Road Rash (1996): Game rip
Game info
Name: Road Rash (1996)
Publishers: Electronic Arts, EA, EA Victor
Developers: Papyrus Design Group, EA
Original/port composers: Hammerbox, Monster Magnet, Paw, Swervedriver, Soundgarden, Therapy
Platforms:
Sega GameGear
Sega Master System
Game Boy
Sega Mega-CD
3DO (27 Aug 1994) - Japan
PC Windows (1996) - Europe
PlayStation (22 Mar 1996) - Japan
Sega Saturn (26 Jul 1996) - Japan
PlayStation (15 Sep 2000) - Europe
Game Boy Color (15 Dec 2000) - Europe
Music info
Released: 27 Aug 1994
Related Plaform: PC Windows
Format: Sequenced music (MID)
Composers of these tunes: Hammerbox, Monster Magnet, Paw, Swervedriver, Soundgarden, Therapy
Source / Archiver / Ripper: Alpha23, Bail_Shamber
Music type: Game rip
Archived process: Archived completely
Num of tunes: 16
Complete: 100%
Size of archive: 1.17 MBytes
User reviews
Facts / description
Info from Bail_Shamber, related to following tunes:
1- The City.mid
2- Sierra Nevada.mid
3- The Peninsula.mid
4- Napa Valley.mid
5- Pacific Highway.mid
This archive contains all 5 midi tracks of Road Rash for PC, and unlike
the one provided before it, which is a direct copy/paste of the game
files, the .mid files in this archive can be played using any player
that supports midi playback.
The files in this archive were made by recording midi events while
the game was being played, then removing the initial silence,
and ending the midi sequence right before the music loops.
It should be accurate to the tick, I believe.
Info from Alpha23 (rest of the tunes, previous version with directly stored files):
Near the Midis, the game has also digital audio soundtrack made by various
rock bands. But these Midi tunes are different from this soundtrack and they
are playing during the game (while the DA plays in menus)
Music download
Download Game Music in ZIP archive!
Other music records from this game
Other tools
Generate info.txt - with this cool feature you can generate the info.txt file with all tune information and save it somewhere, which means you'll have something like "tune ID card"! :) This has cool advantages - it's small, fastly readable/editable, you can add it to the tune archive if you want and you will have everytime fast information about the game and music archive. Also programs which support reading from txt files (such as KBMedia Player) can read the info.txt file directly while playing tunes of all formats!
Help - description of Music record fields