introduction
hello!
my name is will furmanick.
i make things. however, because i am poor and can't afford a lot of webspace, i can't host all of it over at willf.org, my personal domain. so i am using tripod's free space and filling it with mp3s i've written. they're all techno, or at least supposed to be, and a good half of them aren't even worth the ones and zeroes they represent. however... they're my babies and i've kept them for nostalgia's sake.
the songs are below! click a link, load a page, download the song.
this is page one! page two has more music!
songs [title: length, filesize - description]
cacaphony: 0:05, 91.9kb - i actually made a mistake when encoding this one (which is why it's only 5 seconds long) but ended up liking it better. didn't save the original so i can't go back and fix it.
alpha 1 (captain planet remix): 1:13, 1.12mb - the captain planet theme song with crazy techno going on in front of it. i say in front rather than behind it because i made the techno part too loud so it's hard to hear what the planeteers are saying first go.
another day (mr. sandman mix): 1:39, 1.51mb - that 50's song. you know: "mr. sandman / won't you give me a dream..." anyway, i chopped up the original and made it into a not-so-bad techno track. well, not-so-bad in my opinion.
armegeddon clipping: 0:54, 857kb - my first attempt at using samples that weren't musical instruments. it's got clips from all over the place (rocko's modern life, anyone?) and a really repetitive backbeat which gave me the "armegeddon" part of the title.
breathy sorta thing: 0:30, 482kb - i don't like this song very much now, but i did when i made it, i think.
dreaded egg pirate: 2:39, 2.43mb - a song i made as a birthday present for my friend eggie. my first experiment with using the encarta on-line pronunciation wavs as actual speech.
drifting in deep space: 0:56, 884kb - my first attempt at doing a real "trance" song. i didn't like it much when i made it (listening to it too long made my eyes hurt) but when i uploaded it to mp3.com people seemed to like it. by the way - i hate mp3.com for music hosting. they're slow and won't let half my songs through their censoring thing.
ffx piano theme (farting): 1:56, 1.77mb - i took the opening piano theme from final fantasy x and made it sound like someone (who would have to be really talented) was farting it, rather than playing it on a piano.
ffx battle theme (de jug): 3:01, 2.77mb - the music that plays while you're fighting in final fantasy x, but as if it was played by a jug band. or a very odd drum band.
floaty happy: 2:54, 2.66mb - i like this one. the bass kick sounds very neat in my headphones.
hateful fairies: 0:07, 121kb - another clip i messed up the encoding on (and, by the way, i don't mean encoding as in the bitrate or any such nonsense. i mean taking the audio data from my step sequencer and making into an mp3 file). it was better as a full song.
pick up that damn phone!: 0:41, 646kb - this is why i stopped playing with samples at three in the morning.
additive explosives: 1:16, 1.17mb -i think this is the third song i ever wrote. it's one of my favorites! considering, of course, that i had idea what i was doing at the time, i think it came out rather well.
angry bubbles: 0:28, 445kb - i don't know why i bothered saving this song. don't download it!
dexter fun: 1:29, 1.36mb - a song with clips from the cartoon network cartoon, dexter's laboratory. one of my earlier adventures in tv-sampleland.
pop goes the weasel: 0:20, 322kb - the children's classic... just, noisier! a lot noisier. this is another one of those songs that i couldn't believe i'd written at first, but ended up liking afterwards.
the doom song (remix): 1:13, 1.12mb - remixed the doom song from invader zim. not my best remix; it was the first i attempted.
contact
email: willf@willf.org
website: http://willf.org/
aim sn: a very old hat
copyright
all of the content appearing on this site is copyright will furmanick, 2002. in cases in which the songs contain clips from other sources, no money is being made off these tracks and all rights are retained by the original creator.