It’s the story… of a podcast named Legacy… Music Hour, that is. In this episode, the boizz talk about nutz, among other things, and Brent does a sort of theme to his selections. There’s also a VGM Karaoke segment featuring user UtopiaNemo! Full track listing below.
Game - Composer - Track - Company - Console - Year (North American release unless otherwise indicated)
Aoi Blink - Shinichi Sakamoto, Souichirou Harada - Story - West One/Hudson Soft - PC Engine - 1990
Super C - Kazuki Muraoka, Motoaki Furukawa, Hidenori Maezawa (arr.) - Stage 2: Military Fortress - Konami - NES - 1990
Mr. Nutz - Raphael Gesqua, Matt Furniss (arr.) - Title - Ocean - Mega Drive (Europe) - 1994
Final Fantasy - Nobuo Uematsu - Shop - Square - NES - 1990
Marsupilami - Matthew Owens - Battle of the Marsupials - Apache Software Limited/Sega - Genesis - 1995
Metal Black - Yasuhisa Watanabe - A Mirage of Mind (Part 1) (Ending) - Taito - arcade (Japan) - 1991
Dead Zone - Naoki Kodaka - Ending - Sunsoft - Famicom Disk System - 1986
Zelda II: The Adventure of Link - Akito Nakatsuka - Overworld - Nintendo - NES - 1988
Phelios - Yoshinori Kawamoto - Ending - Namco - Genesis - 1990
Streets of Rage 2 - Yuzo Koshiro - Go Straight - Sega - Genesis - 1992
Cross Wiber: Cyber Combat Police - Hiroto Saitoh (Dandy Hiroto) - Chapter 01 - Sankindo/Face - PC Engine - 1990
Kirby's Adventure - Hirokazu Ando - Cloud Tops - HAL Laboratory - NES - 1993
Erik the Viking - Neil Baldwin - Peace In The Harbor - Eurocom - NES - 1992 (unreleased)
Vibin' is for kids, real nickels are Wibin' like my man Dandy Hiroto
ReplyDeleteI have not listened to this one yet, but the previous episodes for download have broken links.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the heads up! All the links are fixed now.
DeleteThanks!
DeleteLove Brent’s ‘classic’ focus. Too many great tracks have been left behind through the years. Great to hear from Streets of Rage 2 and Final Fantasy 1. Keep up the great work, fellas.
ReplyDeleteHey Brent, Shop from Final Fantasy NES was played on Episode 80: Free Play 8 as the closing track. Nutz.
ReplyDeleteAnd apparently Episode 243 too! Double deez nutz.
ReplyDeleteFun Fact: Marsupilami is originally a French-Belgian comic. Disney did make a TV show of it briefly, but its origins are completely different. Pretty strange how it ended up as a lesser-known American Disney cartoon! I guess the character just had 'the look'!
ReplyDelete