21st October 2010, 9:48 AM
What's up with so many flash media players intentionally dampening the volume? I mean, my PC already has volume control that I've set up myself. If it's too loud, I prefer to use that. Internal flash volume bars that are always at some weird 85% or something is just odd to me. I don't see the point, especially on my laptop where I need all the volume I can push just to make these tinny speakers sing.
As for what song... Hmm... Given the mood you say you're going for, I just can't picture the steel drums working at all, unless it's a somber and uplifting scene during an island luau. The mamba might work if it's Donkey Kong Country but in space... They're nice renditions, but those two just have a more comedic or lighthearted feel to me. I'm going to agree with GR tentatively, in that without knowing exactly what scene it's in, I don't have much to offer. Just knowing the mood, 2 and 4 don't really seem to work. The flute music reminds of Picard playing a flute first in his dream and then in real life, but it also reminds me of graduation day, so I gotta go with GR. Just for the mood, the piano one sounds best to me.
As for what song... Hmm... Given the mood you say you're going for, I just can't picture the steel drums working at all, unless it's a somber and uplifting scene during an island luau. The mamba might work if it's Donkey Kong Country but in space... They're nice renditions, but those two just have a more comedic or lighthearted feel to me. I'm going to agree with GR tentatively, in that without knowing exactly what scene it's in, I don't have much to offer. Just knowing the mood, 2 and 4 don't really seem to work. The flute music reminds of Picard playing a flute first in his dream and then in real life, but it also reminds me of graduation day, so I gotta go with GR. Just for the mood, the piano one sounds best to me.
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." ~ Charles Babbage (1791-1871)