Music is a music sequencer program developed by Jester Interactive and published by Codemasters for the PlayStation in November 1998. A sequel, Music 2000, was released in 1999.
Developer(s) | Jester Interactive |
---|---|
Initial release | |
Platform | PlayStation |
Type | Digital audio workstation |
Gameplay
editMusic is a song creation tool. The main screen has 16 channels, where premade sounds called "riffs" can be layered together. There are different riffs, including basslines, drumbeats, samples, vocals, sound effects, and instruments. There are also tools for music video creation.[1][2]
Development
editMusic was developed by Jester Interactive, based in Flintshire, Wales.[3] Music had a small development team and nine months of development time which lead to extensive crunch time. After seeing a working demo, Codemasters cancelled their own similar product and published Music instead.[2]
Reception
editPublication | Score |
---|---|
Consoles + | 92%[4] |
Computer and Video Games | 4/5[1] |
MeriStation | 8.2/10[5] |
Video Games | 85%[6] |
Computer and Video Games said that it's easy to use and possible to create very impressive songs but disliked the quality of the vocal samples.[1] Meristation liked the riffs section but wished there was more music genres in the game than just dance.[5] Video Games said that sound quality is good but criticised that you can't include your own samples.[6] Consoles + called it "a very, very interesting product".[4]
Music and Music 2000 have sold combined over a million copies.[3]
References
edit- ^ a b c d Lomas, Ed (December 1998). "Review - Music". Computer and Video Games. No. 205. Future plc. p. 52.
- ^ a b Hinson, Martin (12 April 2023). "Music, The PlayStation Audio Creation Tool From WipEout's Tim Wright". Time Extension. Hookshot Media. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
- ^ a b "JESTER". Jester Interactive. Archived from the original on 6 February 2002. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
- ^ a b Niiico (December 1998). "Test PlayStation - Music". Consoles + (in French). No. 83. p. 118.
- ^ a b Méndez, José Javier (4 November 1998). "Análisis - Music". MeriStation (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 8 February 2001. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
- ^ a b A.F. "Test - Music". Video Games (in German). No. 11/98. p. 77.