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This is my humble homage to Alexander Brandon and the Tyrian team. @Alexander Brandon The game footage is taken from Ross’s review on Ross’s Game Dungeon (love you, Ross). @Accursed Farms Throughout the process, I did my best to preserve the character of the original piece. My goal was to stay as close as possible to the original without using synths or electronic instruments—because that would be pointless, as the original is unbeatable in that department. So I tried to use mostly acoustic instruments (I did cheat a little, as you’ll see below). Some of the instruments are real, others are VSTs. I wish I could record every instrument live, but I’m far from having the means to do that. Instruments used: An ocarina pad for both voices (a pad based on ocarina recordings). I had to use a pad instead of a real ocarina to maintain the “outer space” atmosphere. 3 layers of flutes (performed by myself) for the higher voice: the melody in octaves and a staccato layer in the higher octave. A marimba (bowed for the lower voice and played with soft mallets for the upper voice). Whirl tubes, tuned to the correct pitches. Ondes Martenot (yes, borderline cheating—but I wanted to preserve the “outer space” vibe). If you don’t know this instrument, do a bit of research—you’ll love it! A choir (myself singing) for the lower voice. I also doubled the lower voice with a church organ and a bass synth (yes… I know, more cheating—but just to give it more depth). I noticed the original has an effect that resembles a robotic voice and some sort of mechanism. For the “robotic” voice, I used a female choir (which I love the sound of) singing random syllables. For the mechanical element, I used a recording of a machine. I decided to thin out the orchestration in the middle section to let some of the instruments come through more clearly. You might notice slight tempo variations. That’s because I used the original music file from the game, which already has those subtle changes. I hope you enjoy it. Subscribe if you’d like to hear more recordings of classic game music (or my original pieces), or follow me at: cfilipealves.bandcamp.com Game: Tyrian (Tyrian 2000) Published by: Epic MegaGames, Inc. Developed by: Eclipse Software Released: 1995 Platforms: DOS, iPad, iPhone Composer: Alexander Brandon