To anyone who tries to Recreate the circumstances that lead to this I have no idea. I have tried to recreate this for 2 hours now and have gotten nowhere. for the settings though 1. Issue a sys reset by holding Select and pushing Instrument [L] and [R] [Init ALL, Sure?] Push ALL 2. Enable CM-64 Mode hold Select and push Instrument [L] [Init CM-64, Sure?] push ALL. 3. SC-55MKII compatibility mode hold Select and Push ALL ALL should be flashing Push SC-55 MAP. Enjoy
Turns out the CM-64 & MT-32 samples are available in the SC-55 Map via any DAW that is how this worked (I figured it out about 6 months after this video)
I've begun going down the rabbit hole of trying to figure out just how I heard the soundtrack as a kid. This is *definitely* not it, but it's so funky I can't help but love it.
The most common sound cards back in the day were the SoundBlaster 16 cards they usually had a Yamaha YMF-262 (OPL-3) Chip on them and used FM synthesis for instruments. I have a cover on my channel of one and if its not that, the endless amount of clone cards that exist are also a probability. then there are the AWE cards they use samples like the Roland SC-88Pro in this video and were also pretty common in the late 90's thats as much as I can help without having a 1000 word long essay on the different sound cards and chips of the 90's and late 80's
@@pirozhkebab Thanks, but I managed to find out which one I had as a kid a few hours after posting this comment. The version I had was the Microsoft GS Wavetable SW Synth.
To anyone who tries to Recreate the circumstances that lead to this I have no idea. I have tried to recreate this for 2 hours now and have gotten nowhere. for the settings though 1. Issue a sys reset by holding Select and pushing Instrument [L] and [R] [Init ALL, Sure?] Push ALL 2. Enable CM-64 Mode hold Select and push Instrument [L] [Init CM-64, Sure?] push ALL. 3. SC-55MKII compatibility mode hold Select and Push ALL ALL should be flashing Push SC-55 MAP. Enjoy
Turns out the CM-64 & MT-32 samples are available in the SC-55 Map via any DAW that is how this worked (I figured it out about 6 months after this video)
I've begun going down the rabbit hole of trying to figure out just how I heard the soundtrack as a kid. This is *definitely* not it, but it's so funky I can't help but love it.
The most common sound cards back in the day were the SoundBlaster 16 cards they usually had a Yamaha YMF-262 (OPL-3) Chip on them and used FM synthesis for instruments. I have a cover on my channel of one and if its not that, the endless amount of clone cards that exist are also a probability. then there are the AWE cards they use samples like the Roland SC-88Pro in this video and were also pretty common in the late 90's thats as much as I can help without having a 1000 word long essay on the different sound cards and chips of the 90's and late 80's
@@pirozhkebab Thanks, but I managed to find out which one I had as a kid a few hours after posting this comment. The version I had was the Microsoft GS Wavetable SW Synth.