Thanks for watching, be sure to check out c64audio.com/products/8-bit-symphony-pro-pre-order for Robs upcoming 8bit Symphony CD and the wonderful orchestral re-imaginings of his works. I hope you enjoy the chat! Neil - RMC
Thank you @@porkybitz - They are Howland West CIS-7000 according to the label... I can't tell you much more as I found them in a charity shop but they seem pretty vintage
Seeing 'Music by Rob Hubbard' on a game influenced my purchases back then, and today it influenced my need to _immediately_ click on this interview! Not disappointed today, as then!
Fun fact, he used to go to the whittington and cat pub here in Hull in the 1980s and my old man used to have the odd pint with him, around the time he was getting into music and computers.
Oh wow, you really found the legend himself! Words cannot begin to describe how much I love his music. Truly, a real legend that will stand the test of time. Most underrated Rob tune? Populous. If there's one tune that deserves a modern re-make, that's the one. Thanks to both for this lovely chat, I really enjoyed it. I'm also grateful that you took an extended tea break this time. :)
JSW and Warhawk on Atari 800XL was also great. He quite liked the Pokey chip when we spoke to him. When we were teenagers we phoned him from a telephone box in Manchester and was surprised that he gave us the time of day and answered our questions!
WOW Rob Hubbard on the Phone... Always liked his music. So many good memerories.... Now i am nearly 50 years, still loving them... Thx for the Interview... :-)
The little picture of Rob on the phone in the bottom corner reminded me of the days of Multi Coloured Swap Shap with a phone in competition or interview! Super Tea Breat BTW with Rob!
Omg Rob is my idol ..ever since I was little his music has been such a big part of my life and even now every one of his times is like an instant memory ... They're right up there with the likes that smell of your mam baking etc that transport you back to the Times when life was simpler and easy....the best times of our lives. Great video mate :-)
And you'd still have to play on a single string. :) I mean, in the 8-bit era the hardware was limited not only by the sound chip, but how much memory the machine could handle, yet these composers made really amazing works.
Wow you managed to get the main man himself, great job. He's among the elite of Musicians who was able to extract the best from the sid chip and produced some incredible music for the machine. Absolutley love your channel and it was a privilege to listen to the interview.
What a wonderful interview. Many thanks to both of you. As a C64 user back then, those tunes were (and still are) just so memorable. What Mr. Hubbard was able to squeeze out of such limited hardware was nothing short of genius. The new orchestral versions only help to further reveal just how superb the actual compositions are.
Such a down to earth fella.. He helped inspire so many young imaginations while playing what were such simple but effective ideas we called computer games back in the day. Thank you for sharing this tea break Neil... Completely wonderful!!!
My brother did the artwork for the cover on that record. He had a book printed with quite a few similar images but included was Rob Hubbard along with Martin Galway. The Martin Galway one I have as a canvas on my wall. The images were used in Project Sidologie which is a Jean Michel Jarre inspired project done in the C64 style by Marcel Donné
A big thanks Neil (and to you Rob Hubbard) for this priceless trip down memory lane. Massive flashback to my C64 teens and very interesting to see what RH did in the following years and going forward.
Monty on the Run.. I can almost still recall that music in my mind. Fantastic. As a games developer for Icon Design (Manchester) I had to work with David Whitaker on a few games. I vaguely recall he also sampled my voice for a game I didn't work on, because I didn't have a UK accent. Super times. Shame the games industry went all violence, left the industry for less violent projects.
Once again, RMC comes through with remarkable content. As a Canadian I am educated each video about the U.K. perspective on computers, software and personalities from “back in the day”. I think I’ll fire up my C64 tonight and listen to some SID music.
Thank you for this treat, it is certainly much appreciated. I hope you can interview more of these beloved musicians, (like Jeroen Tel, Chris Huelsbeck, Martin Galway, Matt Gray, just to name a few), and have a bit of their music in the Retro Tea Break. As usual, an impeccable video, thank you so much. :-)
Amazing! Just two or three days ago I wondered if you'd ever get someone like Rob Hubbard on the line and here he is! I never had a C64 (Atari 800XL rulezzz!), but I always envied the Commodore owners for the great, great music they got. Commando! Crazy Coments! International Karate! One Man and His Droid! Thing on a Spring! Skate or Die! Warhawk! Pure genius.
What a great interview. My daughter and I were at the concert in Hull, and we've backed Project Hubbard. Always good to hear him and it was nice that you asked him a few different questions, in a little more depth than usual. Many thanks.
Gotta love Rob Hubbard. Thanks Neil for having him on to chat. Rob's definitely one of those super-humble but supremely talented guys. Another northerner who had a similar way about him and a huge inspiration but under-sung in the industry, was Rod Temperton, who wrote Michael Jackson's famous hits such as Thriller, Baby Be Mine, etc Legends.
I went to 8 bit symphony in Hull earlier this year, it was all c64 music and was orchestrated by Sir Rob for a full symphony orchestra. It was truly amazing.
Mr. Hubbard himself. This is a very interesting interview and Rob seems like a really cool guy. Gonna check out that symphony project! EDIT: Preordered!
I know Rob well. We won't mention his keyboard collapsing at the BIT Live 1. Never seen anyone play on the floor before 0_0. He's a lovely chap but finds it all a bit strange lol. It's a shame we've lost so many other composers in the past 10 years ;( Got whole folder of his unreleased music ;)
Great vid Neil! Rob Hubbard is my favorite 8-bit musician ever, some of the best tunes on the C64 was made by this guy. I was one of the fans to buy a game just if he'd made the soundtrack. Sanxion is my all time favorite SID tune from his amazing collection. Legend :)
I was a teen back then. The gaming industry was in its infancy and there was no internet. And yet among the few names that stood out Rob Hubbard was number 1 in my mind. I was and still am a huge admirer of his work on C64. It's true, a great soundtrack can change how the whole game is perceived and enjoyed. Games like "Thing on a spring" were not my favorites, but then something in my head was telling me "With a soundtrack like this, this game can't be bad; I should try it sometime".
Really talented bloke and responsible for some of the very best of the pioneering game music of the 80's. Sanxion, Thrust, Warhawk, Human Race tune 4, Thing on a Spring, Monty on the Run, Commando, Crazy Comets, Lightforce, Spellbound......... He totally dodged the question about some of his tracks being influenced by other music though. Bits of Prophecies from Koyannisqatsi by Phillip Glass are obviously used in Delta. Bits of Space Agent and The Unknown Planet by John Keating are unmistakeably borrowed in Warhawk too
Holy cow, first Tim Follin and now Rob Hubbard? You're gonna spoil us, Neil! Any plans to get Huelsbeck on here? Seriously, though, the title theme to Monty on the Run is possibly the single greatest piece of game music ever made.
Best interview ever, Rob is a genuine legend of the 8-bit days. I was a dyed-in-the-wool Speccy fan, but nowadays I would buy a C64 just to hear Rob's work, or even just to hear Monty on the Run, the best SID tune ever. Best 8-bit tune ever. He even worked wonders with the POKEY on Jet Set Willy. The Speccy's AY chip, garbage unfortunately.
But I had a Speccy growing up and though it didn't have the envelope filters of the SID it had a less messy and precise sound I felt. And then I guess I moved on to to the ST with a familiar Chip that had modulation and extra features or that was maybe the power of the extra processing and the demo scene was great with AY sound.. You know what... looking back now I would rather have pure, chip sound rather than samples like the Amiga. Bit like prefering the Megadrive over the Snes. That, crude DX7 style synth is legendary. Especially that jangly guitar sound. Hence how Rob liked moving to Yamaha based synth chips in the early PC adLib cards. And does he really look like a 70's pornstar...........still in that phone window. Lol x
I have been to a few retro concerts when rob played and met him once just for 1 Q&A. I nearly met him when I went to the codemasters office but missed him by a few hours I was told. He had such an influence on me but lost track during his EA days but feel grateful on catching up in 2001 with back In time stuff. It was great to hear him here and on par with my meeting jeff minter in 1983 at a London commodore show. Thankyou for the vid. My question would have been around mega apocalypse I think as I heard that was a technical marvel splitting 1 chanell into 2 making it sound like 4 channels rather than 3. Thanks again.
I was always impressed with the music that Rub squeezed out of the Commodore 64. I never understood the "Wow" that people seem to hold for the music of Commando, except that he squeezed some impossible percussive sounds out of interrupt glitches to make the SID sound much richer than it was generally capable of. But if you want to talk about making music sound RICH and thick with only a 3 voice chip, consider that Skate Or Die uses a thrashing guitar chord to really open it up, and this has lead to people writing Amiga Module Players for the C64 and SID Chip. We can now play a 4-Channel Sampled Module on the SID. I personally am getting my hands on EVERY SID CHIP I can and trying to figure out how many I can jam into one C64 using 2020 technology.
@RetroManCave - PLEASE get Rob Hubbard into the cave for a video interview. This was ultra-awesome but fly the man in and feed him some Vodka... Beers and Steaks, and do a 4 hour video with him on Coding Machine Language Music. Robin has done some basic Machine Language Tuts on some border colour cycling and it helped me understand the 50 interrupt cycles a little better than 10 PRINT "I'm Cool"; : GOTO 10 or in Bigmouth 10 SAY "I am a ,DORE Sixtee fur"
I still listen to the SID tunes from Master of Magic, Commando, and Skate or Die all the time. Rob was, hands down, the best 8-bit composer. There were games that I played that I didn't even like just to listen to Rob's music (I'm looking at you Last V8).
I think when Rob was talking about Delta and the experimental nature of the tune he wasn't talking about the title tune but the in-game music. The title tune was inspired by Philip Glass and the in-game by On the Run by Pink Floyd.
so way back in the early c64 days, rob hubbard used to make little musical demos (before he made for games) that got shared around with people, one of these had his phone number on it, as a 14 year old i phoned it, made up some story about wanting music and sound effects for a file manager/app launcher,.....i was ahead of microsoft by years with that one (about 1984) , wasted a couple of minutes of robs time with gibberish
Back in time 2001 was like a childhood dream come true. We all, including Rob on the wine got very drunk! Got a ton of pictures from that with guys no longer with us, some pics I couldn't share to save face! The hangover on the way back was horrendous lol
What a humble guy. Does he realise how much his music has affected so many people? My faves are Dragon's Lair 2 on the 128k Speccy, IK+ on Speccy 128k and Master Of Magic C64, Last V8, Auf Weidersein Monty collaboration with Ben Daglish
Woo, thanks (especially) for this one. I can't help wondering if Hubbard, Galway, Daglish, Tel et al *liked* the sound of the SID chip or were primarily seeing it as a challenge or a limitation to contend with -- because I *still* get that sense of "whoa! this little breadbox is synthesising that rich psychedelic sound *right now*! IT LIVES!"... and neither prerecorded orchestral music the way we get it now nor softsynths with infinite CPU power can fully recapture that. Not that I'd not take advantage of that, but ykwim... "Rob Hubbard effect"? Now that I can actually afford games, I look for games like Spellbound and Master of Magic as if they were Rob Hubbard singles...
As soon as you asked that first question, I thought to myself "D'oh! He's been asked that one a million times!" Great interview, though. Rob is a good guy. I saw him give a presentation a number of years ago about writing music for those old systems back in the day and it was obvious that a large number of people in the crowd didn't know of him or how amazing his music was (especially given the limitations of the systems he worked on). His response from them at the end was tepid at best, which was really disappointing to see. Anyway, another thing he said there was that the game companies would tell him how much RAM he had to work with to create his tunes, and one of them only had 100 BYTES or so to spare, but he was able to do it anyway. Don't know what game or system that was, though.
I remember listening to his music when I was a c64 kid, only in recent years I've found out his name. The Beethoven of chiptunes. Thrust, Skate or die, International Karate, Spellbound, Sanxion are my Top 5
Such a clever guy. Would love to see what's inside his head. Always think the goings on inside his head is like one of those crazy Terry Gilliam Monty Python animations 🤯👍
An aspect of these great old tunes from Rob Hubbard and Martin Galway and others is that their tunes sounded a bit different on American C64s because of the faster refresh rate (60hz vs 50hz), so when I hear them here they sound too slow! (Probably sound too fast when you hear them on American C64s, eh?)
This freaked me out. I swear I read that Rob passed away a couple of years ago. Freaky! Rob, if you are reading this, you are my favorite music composer on the 64!
Rob is incredible and my favourite composer of all time regarding Chip tunes. And a shout out to wife Lin (still I hope) for coding to other Computers while he was out gigging. What a legend. I grew up with the Speccy and felt the AY could also do great stuff. No fancy envelope filters or decay and attack control But a cleaner, precise sound that I loved. I know it's not Rob H but check out the Robocop Title Tune that sounds just as good on the Speccy. Was playing my guitar with my boy earlier and explained my wah wah is called an envelope filter. But as my 4 year old just said..........if we have that we get no Post...............He's a Legend already. More to the fact he knew what a filter was. Maybe he should invent a letterbox that filters junk mail back to them. I will have a nice Nursing home then. Xx
I was thinking all night how is it possible that "Monty on the Run", "Lightforce" and "Delta" for Rob Hubbard aren't the pieces that stand out from his work. I guess an average person enjoys music in a totally different way than a great composer.
Great interview!! I love how the C64 can exactly duplicate the sounds and music from all the classic arcade games like PacMan. Seems all other machines couldn’t get the music a 100% sounding like you were at the arcade dropping coins in to play!!!
Thanks for watching, be sure to check out c64audio.com/products/8-bit-symphony-pro-pre-order for Robs upcoming 8bit Symphony CD and the wonderful orchestral re-imaginings of his works. I hope you enjoy the chat!
Neil - RMC
Also c64audio.com/collections/project-hubbard
This was an excellent interview. Thanks!
Fantastic interview Neil and sorry to be that guy, but can you tell me what those headphones you're wearing are?
Thank you @@porkybitz - They are Howland West CIS-7000 according to the label... I can't tell you much more as I found them in a charity shop but they seem pretty vintage
The man, the myth, the legend! Rob Hubbard! Great interview, Neil and I'm glad to see that Mr. Hubbard is doing well. Cheers!
His talent has been appreciated by me since the 80s, great uplifting tracks he's created. Also Ben Daglish (RIP), Martin Galaway, Fred Gray
Seeing 'Music by Rob Hubbard' on a game influenced my purchases back then, and today it influenced my need to _immediately_ click on this interview! Not disappointed today, as then!
Fun fact, he used to go to the whittington and cat pub here in Hull in the 1980s and my old man used to have the odd pint with him, around the time he was getting into music and computers.
Oh wow, you really found the legend himself!
Words cannot begin to describe how much I love his music. Truly, a real legend that will stand the test of time.
Most underrated Rob tune? Populous. If there's one tune that deserves a modern re-make, that's the one.
Thanks to both for this lovely chat, I really enjoyed it. I'm also grateful that you took an extended tea break this time. :)
I used to play that game on my mega drive....amazing game
I did a remake of Delta C64, will look up Populous but I probably do Turrican first.
The music for Dragon's Lair 2 is incredible. What a humble genius
such a humble chap also
Martin Galway's Parallax with that stereo effect .. goosebumps!
JSW and Warhawk on Atari 800XL was also great. He quite liked the Pokey chip when we spoke to him. When we were teenagers we phoned him from a telephone box in Manchester and was surprised that he gave us the time of day and answered our questions!
OMG I can't wait to get home from work now, Rob Hubbard is basically the God of 8-bit music.
Now THIS is an actual legend.
The Sanxion loader tune is a work of consummate genius. This man really is a legend.
Thank-you for mentioning the Sanxion loader, personally my absolute favourite. Genius!
WOW Rob Hubbard on the Phone... Always liked his music. So many good memerories.... Now i am nearly 50 years, still loving them... Thx for the Interview... :-)
The little picture of Rob on the phone in the bottom corner reminded me of the days of Multi Coloured Swap Shap with a phone in competition or interview!
Super Tea Breat BTW with Rob!
Rob Hubbard & Swap Shop, I don't think my nostalgia gland can take any more
Damn.. I loved Swap Shop sooooooo much!
Omg Rob is my idol ..ever since I was little his music has been such a big part of my life and even now every one of his times is like an instant memory ... They're right up there with the likes that smell of your mam baking etc that transport you back to the Times when life was simpler and easy....the best times of our lives. Great video mate :-)
Being a computer musician back in the day was like being a violinist and having to build your own flippin' instrument.
And you'd still have to play on a single string. :) I mean, in the 8-bit era the hardware was limited not only by the sound chip, but how much memory the machine could handle, yet these composers made really amazing works.
Wow you managed to get the main man himself, great job. He's among the elite of Musicians who was able to extract the best from the sid chip and produced some incredible music for the machine. Absolutley love your channel and it was a privilege to listen to the interview.
What a wonderful interview. Many thanks to both of you.
As a C64 user back then, those tunes were (and still are) just so memorable.
What Mr. Hubbard was able to squeeze out of such limited hardware was nothing short of genius.
The new orchestral versions only help to further reveal just how superb the actual compositions are.
I used to buy games just for robs music. Thanks for this interview.
Such a down to earth fella..
He helped inspire so many young imaginations while playing what were such simple but effective ideas we called computer games back in the day.
Thank you for sharing this tea break Neil... Completely wonderful!!!
I've watched and loved all of these tea-breaks but as someone else has already said, this...THIS is a true legend of the scene.
My brother did the artwork for the cover on that record. He had a book printed with quite a few similar images but included was Rob Hubbard along with Martin Galway. The Martin Galway one I have as a canvas on my wall. The images were used in Project Sidologie which is a Jean Michel Jarre inspired project done in the C64 style by Marcel Donné
A big thanks Neil (and to you Rob Hubbard) for this priceless trip down memory lane. Massive flashback to my C64 teens and very interesting to see what RH did in the following years and going forward.
Monty on the Run.. I can almost still recall that music in my mind. Fantastic. As a games developer for Icon Design (Manchester) I had to work with David Whitaker on a few games. I vaguely recall he also sampled my voice for a game I didn't work on, because I didn't have a UK accent. Super times. Shame the games industry went all violence, left the industry for less violent projects.
I want to remake Monthy on the run.
Once again, RMC comes through with remarkable content. As a Canadian I am educated each video about the U.K. perspective on computers, software and personalities from “back in the day”.
I think I’ll fire up my C64 tonight and listen to some SID music.
Thank you for this treat, it is certainly much appreciated. I hope you can interview more of these beloved musicians, (like Jeroen Tel, Chris Huelsbeck, Martin Galway, Matt Gray, just to name a few), and have a bit of their music in the Retro Tea Break. As usual, an impeccable video, thank you so much. :-)
Pint of Cider, doing some Atari 800 coding and listening to Rob Hubbard - my idea of heaven :)
Amazing! Just two or three days ago I wondered if you'd ever get someone like Rob Hubbard on the line and here he is! I never had a C64 (Atari 800XL rulezzz!), but I always envied the Commodore owners for the great, great music they got. Commando! Crazy Coments! International Karate! One Man and His Droid! Thing on a Spring! Skate or Die! Warhawk! Pure genius.
What a great interview. My daughter and I were at the concert in Hull, and we've backed Project Hubbard. Always good to hear him and it was nice that you asked him a few different questions, in a little more depth than usual. Many thanks.
Thanks for this and all people of scenes like the 'C64/AMIGA' 💝.
Have all happy days with a lot of fun ;)
Gotta love Rob Hubbard. Thanks Neil for having him on to chat. Rob's definitely one of those super-humble but supremely talented guys. Another northerner who had a similar way about him and a huge inspiration but under-sung in the industry, was Rod Temperton, who wrote Michael Jackson's famous hits such as Thriller, Baby Be Mine, etc Legends.
Its funny after all these years, i can still hum along to those classic tunes. Thanks for the interview. Long live the SID chip!
Fantastic interview even if we didn’t get to see him, so great to hear from such a legendary 8-Bit composer.
Never have I clicked on a thumbnail so quickly!!!!
I went to 8 bit symphony in Hull earlier this year, it was all c64 music and was orchestrated by Sir Rob for a full symphony orchestra. It was truly amazing.
Once in a life time, you make great music. Never again is it the same.
Well, its logical only to hear Rob Hubbard's audio, isn't it 😀
Mr. Hubbard himself. This is a very interesting interview and Rob seems like a really cool guy. Gonna check out that symphony project!
EDIT: Preordered!
I know Rob well. We won't mention his keyboard collapsing at the BIT Live 1. Never seen anyone play on the floor before 0_0. He's a lovely chap but finds it all a bit strange lol. It's a shame we've lost so many other composers in the past 10 years ;( Got whole folder of his unreleased music ;)
Great interview! The Delta theme is amazing! Spellbound is amazing too! How incredible that we had a genius like Rob on the C-64!
A true legend from way back in the day 🤩 what an interview!
Congratulations and thanks for this interview!
Thanks for sharing!
Cool video matey, Rob is a music god thanks for all your awesome game tunes ;)
Great vid Neil! Rob Hubbard is my favorite 8-bit musician ever, some of the best tunes on the C64 was made by this guy. I was one of the fans to buy a game just if he'd made the soundtrack. Sanxion is my all time favorite SID tune from his amazing collection. Legend :)
I was a teen back then. The gaming industry was in its infancy and there was no internet. And yet among the few names that stood out Rob Hubbard was number 1 in my mind. I was and still am a huge admirer of his work on C64. It's true, a great soundtrack can change how the whole game is perceived and enjoyed. Games like "Thing on a spring" were not my favorites, but then something in my head was telling me "With a soundtrack like this, this game can't be bad; I should try it sometime".
Congrats on this one Neil! I would love to hear from other SID maestros like Tony Crowther and Martin Galway.... just amazing music in those days!
This was an amazing interview. Rob Hubbard! Thank you!
Really talented bloke and responsible for some of the very best of the pioneering game music of the 80's.
Sanxion, Thrust, Warhawk, Human Race tune 4, Thing on a Spring, Monty on the Run, Commando, Crazy Comets, Lightforce, Spellbound.........
He totally dodged the question about some of his tracks being influenced by other music though.
Bits of Prophecies from Koyannisqatsi by Phillip Glass are obviously used in Delta.
Bits of Space Agent and The Unknown Planet by John Keating are unmistakeably borrowed in Warhawk too
I've just come out from the lab and have to report that it turns out the theme tune to Chimera on the C64 was the best video game theme song.
Used to love listening to delta in game music. as a kid it sounded just like Koyaanisqatsi by Philip glass
Such great tunes! I just love his work, he should be very proud.
What a smashing interwiev Niel 👍👍👍. Have always loved rob’s tunes on the C64 😁😁
When I hear the name "Rob Hubbard", I immediately think of the music for ZOIDS: my Top #5 game music of all time.
Holy cow, first Tim Follin and now Rob Hubbard? You're gonna spoil us, Neil! Any plans to get Huelsbeck on here?
Seriously, though, the title theme to Monty on the Run is possibly the single greatest piece of game music ever made.
What a great interview with a wonderful artist. Thank you very much.
Brilliant, most interesting to hear Rob Hubbard, thank you very much!
Enjoyed the Interview a lot 👌🏻😊
He‘s a true legend indeed !
Thanks for all those tunes Rob
Best interview ever, Rob is a genuine legend of the 8-bit days. I was a dyed-in-the-wool Speccy fan, but nowadays I would buy a C64 just to hear Rob's work, or even just to hear Monty on the Run, the best SID tune ever. Best 8-bit tune ever. He even worked wonders with the POKEY on Jet Set Willy. The Speccy's AY chip, garbage unfortunately.
But I had a Speccy growing up and though it didn't have the envelope filters of the SID it had a less messy and precise sound I felt. And then I guess I moved on to to the ST with a familiar Chip that had modulation and extra features or that was maybe the power of the extra processing and the demo scene was great with AY sound.. You know what... looking back now I would rather have pure, chip sound rather than samples like the Amiga. Bit like prefering the Megadrive over the Snes. That, crude DX7 style synth is legendary. Especially that jangly guitar sound. Hence how Rob liked moving to Yamaha based synth chips in the early PC adLib cards. And does he really look like a 70's pornstar...........still in that phone window. Lol x
OMG I'm so glad I stumbled across this channel.
Hello and welcome aboard! There will be lots more Tea Break interviews coming in 2020 🎅
Great audio on new mic!
thank you. these interviews are great!
You're welcome, thank you for watching them
I have been to a few retro concerts when rob played and met him once just for 1 Q&A. I nearly met him when I went to the codemasters office but missed him by a few hours I was told. He had such an influence on me but lost track during his EA days but feel grateful on catching up in 2001 with back In time stuff. It was great to hear him here and on par with my meeting jeff minter in 1983 at a London commodore show. Thankyou for the vid. My question would have been around mega apocalypse I think as I heard that was a technical marvel splitting 1 chanell into 2 making it sound like 4 channels rather than 3. Thanks again.
A man from my home town of Hull :) ..a real legend..sadly never mentioned when great people from Hull are...
His music on the EA hockey series on the Genesis hooked me into hours of gameplay a day, loved his rock sound.
wow! what an honour.. fascinating interview... Rob is a true genius.. many many thanks for this Neil :)
It really was a special privilege to speak with him, I'll remember it fondly
@@RMCRetro next David Whittaker... ??
I was always impressed with the music that Rub squeezed out of the Commodore 64.
I never understood the "Wow" that people seem to hold for the music of Commando, except that he squeezed some impossible percussive sounds out of interrupt glitches to make the SID sound much richer than it was generally capable of.
But if you want to talk about making music sound RICH and thick with only a 3 voice chip, consider that Skate Or Die uses a thrashing guitar chord to really open it up, and this has lead to people writing Amiga Module Players for the C64 and SID Chip. We can now play a 4-Channel Sampled Module on the SID.
I personally am getting my hands on EVERY SID CHIP I can and trying to figure out how many I can jam into one C64 using 2020 technology.
@RetroManCave - PLEASE get Rob Hubbard into the cave for a video interview. This was ultra-awesome but fly the man in and feed him some Vodka... Beers and Steaks, and do a 4 hour video with him on Coding Machine Language Music.
Robin has done some basic Machine Language Tuts on some border colour cycling and it helped me understand the 50 interrupt cycles a little better than
10 PRINT "I'm Cool"; : GOTO 10
or in Bigmouth
10 SAY "I am a ,DORE Sixtee fur"
Jesus rob didnt do bomb jack :)
@@ryg1943 Yeah, you're right. I was thinking of something else. Forgive my 42yo senility.
I still listen to the SID tunes from Master of Magic, Commando, and Skate or Die all the time. Rob was, hands down, the best 8-bit composer. There were games that I played that I didn't even like just to listen to Rob's music (I'm looking at you Last V8).
It's interesting how such a soft spoken person makes such intense music.
I think when Rob was talking about Delta and the experimental nature of the tune he wasn't talking about the title tune but the in-game music. The title tune was inspired by Philip Glass and the in-game by On the Run by Pink Floyd.
so way back in the early c64 days, rob hubbard used to make little musical demos (before he made for games) that got shared around with people, one of these had his phone number on it, as a 14 year old i phoned it, made up some story about wanting music and sound effects for a file manager/app launcher,.....i was ahead of microsoft by years with that one (about 1984) , wasted a couple of minutes of robs time with gibberish
Super interesting, great work! 👌
Bought him a pint at a retro event once!
I always loved the music from Monty On The Run and Thing On A Spring, What about thrust Concert, I remember Robs name being in it.
Back in time 2001 was like a childhood dream come true. We all, including Rob on the wine got very drunk! Got a ton of pictures from that with guys no longer with us, some pics I couldn't share to save face! The hangover on the way back was horrendous lol
why did you put a mug on rob's head?
Ultravox was Midge Ure band back in the 80s - I noticed Neil didn't say anything so he didn't know either lol
This means nothing to me 😂
RetroManCave 😆😆😆😆
Using Merry Christmas Mr Lawrence on IK was genius.
Amazing interview with an absolute legend. Thank you ❤️🐵
What a humble guy. Does he realise how much his music has affected so many people? My faves are Dragon's Lair 2 on the 128k Speccy, IK+ on Speccy 128k and Master Of Magic C64, Last V8, Auf Weidersein Monty collaboration with Ben Daglish
Favorite tune is Goldrunner . Love that tune
28:23 Ultravox was the band name!
Woo, thanks (especially) for this one. I can't help wondering if Hubbard, Galway, Daglish, Tel et al *liked* the sound of the SID chip or were primarily seeing it as a challenge or a limitation to contend with -- because I *still* get that sense of "whoa! this little breadbox is synthesising that rich psychedelic sound *right now*! IT LIVES!"... and neither prerecorded orchestral music the way we get it now nor softsynths with infinite CPU power can fully recapture that. Not that I'd not take advantage of that, but ykwim...
"Rob Hubbard effect"? Now that I can actually afford games, I look for games like Spellbound and Master of Magic as if they were Rob Hubbard singles...
Thank you! 🌟
What a humble genius
As soon as you asked that first question, I thought to myself "D'oh! He's been asked that one a million times!" Great interview, though. Rob is a good guy. I saw him give a presentation a number of years ago about writing music for those old systems back in the day and it was obvious that a large number of people in the crowd didn't know of him or how amazing his music was (especially given the limitations of the systems he worked on). His response from them at the end was tepid at best, which was really disappointing to see.
Anyway, another thing he said there was that the game companies would tell him how much RAM he had to work with to create his tunes, and one of them only had 100 BYTES or so to spare, but he was able to do it anyway. Don't know what game or system that was, though.
I remember listening to his music when I was a c64 kid, only in recent years I've found out his name. The Beethoven of chiptunes. Thrust, Skate or die, International Karate, Spellbound, Sanxion are my Top 5
so many seemed to want the arcade style joysticks back in the day but I always preferred the tac 2 and slik stik
Crazy to think he had time to start his own religion as well!
First thing I looked for when buying games was the name "Rob Hubbard", I bought no end of terrible games just because of him!
TIL Rob Hubbard is British - why did I think he was American!?! (Mid 40’s ‘old school’ original C64 owner too!)
Such a clever guy. Would love to see what's inside his head. Always think the goings on inside his head is like one of those crazy Terry Gilliam Monty Python animations 🤯👍
An aspect of these great old tunes from Rob Hubbard and Martin Galway and others is that their tunes sounded a bit different on American C64s because of the faster refresh rate (60hz vs 50hz), so when I hear them here they sound too slow! (Probably sound too fast when you hear them on American C64s, eh?)
He is my favourite game music composer he is brilliant. The music for thing on a spring was better than the game.
Most of his music is better than the games they're in!
This freaked me out. I swear I read that Rob passed away a couple of years ago. Freaky! Rob, if you are reading this, you are my favorite music composer on the 64!
You may be thinking of Ben Daglish, another great English contemporary of Rob's who passed away in 2018.
@@savajeff That is exactly who I am thinking of. THANK YOU!
Just read his bio. Looks like cigs got him (lung cancer).
Rob is incredible and my favourite composer of all time regarding Chip tunes. And a shout out to wife Lin (still I hope) for coding to other Computers while he was out gigging. What a legend. I grew up with the Speccy and felt the AY could also do great stuff. No fancy envelope filters or decay and attack control But a cleaner, precise sound that I loved. I know it's not Rob H but check out the Robocop Title Tune that sounds just as good on the Speccy. Was playing my guitar with my boy earlier and explained my wah wah is called an envelope filter. But as my 4 year old just said..........if we have that we get no Post...............He's a Legend already. More to the fact he knew what a filter was. Maybe he should invent a letterbox that filters junk mail back to them. I will have a nice Nursing home then. Xx
Thought this was the guy who invented scientology!
I was thinking all night how is it possible that "Monty on the Run", "Lightforce" and "Delta" for Rob Hubbard aren't the pieces that stand out from his work. I guess an average person enjoys music in a totally different way than a great composer.
I rate him as highly as jean michel jarre for biggest influences in my teenage years, such a legend..........
The advertisements make a bad window and drive me up the wall and I wish that would realize this.
Cool! The man is a legend.
Great interview!! I love how the C64 can exactly duplicate the sounds and music from all the classic arcade games like PacMan. Seems all other machines couldn’t get the music a 100% sounding like you were at the arcade dropping coins in to play!!!