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{"id":1424,"date":"2009-04-27T17:00:46","date_gmt":"2009-04-27T22:00:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.robohara.com\/?p=1424"},"modified":"2009-04-27T17:00:46","modified_gmt":"2009-04-27T22:00:46","slug":"you-cant-handle-the-commodore-song","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.robohara.com\/?p=1424","title":{"rendered":"You Can’t Handle the Commodore (Song)"},"content":{"rendered":"

The third annual Blockparty<\/a> (now I believe the longest running US demo party) took place Saturday night at during Notacon. Demo parties<\/a> are competitions where coders enter their programs and audience members vote on them. Along with the standard “demo” category, the organizers of Blockparty expanded to include several different categories. One of them was music, so I decided to write, record and enter my own song.<\/p>\n

My interest in demos and the demo scene goes back to the Commodore 64, so I knew up front I wanted to record a tribute to the 64. I know nothing of 8-bit recording techniques, so that was out. I considered recording samples from 8-bit games into a modern program and restructuring them into a song, but I didn’t want to create an entire song out of other people’s sound samples, so I dropped that idea too. While listening to Run DMC during my recent road trip to Pennsylvania, it hit me — I’ll record a rap! Raps are relatively easy to write and perform as is loop-based music, so that’s what I decided to do.<\/p>\n

The end result was “You Can’t Handle the Commodore,” a three-minute song written in the style of an old-school “rap battle”. Rap, and especially the rap I used to listen to growing up, has always been filled with “battle” songs — you know, “I’m so bad” and “I could kick your butt” and stuff like that … so after listening to several hours of old Run DMC, Ice-T, NWA and LL Cool J albums to get me in the mood, I sat down and wrote the lyrics to my song. Here are the lyrics, with a ton of notations added to explain all the jokes. Note that unless you are familiar with the C64 and much of its library, most of this won’t seem very funny.<\/p>\n

You Can’t Handle the Commodore<\/b><\/p>\n

[First Verse]<\/p>\n

Listen up kid, it’s time to put down the Wiimote
\nDrop the 32-bits, hop into my boat (1)
\nTalkin’ trash like a punk emcee,
\nI’ll punch you in the face like the Ninja from Bruce Lee! (2)<\/p>\n

My kid is the son of an 8 bit, (3)
\nIn front of a sixty-four’s where I sit. (4)
\nI like to battle, but I won’t bark on,
\nI’ll toast your ass like the Phoenix from Archon. (5)<\/p>\n

I’m great at a million games man,
\nWhen you were in diapers, I was cleanin up Wasteland.
\nSummer Games, Winter Games, World Games, too, (6)
\nCalifornia Games cured my summertime Blues (7)<\/p>\n

Wanna play? Bring a DB9 Stick, (8)
\nI got an old Epyx that I’ll kick your ass with. (9)
\nYou want mercy? Well you better start wishin,
\nYou beatin’ me’s an Impossible Mission. (10)<\/p>\n

Like HERO, I’m about to fly, (11)
\nWith a disk notcher I’ll use your backside, (12)
\nLike Load Runner you’ll drop your load,
\nThen I’ll pick up your package of gold. (13)<\/p>\n

You’re a headbanger, cuz you bang your drive’s head (14)
\nYou’re like a zombie, and you’re already dead,
\nAnd I’m a serial killer with a serial cable, (15)
\nCuz you’re retarded, or should I say disabled?<\/p>\n

Let’s play Pitfall, you know what to do? (16)
\nWell take notes chump and I’ll give you a clue.
\nJump over the logs, then swing on the vines,
\nAnd then you gotta UH OH out of time! (17)<\/p>\n

This battle’s over, I’ve already won,
\nCuz you come last like comma eight comma one. (18)
\nFeelin’ lucky? Wanna test your ability?
\nYou beatin’ me? Realm of Impossibility. (19)<\/p>\n

[Chorus]<\/p>\n

I’m the king of (20) [the Commodore]
\nYou don’t want none of (21) [the Commodore]
\nYou can’t handle (22) [the Commodore] (23)<\/p>\n

[Second Verse]<\/p>\n

So bring what you got, whatchu think, you’re bad man?
\nWell I got skills yo, but I ain’t Rad Man (24)
\nCuz he does art, yo and I play games, yo
\nso pick up a stick and I’ll bring the pain, yo<\/p>\n

Cuz here is the church and here is the steeple,
\nyour only friends are Little Computer People (25)
\nIn Skate or Die (26) you always fall,
\nSo you can suck on my Wizballs (27)<\/p>\n

I’ll cut your head off, like Barbarian (28)
\nI’m bout to school you like a librarian
\nYour expectations are never gonna be met
\nI’ll rip you apart like Racing Destruction Set (29)<\/p>\n

You think your bad, you better get your facts on,
\nCuz I can rock a perfect score in Zaxxon, (30)
\nWanna play some Hacker or Hacker II, (31)
\nWell look it up bitch I wrote the walk thru. (32)<\/p>\n

Your face is red, I can tell your pissed,
\nCuz I whipped you in the Way of the Exploding Fist (33)
\nCuz I kick ass, and I never come in last,
\nAnd I’ll beat your ass at Boulderdash (34)<\/p>\n

Player one, player two, it just don’t matter,
\nIn Karate Champ (35) your face will splatter,
\nI’ll whip you, like a goddess wearing leather (36)
\nYou can Stay a while, but don’t stay forever. (37)<\/p>\n

In Beach Head (38) you took two the dome,
\nYou gonna need a Space Taxi (39) to get you home.
\nYes I’m better than you, you’re not just paranoid,
\nand I’m a 999 in Paradroid (40)<\/p>\n

Three minutes and this track is through (41)
\nI’m number one and you’re 6502 (42)
\nWe’re done here, and there’s the door,
\nI was right, you can’t handle the Commodore.<\/p>\n

[Chorus]<\/p>\n

[Closing Comments]<\/p>\n

That’s right, he’s the king.
\nYou better run\/stop your mouth. (43)
\nAw your disk is all floppy … (44)
\nHe’s got two kids — Vic, and Sid. (45)
\nHe’s gonna get you with an Isepic. (46)
\nYeah, you can’t handle the Commodore …<\/p>\n

Notes:<\/p>\n

1 – The Wii is a 32-bit System
\n2 – Bruce Lee = Popular C64 Game (that featured a ninja).
\n3 – Play on “son of a b***h”
\n4 – sixty-four = Commodore 64
\n5 – In the game Archon, the Phoenix attacked by exploding into fire.
\n6 – Wasteland, Summer Games, Winter Games, World Games, California Games = Popular C64 games.
\n7 – This was going to be a joke about “M Network Games” who had a commercial sung to the tune of “Summertime Blues” but I decided it was too obscure so I got rid of it and replaced it with this line.
\n8 – The C64 uses a nine pin or DB9 joystick.
\n9 – Epyx made a popular C64 joystick, the XJ 500.
\n10 – Impossible Mission = Popular C64 game.
\n11 – HERO = Popular C64 game (in which the player flew)
\n12 – A disk notcher allowed owners to store data on the back side of a floppy. I thought this was one of the wittier jokes in the song.
\n13 – Lode Runner = Popular C64 game that involved picking up packages.
\n14 – The 1541 was notorious for banging its head.
\n15 – The 1541 used a serial cable.
\n16 – Pitfall appeared on many systems, including the C64.
\n17 – Pitfall was a timed game.
\n18 – The command to load a game on the C64 ended in “,8,1”. This is another good line I thought.
\n19 – Realms of Impossibility = Popular C64 game
\n20 – “I’m the King of” (Run DMC sample)
\n21 – You don’t want none of” (David Space from Tommy Boy sample)
\n22 – “You can’t handle” (A Few Good Men sample)
\n23 – “The Commodore” (William Shatner from old Vic-20 Commercial sample)
\n24 – Rad Man is one of the two co-organizers of Blockparty and a famous computer artist.
\n25 – Little Computer People = Popular C64 game
\n26 – Skate or Die = Popular C64 game
\n27 – Wizball = Popular C64 game (and a play on a vulgar phrase)
\n28 – Barbarian = Popular C64 game (allowed you to decapitate your opponent)
\n29 – Racing Destruction Set = Popular C64 game
\n30 – Zaxxon = Popular video game.
\n31 – Hacker and Hacker 2 = Popular C64 games
\n32 – A “walk thru” is a file people write that tells you how to beat a game. I did actually write a walk-thru for Hacker years ago but I needed help beating the game.
\n33 – Way of the Exploding Fist = Popular C64 game
\n34 – Boulderdash = Popular C64 game
\n35 – Karate Champ = Popular video game
\n36 – “goddess wearing leather” refers to the game Leather Goddess of Phobos
\n37 – “You can stay a while but don’t stay forever” is a popular sample from the game Impossible Mission
\n38 – Beach Head = Popular C64 game (where you could get shot)
\n39 – Space Taxi = Popular C64 game
\n40 – Paradroid = Popular C64 game (the highest level was 999)
\n41 – The song competition limit was 3 minutes in length. This song is 3:00, exactly.
\n42 – 6502 = the main CPU in the Commodore 64.
\n43 – Run\/Stop is a key on the C64 keyboard.
\n44 – The C64 used floppy disks.
\n45 – VIC and SID are the C64’s video and sound chips.
\n46 – Isepic was a popular cracking cartridge.<\/i><\/p>\n

As you can tell, I tried to cram an awful lot of jokes and references into a three-minute song. My minimum goal was one joke or reference every other line, and I tried to put one per line where I could do so without making it feel forced.<\/p>\n

The song also contains several samples, both in the actual music and behind the lyrics. The song is composed of a couple of drum loops I actually ripped from vinyl to mp3 using my Ion USB turntable. The main “riff” is comprised of a modem tone, a dial tone, a 2600 tone, and a red box tone. (Surely that ought to earn me some old school cred!) The build up to the chorus is a jet taking off in Raid Over Moscow, slowed down. Most of the incidental samples come from the songs I’m talking about at the time (Pitfall, Little Computer People, Beach Head, etc). The chorus features a 1541 head bang. The bass line was created by hand by manipulating a single bass sample; the dial tone was then modified to play the same notes. The chorus samples were mentioned above in notes 20-23. The whole song was put together in Acid 6.0; I’d say I spent a total of 5-6 hours working on the music specifically, and then another couple of hours laying down (and doubling) the vocals.<\/p>\n

I sent copies of the song out to half a dozen friends and the majority of them said, “it’s not as bad as I was expecting.” Based on their feedback I lowered the volume of the modem tone, EQ’ed the voice on the second track a little lower, and added the “end comments” which in the end I didn’t like, but it sounded better than having nothing there.<\/p>\n

Blockparty had 15 song entries, and mine was number 14th in line to be played. As the organizers began playing the songs, I noticed something — none of them had any lyrics! They all sounded computer generated, and none of them were “songs” like I was thinking. I slumped further in my seat. I had misjudged the style of music completely. My only hope was that the crowd would be full of C64 fans and that they would like my jokes.<\/p>\n

Well, they didn’t, at least not very much. I tied for seventh place out of fifteen songs which put me right in the middle. To be honest, after hearing the quality and style of the other entries I expected to be closer to the bottom of the list. While I’m not exactly proud of where I placed, I’m glad I entered and, if nothing else, forced a room full of a couple hundred nerds to listen to me rap. It’s a trauma I’m sure it will take some time for them to get over.<\/p>\n

If you would like to recreate the experience, turn off all your lights, stay up until 2:30 in the morning, crank up your volume and press play below.<\/p>\n