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David Lowe (video game composer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

David Lowe, also known as "Uncle Art", is a British composer known for his work on computer games from 1985 to 1998.

Lowe gained attention by making music with professional synthesizers (CX5, DX7, RX11 drum machine) for an additional cassette tape distributed with the games Starglider 2 and Carrier Command.[1]

His Starglider soundtrack for 16-bit computers (Atari ST and Amiga) was notable for having a 15-second song (a single sound file) with vocals and synthesizers on both versions. The Amiga version's title music used high-quality instrument sounds before tracker music.

Lowe composed and recorded the music for Frontier: Elite II.[1]

Lowe was also co-author and assembler programmer for 'Buggy Blast' and also programmer for the Spectrum Z80 version of 'Thrust': both published by Rainbird 1985 & 1986 respectively.[1] In 2017, Lowe and his daughter finished their latest album; A Temporal Shift. It features remastered versions of some of Lowe's best-known gaming tunes.[2]

Notable games

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Drury, Paul (18 June 2015). "Desert Island Disks: David Lowe". Retro Gamer. No. 143. pp. 90–95.
  2. ^ Lowe, Dave. "A Temporal Shift". Remix64. Retrieved 1 November 2024.
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