David Lowe
From Sega Retro
David Lowe |
---|
Role(s): Musician |
This teeny-tiny article needs some work. You can help us by expanding it.
David Lowe, otherwise known as Uncle Art is a British video game composer. He composed and provided sound effects for many home computer ports of Sega games.
His style of using a computer's sound chip is very distinctive among Amiga enthusiasts - short looped samples mixed with high quality drums and chords that have been used in several games. Where possible, he programmed playback of live music for the games of which he arranged in a "chopped and screwed" fashion. This and the stylistic clash inherent was acknowledged by Matt Furniss in the internal music files of the Amiga conversion of Space Harrier II.
Production history
- After Burner (Amiga; 1988) (as Uncle Art)
- Turbo OutRun (Atari ST; 1989) — Music by (as Uncle Art)
- Power Drift (Amiga; 1989) — Music by (as Uncle Art)
- Power Drift (Atari ST; 1989) — Music by (as Uncle Art)
- Power Drift (Commodore 64; 1989) — Music by (as Dave Lowe)
- Power Drift (Commodore 64; 1989) — Music (as Dave Lowe)
- Galaxy Force II (Amiga; 1990) — Music by (as Uncle Art)
- Line of Fire (Amiga; 1991) — Music (as Uncle Art)
- Cliffhanger (Game Gear; 1993) — Music by[1] (as Dave Lowe)
- PGA Tour Golf II (Game Gear; 1994) — Music[2]
- Power Drift (ZX Spectrum; 1989) — Music and FX by (as Dave Lowe)
- Altered Beast (Amiga; 1990) — Music by (as Uncle Art)
- Turbo OutRun (Amiga; 1989) — Music by (as Uncle Art)
- Turbo OutRun (Amstrad CPC; 1989) — Music (as Uncle Art)