DK Jamz is the name of the original Donkey Kong Countrysoundtrack. It was extremely popular, and the quality of the music is considered by many to be some of the best in its genre. Composers Robin Beanland, Eveline Fischer and Dave Wise collaborated on this ensemble of lush jungle music. This rich, diverse composition consists of 50 tracks, of which tracks 24-48 are completely silent, and the remaining two tracks in the end are 'secret' bonus tracks not listed in the back of the disc cover. This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ... Outrun (1986) is an arcade game with an integral soundtrack. ... Music is an animal activity which involves structured and audible sounds, which is used for artistic or aesthetic, entertainment, or ceremonial purposes. ... A genre is a division of a particular form of art according to criteria particular to that form. ... Robin Beanland composed video game music for numerous Rareware titles such as: Killer Instinct, Killer Instinct 2, Conkers Bad Fur Day, and many others. ... David Wise (often also credited as Dave Wise) is a video game music composer. ...
Tracks
Theme
Simian Segue
DK Island Swing
Cranky's Theme
Jungle Groove
Cave Dweller Concert
Bonus Room Blitz
Aquatic Ambiance
Candy's Love Song
Bad Boss Boogie
Mine Cart Madness
Life in the Mines
Voices of the Temple
Forest Frenzy
Treetop Rock
Funky's Fugue
Misty Menace
Northern Hemispheres
Ice Cave Chant
Fear Factory
Gang-Plank Galleon
K. Rool's Cacophony
The Credits Concerto
24-48. - (silent)
49. End of Turn (the melody played when a turn ends)
50. End of Stage (the melody played when a stage is cleared)
Topic: Donkey Kong Country (DKJamz) (Read 79 times)
DKJamz is the name of the original Donkey Kong Country soundtrack.
Composers Robin Beanland, Eveline Fischer, and David Wise collaborated on this album.[1] It was extremely popular, and the quality of the music is considered by many to be some of the best in its genre.
I consider DKC 1 to be the peak of the DK franchise's success, both creative and commercially.
New level concepts were brought in, a new character which brought a whole new playing style in and of course the awesome atmosphere which DKc1 had.
DKC3 was a humiliation on Rare's behalf, DK64 was nothing particularly special in terms of gameplay, and most of the Nintendo-created DK games are just unspeakably bad.