What's an adventure game soundtrack that lives rent free in your head?
I mean, obviously I'm biased, but Space Quest III just had one of the most amazing kick-ass soundtracks. Composed by Bob Siebenberg, the drummer from Supertramp!
He started out doing conversions of other Sierra composers' music to "lesser" music cards, like AdLib and PC speaker. It wasn't until he worked on Gabriel Knight as a producer that he decided, "You know what, I'll write the score as well."
Such a nice guy, too. He was super supportive when we did the Synths of the Fathers remix record, and he even let me play drums on his solo album Sequel (and its upcoming sequel, Son of Sequel).
Thank you for reminding me, Benny. I've played the Riven soundtrack so many times that I practically have it memorized. I guess it's tied with KQ6 for living rent-free in my head all the time.
Police Quest ]['s intro song, played through an MT-32 on my dashboard like some kind of police radio hardware, as I drive out to get coffee.
Lol, seriously. Back in 3rd or 4th grade our teacher was asking the class what their favourite music was and my legit answer was Police Quest 2. The whole class thought I was a freak. I mean they did before, but my answer didn't change any minds.
Serious answer for an entire soundtrack though? Space Quest 4. Good variety. I'm a big fan of the dystopian vibes, and that final countdown theme in the supercomputer is chef's kiss
What a wild game. I want to replay it, but played it too recently. Need time to forget the puzzles.
Wonder if we'll see anything in this vein again. There is Markus Ritter, which seems to be at least inspired by the same German-evil-hunter-descended-from-Ritter-lineage backstory. I'm playing its sequel in the Steam Next Fest, haven't made it very far, and it's definitively an indie/lower budget game, but has a nostalgic and interesting feeling, and is actually a point and click game, unlike some latter-day FMV games that are more like choose-your-own-adventure with dialogue prompts.
The 7th Guest and The 11th Hour were both stuck in my head (and on my phone, my old WinAMP playlist, the MIDI's are still floating around my computer somewhere) for the longest time after I discovered those games in the mid 2000's.