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Russell Lieblich
Russell Lieblich (March 2, 1953 - January 26, 2005) was a game designer, programmer and musician who first came to prominence for his music for Activision and Intellivision games, as well as doing the Commodore 64 (C64) music translation of one of LucasArts first titles, Ballblazer. He graduated with a Master's Degree in Music from UC San Diego. Lieblich was one of the first to experiment in the realm of music/rhythm-oriented gameplay with a game he designed called Web Dimension, and then with one of his most popular works, the music for the cult game Master of the Lamps. In the game, programmed by Peter Kaminski, music (a series of great "psychedelic rhythm and blues" songs) has a very important role. His work spans more than 30 game titles; including Stealth ATF for the Nintendo Entertainment System. A well known musician/composer from the demoscene remixed Lieblich's C64 version of the Ballblazer music with a Beastie Boys vocal track, producing one of the most popular tracks featured on Remix64. Russell Lieblich died on January 26, 2005 after a heart attack outside his home on Long Island, New York, at the age of 51.
Audio Development
Commodore 64
Like most other composers, Lieblich had to program his own sound engine and write the music in assembly directly on the Commodore 64 itself.
NES
Lieblich created MIDI files for Stealth ATF which were then converted to Glyn Anderson's sound driver, but it is unknown what music software he used to make the MIDI files. He coded the sound driver to Roundball 2-on-2 Challenge.
SNES
Lieblich used the Visual Concepts sound engine which was created by Jason Andersen and John Schappert. It is unknown how he created the music though.
GEN
Lieblich used the infamous GEMS sound engine. It is unknown how he created the music though. NHL '95 (GEN) used a driver that was programmed by Don Veca.