have written music since I was 16/17 as well
It would actually surprise me if he wasn't 16!
I composed most of my stuff (Amiga demo scene) between the ages of 16 and 19. By the time I got to mid 20s, I was already seriously in VFX / Game Development (as an Animator), that I never had enough time and energy to go back to music.. Unfortunately. :(
But many people also get stuck in certain way of doing as they get older.
The younger you are, the less stuck in a rut, a way of doing, opinions, of thinking certain things are just not done etc.
He combines so many elements, and in the most perfect ways.
@dustBoxed.isUpNORTH same. except i'm 15 lmao.
It should be noted that Purple Motion (Jonne Valtonen) was already being educated in music back then, as far as my research about him indicated. Skaven (Peter Hajba) did not have any training in this field at all. Of course Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote an entire symphony when he was four years old, so Valtonen did not set a record. Don't get me wrong, I'm not bashing Valtonen down.... on the contrary, whenever I find a music piece I don't know credited to "Purple Motion", I put whatever I'm doing aside to listen, as I know that whatever it is I'm gonna hear, it'll be very very good.
Although Valtonen was the youngest member of Future Crew, his fellow FC members were not that much older, and the coders did stunts that even professional coders never deemed possible, so we can say that the entire crew was very talented.
This is the best Demo/game music ever. And it sounded magical on Gravis Ultrasound back in the 1993.
The Gravis Ultrasound was the top card for it's time. I had one and loved it compared to the Soundblasters that were just appearing on the markets. They were a pain to setup until you understood them, but they were well worth their weight in gold.
GUS.... amazing sound and amazing music!
HELL YEAH!! WHOPPING 1 GIGA BYTES OF FINEST 16BIT PCM SAMPLES THERE IS !! What a wonderful device!!
Clearly you missed the decade+ of C64 and Amiga demo scene leading to that. Not to late to appreciate and discover even better gems from the scene.
@@Boboche I come from the C64 background. What you seem not to understand in this case, is that this Demo signaled the end of Amiga domination in the graphics department, because PC finally could compete with Amiga on every field.
When a friend gave me a PC Format CD in 1996 with FastTracker II on it, it opened a new door to music writing for me. So many XMs, MODs and S3M files... Watching this brings back some very happy memories, writing tunes on a P100 machine with an AWE 32 soundcard. Then a few years later I fried my poor soundcard and FT2 never sounded the same, so I ended up discovering Jeskola Buzz and still use it...
To you and other people that wrote this kind of music.. hats down! I loved this generation of music to bits.
This song is like the "bohemian rahpsody" of electronica. An absolute masterpiece.
One who is not an atomic playboy is likely a poor boy.
"bohemian rahpsody" is nothing special in comparing to this Masterpiece or, for example, "Telegraph Road", seriously.
@3713 3713 No u.
I never want to hear any mentions to queen i think it is bad and overrated
Yeah, It's better.
2020, still here listen this all MODs master pieces. Stay Strong fellas.
2022 and I'm listening to this in my studio in Tokyo. It is just amazing.
SCREAM TRACKER!!!! OMG I spent my entire adolescant life addicted to this tracker. As we got older we moved onto impulse tracker and eventually we used to use cubic player to play our tracked music along side DJ's at drum'n'bass raves here in England. THE MEMORIES!!
Yeah!
Got into scream tracker because I played a fighting game back in the day; the soundtrack for it was made in st3.. and I just HAD to have the thing that made _that music_. The game? One Must Fall: 2097 ruclips.net/video/6fGM1cvUQv8/видео.html
This track is one of two mods that made me get into music back in 1995 :) (The other one was Space Debris by Captain)
I still listen to both in 2016. And probably will in 2036 and beyond. ;)
exact same two tracks here =) Good old nostalgica
Well, became fan of this tracker in the same year. We meet again in elysium to sort our collections and rhapsodize again.
These were good times. Agree with both mods.
Still here, 4 years later :)
There's something incredibly appealing to me about Tracker music. It's a very distinct sound. Like it has it's own subgenre.
It's probably that it's a bit "unpolished", rough around the edges compared to properly mixed electronic music. This is not to bash tracker music, but that probably gives it a certain sound.
When you think about it, tracker music is relatively limited in what you can do.
Well, I suppose that technically speaking they would be completely limitless because you can create a sound sample containing an entire orchestral piece and just play that one sample (unless the tracker file format imposes some limit on sample size), but tracker music especially in the 90's aimed to optimize the size of the file in relation to the length and complexity of the music composition itself. Thus the _primary_ aim for the sound samples is not for them to contain the music itself, but to act as instruments. While not limited to merely an instrument playing a particular note (and many sound samples in many track files did contain more complex sounds than just one instrument playing one note), that was the common goal and trend, in order to optimize the size of the file. After all, back in the 90's you had only so much disk space to store hundreds of tracker files, and internet connections were extremely slow and, often, expensive so you really wanted to minimize the size of files. This even on PC. Of course in the actual origin of tracker music, the Commodore Amiga, limited RAM and disk space put a serious limitation on tracker file size, thus inducing this kind of "size optimization" into tracker music composition.
Anyway, given that, tracker music is limited in that you have only a very limited amount of sound samples (one sample typically representing just one instrument, if you were generous you could have a few different sound samples for the same instrument, recorded at different octaves, for better sound quality), the number of samples you can play at a time was typically quite limited (in the original Amiga tracker music was originally limited to 4 tracks because of the sound hardware supporting 4 simultaneous PCM sounds, but later trackers doubled this to 8 tracks by using software sound mixing), and the _timing_ of each "note" is limited to discrete steps. (Of course you could speed up the tempo high enough to be able to start notes at whatever timing you need, but anyway.)
So, in principle, in most tracker music you have a very limited number of sound samples, which are played over and over (at different pitches), and a very limited number of tracks (ie. sounds that can be played at the same time), and somewhat limited time slots where each sound can be started to play. Thus it's sometimes incredible what kind of music could be created taking into account these limitations. And in a way it could explain that somewhat distinctive "tracker music" feeling that may be otherwise hard to pinpoint.
idk i feel it sounds extremely experimental and artistic, so it really gives me indie game vibes for example, i was thinking that had to do with it
but yeah youre prolly right
My goodness - the chord work around 5:30 gives me shivers!
Agreed
This has been my ringtone for 10 years now. Long live Purple motion!
what part?
It would not be ideal. I would have to call everyone back, just because enjoying the music and therefore not responding to the call.
@@skyhdmovies4254 I've personally had 3:19 as my ringtone for years. It's perfect
Oooohhhh the royalties! $$$$$$ 😁
How have I never thought of this?
Still a classic. You won't believe how many times I've listened, sung, and danced to this over the years. Awesome!
Great track! I live in St. Petersburg. every time driving into Finland on my own car for the raw I remember that I'm on the holy land of the creators of 2 HD reality and the Satellite ONE !!!
I can't recall the number of times I've stumbled upon this but, here I am again listening to its entirety.
made me almost cry. best tracker track ever ;)
+GonzoGonschi one of 'em - he was not alone in tracker music/demo scene... for example Scaven at least ;-)
This blew me away in the 90s and it's still such a tune now
You genius! From 2023 still thrilled.
Imagine being this guys parent and listening this in your car while going to work. Absolutely amazing and all the proud to this guy.
This is an alltime BIG ONE ... I cannot describe how much incredible feelings this tune generates... always goose bumps...
I first listened to it in the 90s through the 2nd Reality Demo... and I always loved all of this.
*bowing down*
I love this demo. It made me find out about trackers. It made me code audio software and then record something that looked like music :) Thanks to you I focused on studying image and sound programming. You are the best! forgive my English translation :)
You made me into this! HAHAHAHA. And the Gravis Ultrasound...
Genius, fucking genius. This is incredibly hard, it requires you to have an exceptional ear and patience as you basically program everything into the computer.
Playing it live in your mind as you slowly program the computer to do what you want. Course its samples. But its very short single note samples that are changed in various ways to make this whole sound.
perhaps in all this is made with total 8 seconds of recording time.
Frankly maybe less.
Indeed. Very difficult and time consuming. I'm glad we don't use these tools anymore. Sincerely, Veteran 90's tracker.
i dont mean to brag because i was shit at composing compared to Purple Motion but i never found it hard to work with trackers - it was fun, direct and quick working with those simple tools
Powermaennchen the hard part is getting the samples to loop and play right.
That depended very much on the sounds "character" - soft synthie strings for example were very easy to set up properly for looping .. or you could create sounds out of simple tick sounds which would loop very fast - there it was not simple to find a nice balance between proper tuning and a good sound
Powermaennchen and the pitches of instruments?
when i figured out that having different samples for a single instrument made it sound more faithful it felt like touching the finger of god. so enlightening.
I had no idea you were into this. I used to create music in Scream Tracker and later Fast Tracker 2 but was out of it well before Renoise came out. Skaven and Purple Motion made a lot of great music and the Future Crew demo's were incredibly good :)
I remember Impulse Tracker (I guess Shism tracker was a remake of that?) and Fast tracker, and how hard it was to try and make music on those trackers in general. And I remember in particular how Purple Motion and Skaven were just total masters everybody was in awe of. The whole Future Crew were a bunch of wizards that we imagined had figured out some sort of magic spells they put on our crappy 386's. Awesome time to get into computers!
Thanks for uploading! Truly a masterpiece. Back in the 90s I would play the demo just to listen to the music. Don't get me wrong the demo is visually amazing too, but that music!!
man.. this brings me back! I always dreamed of making good music like the FC guys! Purple Motion was one of my favorites!
UnreaL ][ was the first plausible PC demo in the Amiga's heyday, the one that made us step back in awe, and this soundtrack is a huge part of that experience. Masterful composition from a 16-year old, one that truly captured the spirit of the demoscene. Congratulations from an Amiga aficionado.
Second Reality was the spiritual sequel but that time FC switched to DOS
Listening on 2018. Still one of the best soundtrack! :-)
I'd like to point out in the top left corner, that is the title Purple Motion himself put in the file..
As I said in a reply to a newer comment, the full title of the demo was "Unreal 2 : Second Reality"
This really brought me back to the 90's. Wow! Incredible tune.
Future Crew! "second Reality"! OMG. this brings back so many memories of my youth. thanks for sharing!
This is so Underground! I feel warm here...
demo music has a certain charm about it that I'll always love.
First time I heard this , what seems like eons ago, I was blew away, such a total master work that stands the test of time.
Dude Future Crew rules. I was born in the late 90's so unfortunately I wasn't able to experience the tracker scene at its prime, I am envious because this must've been mind-blowing back in the days of the Amiga.
Epic. Used to listen to this back at 1995 on my Pentium 50MHz PC. Rocking times.
2:47 "I am not an atomic playboy." Love it!
long live the demo scene............ i wish it still was like it was back in ealry 1990s... how i miss seeing 2nd Reality for the first time.
This is the thing which told me that PC is at the same level! We're old. We must be together!!!!
OR else all is lost! I love demoscene!!!!
Amiga /PC / C64 /Nintendo / Atari
All !
One of the best and maybe iconic demo track
this owns.. nough said... may the data live forever.
So many memories.
Back in the 90's, it were the demos of the Future Crew that made me go buy me a Gravis UltraSound ACE, the affordable / low-budget model. Sound quality wasn't the slightest less that the original Gravis Ultrasound, though. I still got it (in original packaging, including the original receipt!). I even have the 486 computer I had it in, somewhere...
Over a quarter of a century ago... Memories... How much different were computers back then... And the way they had to be operated...
That is going to be one epic transmission
One of my favorite MODs in 1995... Good hand craft
Purple Motion rock the place again! He is virtuous on tracks! Awesome track!
Oh my god, this is beautiful.
this song absolutely floors me, I can’t even imagine how long it took to compose it, create or source samples and the enter and tweak the parameters into the tracker bar till their just right
I spent many hours in the mid 90's listening to these tracked songs and this was one of my my favourites. Thanks for creating this archive.
I know I stopped being jealous of my amiga buddies when these guys came around. Classic shit and still as good as first time I heard it 20 something years ago ❤️
Timeless feat, incredible and brilliant track !
I remembered this track just as I've seen it here. Back, around 1995 I had it on my first PC, with Impulse Tracker. I was amazed by computer music at that instance. :) This track is amazing!
I just can't get enough of this song. Simply amazing.
Still going strong. 2022. "UnreaL ][" never dies.
Still number one.
Still goosebumps.
A timeless classic
I accidentally left autoplay going after listening to War in Middle Earth by Skaven... this was on the same tape someone gave me with the former track and I couldn't remember what it was!! I heard the first notes and raced back over to this tab!
Oh, I'm seeing this over and over again!
Memories! And really mad skills.
God this brings back memories. I remember marveling at all the Future Crew demos back in the 90's. Loved to poke around Skaven's and Purple Motion's music in Impulse Tracker and Scream Tracker.
loved that demo back in the days... swopped with floppy-discs from Finland :)
I remember getting this song bundled in with some mIRC extensions. Takes me back to the late 90s.
Love this music.
simply the best, scene=future crew=scene. I was amazed by this track years ago and i estill enjoing! hiya Jonen!
Purple Motion Rocks !
This music was wayyy ahead of it's time. Was one of the most awesome techno beats I heard when I was a kid.
I had an obsolete system and was so frustrated with not being able to do anything cool, I got a job in a bindery schlepping bundles of forms to make scholastic books and boxing them up. Butt busting work but I finally had enough to build a proper SVGA 486 system. This demo came out at that time, along with Doom and all the other fun stuff and my golden age of computing was awesome. Wish I could do it again.
a master piece. In october 1995, I thought i want this one to be played on the next party in my local disco and here the ones here in cologne. It tooks a few months....Yes, well, anyone dare call this dj avangarde? imitated... some nice replicas. sure, easy today
After 30 years I finally learned where this "I'm not an atomic playboy" sample is from when I watched a atomic bomb documentary.
Sonido máquina! Estas demos venían en el CD de la tarjeta de sonido gravis ultrasound en unos videos en 3d, gracias por revivir estos recuerdos.
Must be listened to on original hardware with Gravis UltraSound ;-)
This sounds gives me everytime a hard flashback :D second reality,....epic for all time!
3:33 I need more of that part
Not two, not four... but EIGHT STEREO TRACKS! F_CK YEAH!!!
I must have listened to this hundreds of times back in the day. I liked to use it for a basis for plonking around making stupid loops, a ready to go sample set all tuned nice.
this is beautiful
Heh...That's already an immortal legend! Viva la Demoscene! :)
fucking classic
some of these came up in my playlist from the 90s
i still have alot of these old mods from mid 90s era bbs downloads , i have hundreds from that era
8 tracks of pure epicness
this is a certified SmallHum content
Awesome stuff. Good upload!
Simply amazing!
So awesome!!!
This song is great!
man this brings back memories of being a tracker back in the early 90's on my amiga 500/1200. Not sure if my music is still around or even if i could remember what i was using as name back then.
Reminds me of Future Crew and my Amiga 2000.
Loving the Amiga!!!!
masterpiece.
one of the best mods ever!
Awesome music, old shcool rules
[0:50]
Me esperaba que dijera ¡FIGHT! :D
I was expecting you to say FIGHT! :D
godly music, my 16y too at that time - era of pre-internet - BBS and baud modems
Master piece!
IMPRESIVE¡¡¡¡¡¡ La secuencia inicial es totalmente BRUTAL ¡¡¡¡¡ Playing on Gravis Ultrasound , of course ¡¡¡¡ Gravis Ultrasound RULEZZZZZ, feel the Powerrrr¡¡
I ve watched this SO many times ...
I went over every pattern of this when I was a teen to figure out how they did it.
Godlike
2:17 ! love it
This & space debris PurpMotioN and captain my favorite artist