JAKE KAUFMAN

Lately, I’ve been coming to grips with the realisation that my primary gaming nostalgia channel is auditory. In my mind, I don’t really miss playing old games as much as listening to them, as much as I can figure out from my various sessions of sitting down, replaying my old favourites and losing interest usually within 15 minutes or so. Neither do the graphics throw me back as much as the music! It seems to me that game soundtracks, unlike gameplay or visuals, never quite grow old or dated, no matter how old they are. Same goes with films, which share some common structural and thematic elements with games when it comes to how they implement their soundtracks—you should absolutely try Memrise’s Film Score with Audio course, then you’ll see what I mean.

When the first wisps of inspiration for writing this post came through, what I was intending to do was post a little something about Shovel Knight and Shantae and the Pirate’s Curse, which I’ve been playing on and off on my 3DS. I was kind of at a loss how to go about it though: they’re not bad games, in fact Shovel Knight delivers what it set out to do quite masterfully, but I didn’t feel as if I really had anything special to say about them… apart from the fact that they’re funny and they both have great soundtracks.

What I didn’t know at the time and found out quite randomly was that Jake Kaufman wrote the soundtrack for them both. Common thread detected, keyboard inspiration engaged!

Scuttle Town
Rave in the Grave (“so Castlevania it hurts”)

2 hours of modern chiptune goodness. You’re welcome.

Turns out Jake Kaufman is virt, a remixer I had been listening to and adored since at least 2005 off VGMix.com

Wait. That’s VGRemix.com, nevermind it says VGMix on the title. VGMix.com has just a… dog? WTF? Actually, the plot thickens: here’s an old bio of his from the same dog website last updated in 2007: http://jake.vgmix.com/


From his current bio at virt.rocks/bio:

jake_nugget1-300x300

I am a large, awkward, soft-spoken nerd. I can compose 5 minutes of MIDI music in an hour from scratch, I can transform Street Fighter II music into smooth jazz, I can transform Final Fantasy music into Queen, and I can write for live orchestras. This is a questionable set of talents, and the fact that I can make a living this way is insane. Whatever, we live in the future.

My entire life has been spent obsessively working on music. I taught myself to sight-read notation, play piano, guitar and bass, mix and master, and program synthesizers and computers. As a teenager I became active in several online creative communities (including OCRemix and the PC Demoscene) where I developed the habit of freely sharing my music with anyone kind enough to listen. In addition to studying music theory, I also maintain strong interests in math, linguistics, computer graphics, and electronics. I enjoy learning more than anything else, so I read a lot.

The game industry has kept me gainfully employed for 15 years, as both an external freelancer and a full-time studio composer — usually both at the same time. Most recently, I was the audio director at WayForward, helping to build an audio department from the ground up. Although I’ve enjoyed complete autonomy and some huge opportunities there, I’ve recently decided to focus on diverse and challenging contract work as a free agent.

I live in Los Angeles with my adorable wife, Kris (a science major, Whovian, hardcore gamer, and anime nerd) and our incorrigible dog, Nugget (a beagle, pug, glutton, and unapologetic miscreant.)

Watch Jake

Let me do a magic trick for you


I’m left speechless, man…

Anyway, I remember virt from these here two AMAZING metal medleys from back when I was still in school—more than 10 years ago. Crystal Flash rocks out with Super Metroid’s OST and Blood of Ganon takes us back to the first three console Zeldas.

This man’s passion, creativity and CRAZY good work is a real inspiration for me. That’s what happens when you stick to what you enjoy making and turn your passion into your life’s work. Bravo sir, and thanks for all the tunes. I mean, just look at this, LOOK AT THIS! “A ridiculous amount of excellent free music” doesn’t begin to describe it.

virt.bandcamp.com

One last thing: I have a key for Shantae and the Pirate’s Curse for 3DS from the Friends of Nintendo Bundle  I haven’t used because I already had the game. Whoever catches it first, please comment below to spare others the trouble of trying the code out, thanks. Enter the following code on the Nintendo eShop: B0LH4J1S1RC8FR4F

LINK: GOOGLE’S DEEPMIND DEFEATS LEGENDARY GO PLAYER IN HISTORIC VICTORY

LINK

Video is from another significant Google victory against a puro earlier this year. When AI can defeat the best humans at the game “given to us by the Gods”, there are only few more steps to be taken before the AI becomes God itself.

Hey, I made an allusion to The Last Question without intending to from the start. Yay for me!

Biased as I am from reading Conversations with God Book 3 and incapable to, or perhaps unwilling, to understand God in any other way apart from as it was described by the books’ author Neale Donald Walsh, I’ll go down saying that the introduction of a godlike AI doesn’t necessarily mean that said AI would be fearsome and/or awe-inspiring: a godlike AI could reflect God  in the same way people are gods, that is by being creators, especially of their own life and experience. AI could “just” become another life form trying to figure itself out and its place and purpose in the universe. The world would move on.

Relevant reddit posts: /r/futurology and /r/worldnews (for comparison’s sake)

 

EARWORM GARDEN // KINGS — ΕΔΩ ΠΟΥ Μ’ ΑΦΗΣΕΣ

Έπαιζε συνέχεια στο γραφείο στον αγαπημένο μεσολογγίτικο ραδιοφωνικό σταθμό του κ. Αρχιλοχία του 3ου Λόχου στο 2/39.

ENJOY THE NEW YEAR LIKE LIVING UNDERWATER

Happy new year! I wish this is your year’s soundtrack. May you swim with the seals all the way.

Found this awesome little song from Ran Prieur who had this to say:
Doctopus – Wobbegong is a garage rock masterpiece, and an example of the elusive raw and intense happy song that I mentioned a few weeks ago. This is their only great song.

EARWORM GARDEN // PPK – RESURRECTION

Πριν μερικούς μήνες μου είχε ήρθε η ιδέα να το βάλω σαν ringtone για να τρολάρω τον περίγυρο και να τους θυμίζω/κολλάω αυτό το σούπερ κομμάτι από τότε που πηγαίναμε γυμνάσιο και ήμασταν κάπου μεταξύ παιδιών και ενηλίκων και είχαμε (είχα) το Resurrection για ringtone στα 3310 μας (μου).

Λέω μεταξύ παιδιών και ενηλίκων και δεν λέω εφηβεία γιατί, όπως λέει και ο VSauce και όπως είναι γνωστό στην ανθρωπολογία, η έννοια της εφηβείας, μιας φάσης στη ζωή των ανθρώπων η οποία είναι μεταξύ της παιδικής ηλικίας και της ενήλικης ζωής, είναι πρόσφατο κοινωνικό εφεύρημα του δυτικού κόσμου: στις περισσότερες κοινωνίες, η μετάβαση των μελών από τους παιδικούς ρόλους στους ενήλικους γίνεται άμεσα και συχνά με τελετές ενηλικίωσης.

Τέλος πάντων, δεν το έβαλα το Resurrection για ringtone όπως έλεγα. Κάποιος όμως στο μετρό πριν κανα δυο μέρες είχε όπως φαίνεται την ίδια ιδέα με μένα.

ΠΠΤ (παρεπιμπτόντως): οι PPK είναι (ήταν;) ρώσοι, δεν το ήξερα.

HIGH FIDELITY

Watched this movie recommendation by fellow Spotter Marilena.

I, too, suggest you watch this 15-year-old movie. Especially if you like making lists, can relate to music geekery, can remember what it used to feel like burning mixtapes/audio CDs for people, have been recently, er… disengaged, and most importantly, if you could use some great laughs.

Spoiler
Jack Black too. Boy was I surprised when he appeared!

Soundtrack:

GROW CREATIVE YOUTH EXCHANGE 6TH-17TH OCTOBER, RIJEKA, CROATIA

Once again, I feel so relieved someone else did the more descriptive, general write-up for me. *dons sunglasses, throws self in hammock set up between chestnut trees*

It happened! Grow Creative in Rijeka

The youth exchange we were preparing and waiting so much took place in Rijeka on 6-17 October. 30 young curious and talented people from Croatia, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Greece, and Spain came to learn, act and have fun. And they did it!

The aim of Grow Creative is to empower young people to be successful and creative, to find their dream jobs. The participants went deep inside to discover their inspirations and values, and they flew high to share their dreams and plans for the future. They worked hard morning through evening to enhance their problem-solving and communication skills, and even tried themselves as entrepreneurs.

Many things were happening every day. We learned some NLP and coaching tools, and had many interactive presentations and discussions.We played different roles,and had new exercises and energizers every day.Many activities were created and led by the participants. Thank you for sharing your experiences with us!

We used many different ways of communication, mingling and cooperation. Our mutual understanding and unity reached ones of its highest peaks during the cultural evening. Each country presented the best of its culture: artistic performances, traditional dances, national habits,and delicious cuisine. And we saw creativity boosting! Altogether it made the event so intense, exciting and remarkable.

All these 11 days Dharma Hostel was our home, sweet home. It provided us with beautiful Adriatic Sea view, comfortable rooms, vegetarian food, yoga classes in the morning, and very friendly and hospitable staff.
We also went out to explore Rijeka, and it was a lot of fun with some unexpected discoveries and surprises.
Sometimes the things were not easy, and we needed support of each other. Sometimes we went out of our comfort zones, but always came back to our Cozy Area. And eventually team work proved that everything is possible, we got impressive results and had a great time together!

Thank you to all the participants for making this exchange so special and inspirational. We hope to see you again and wish you beautiful adventures ahead.

And here we go, ready to take off with new projects and ideas!

My remarks:

Everybody set challenges for themselves during the training. Mine was “move and function from love, not fear”, inspired/taken/stolen from the phenomenal book I read a few months ago already, Conversations With God

All in all, I found this exchange very motivating and inspirational. I had  the distinct feeling it was just what I needed, the right thing at the right moment together with the right people etc. The Greek team, the Spanish guys, the Czechs, the Croatians and the EVSers working with them, българите…There was a lot of synergy in the group and we bonded faster and stronger than I expected—though this feeling is a typical high you get during  youth exchanges and one that unfortunately doesn’t last that long once they’re over. I’m still trying to figure out whether that feeling is artificial compared to “normal” intimacy with people. Maybe it’s just our society and way of life that have taken so much out of plain old human connection.

Anyway, I felt great clarity when I was envisioning my future and describing my present situation, my place in life and where I wanted to be. I felt amazingly relaxed letting out the words but not caring whether they would come to pass, or even if anybody would understand; I realised that whatever happens will be right, if only I focus on what I want my life’s meaning to be, so to myself as to the people I meet on the way. No, scratch that actually. No matter what you do, no matter what happens, everything will be alright. Including, I don’t know, the destruction of the Earth itself.

Writing these lines brought Man’s Search for Meaning to mind…

One such moment of touching core meaning was was when I gave a half-hour workshop on the Enneagram to the group and it went super smoothly. Almost nobody had heard of it before, and it resonated with a greater part of the group than I had expected. It felt right and in fact I received positive reinforcement in everything I attempted to do differently, as related to coaching (a big point of focus of Grow Creative in general) and working with people.

The feedback I get during exchanges is so different from what I’m used to hearing in “everyday life” that I must admit I find it addictive, scary and thought-provoking in equal degrees. Many people in Grow Creative found me and what I had to bring to the team—the Enneagram, the games, my honest sharing, my attempts to be an active listener and competent talker—“inspiring.” I was just making a point to be moving from love, not fear. And it made everything so much easier, so much prettier. Opening up and, as cliché as it sounds, letting go—that is, letting go of who you want others to think you are—felt good in a very pure sense.

That said, I can’t recall the last time anybody in Greece called me inspiring. Apparently, I project quite different personalities to the people I’ve known for a long time, who have certain expectations of me, and to those I’ve just met. Quite contrary to what used to be the case, I’ve become much more eager to meet and get to know new people, and find it increasingly harder keeping up with older friends, acquaintances, relatives… I like to think it’s because of expectations and that it’s impossible to make everyone happy, in other words, “best just to avoid having to deal with expectations entirely”... But could it be another sign of my underlying need for infinite novelty? Well, in Grow Creative, for the first time in a long while, I felt as if I took the first step in getting over that too. But maybe not, either, and it’s not very important, really.

A big thanks to the Life Potential team who scored big with their first exchange.

In the vain of Kwa Nhingirikiri (totally had to double-take on that), Timing, Happy

JODOROWSKY’S STAR WARS

The new trailer for Star Wars VII came out just yesterday and it’s racked up more than 30 million views already. Not bad eh?

Here it is for good measure.

I used to really, really love Star Wars. It was about the same time I really, really loved Harry Potter and Pokemon, give or take a few years. Today, as a more or less adult man, in the same way I will still enjoy but find it difficult to really get into Harry Potter and Pokemon for prolonged periods of time—even for nostalgia’s sake—,  I cannot really get Star Wars the same way I used to anymore. It feels comfortable, it feels familiar and easy, but comfortable and familiar is not necessarily what I need or want. Of course I’ll enjoy the movies anytime (I had a blast re-watching A New Hope on VHS a couple of months back—seriously, give let’s VHS a chance— and listening to Verily, A New Hope immediately thereafter) and I’m sure that the SW fan lying dormant somewhere inside of me just waiting to be Awakened will duly do so two months from now, hand-in-hand with the rest of geekkind and the very Force itself, apparently. That much is a given.

But sometimes I do wonder what the world would look like without Star Wars. There, I said it.

Jodorowsky’s Dune. Here’s a link to the full movie. I can’t recommend it enough. Watched it on the train from Belgrade to Thessaloniki. The thumbnail with ole Alejandro sticking his tongue out doesn’t do it justice—or maybe it does. Depends on you.

Imagine a world where there was no Star Wars yet, no original sci-fi blockbuster. Imagine a world where Moebius, Pink Floyd, H.R. Geiger, Salvador Dalí, Mick Jagger, Orson Welles and others  had all been gathered together by pioneering film-maker Alejandro Jodorowsky with the ambition to create a film that would change the world. A film to “simulate an LSD trip” and change young minds, redefine what was  possible for cinema at large visually and thematically. A movie that would play the same technical and cultural role Star Wars played for us, just taking us down a completely different road. A more spiritual and artistic road if you will.

Even though it  got as close to production as a film can possibly get without actually making it to the other side, Jodorowsky’s Dune indeed was never shot because of financing troubles: basically nobody in Hollywood possessed balls big enough and the right shade of gold to support the astronomical $15 million budget and all the associated risk. I don’t blame them really.

View over Arrakeen
View over Arrakeen

Think about it though. Star Wars is great, of course, we all love it, but it’s true that as a film it doesn’t exactly have any kind of message, it’s just a superbly made fairy tale with a generic fairy tale good vs evil plot. In fact it has grown into a marketing and merchandising monstrosity, especially in the last five years or so where you can’t throw a rock without having the rock come complete inside a Darth Vader helmet or better yet have it transform inside your hand into an overpriced Lego brick.

What if our Star Wars had been Dune? The documentary above draws all the parallels, ultimately how this spectre of a movie influenced Star Wars itself as well as other significant films in ways we’d never suspect—another reason I would encourage you to watch it. But get this: the universe where Jodorowsky’s Dune was made is the universe where not only Star Wars would have been completely different, if it had been made at all, but also one where we’d never have seen Alien or Blade Runner.

Would you rather stay in our universe with Star Wars, Blade Runner and Alien, or move to one where Jodorowsky’s Dune had been as successful as Star Wars in ours and had spawned all kinds of stories and ever genres we had never thought possible? If you believe that life imitates art, it would definitely be an interesting universe to experience in a broader sense. Would Muslims be seen under a different light? Would psychedelics or ecology play a more important role in pop culture or even make people vaguely more environmentally-conscious? Will we ever be able to traverse parallel universes and find out for ourselves?

If you enjoyed going down this mental path, I would recommend reading Replay, the book that inspired Groundhog Day, but basically spanning the 26 years between 1963 and 1989 instead of just 24 hours. There is a film in it too that gets big instead of Star Wars and changes the world.