11
what you could do with an Amiga in 1987. Includes how it was done.
(www.youtube.com)
a community for posting cool tech news you don’t want to sneer at
non-awfulness of tech is not required or else we wouldn’t have any posts
fucking awesome! here’s the process behind the music video for anyone who missed the video description:
the Amiga was infamously very good at doing video effects on a budget — shows like Babylon 5 used a bunch of Amigas for editing, effects, and primitive 3D graphics. to be fair, as a budget toolchain the Amiga was also known for some of the cheesiest effects you know from microbudget 90s TV and VHS garbage. it was a flexible tool that could make art in the right hands (or a thoroughly awful infomercial in, ah, other hands)
Tom’s process is insane and I kind of want to try it! this was almost definitely the least expensive way to do computerized video effects, and a base level A1000 (that was the first Amiga, and he mentions it only had 512k of RAM) had so many constraints to work around! a lot of video production places automated the process of compositing the effects onto video using an expensive (to me, cheap to them) software/hardware toolchain called the Video Toaster, the software portion of which is now open source. I’ve actually been wondering if it’d be difficult to clone the Video Toaster hardware on an FPGA board, with maybe a USB interface instead of Zorro III so even the cheap (keyboard form factor) Amigas could play with one. all for the incredible power to edit and composite onto a low-res NTSC video stream!
Absolutely fascinating.
Severed Heads had two actual record companies at this time, though not really a huge amount of money. (They had some hits in the late '80s and early '90s that were helpful to the bank account for a short time.) So Tom got extremely good at beating the crap out of things.
all of this sounds like my kind of music production. which albums do you recommend starting with from their Bandcamp? (finally my bandcamp account’s getting more play)
"Living Museum" is a live album from the final tour a few years ago, that's good for the pop songs. "Clean" and "Blubberknife" are noise records. Severed Heads started in the late 1970s as Tom making his own tapeloops.
edit: looks like you can't actually buy Living Museum from the site? But you can play it!
nice! I grabbed Clean and Blubberknife; it looks like Living Museum can’t be bought on Bandcamp so I’ll have to look more into that one later. this is a great excuse to start listening to music again with the fancy (for me) audio setup on my desktop
Severed Heads also goes extremely well with headphones, so you can try to work out what that thing is at the top-left of the mix.
it’s time to bust out the good headphones (unironically, these feel like wearing a Fisher Price toy but are the best headphones I own for listening quality)