Remember
Psychedelia? Well,
Song in Lines 5
is a similar sort of light synthesiser doohickey.
The difference this time is that
SIL 5 supplies
its own tunes - thirty-seven of 'em to be exact.
And rather fab they are too, ranging in style
from cover versions of film themes to original
and spookily good compositions. Eleven of
these songs are from a chap called Voodoo,
but the main chunk has been written by
Franxoft. (Yes, I know that's not his real
nickname, but his real nickname's a bit, erm,
dodgy, so I'll stick to Franxoft
thankyouverymuch.)
[That would be Fuxoft, named because the guy's surname was Fuka --NickH]
But back to
Song in Lines 5 itself. By
prodding a variety of keys you can select the
type of shapes that whang around the screen,
their colour, and a bunch of obscurely named
but extremely natty effects. Very big, very fast
filled circles with trails and reflections? Step this
way. Enormously huge but dignified vector
triangles that squirm about the place like
neurotic worms? What luck - we've just had a
fresh consignment. Eighteenth century furniture
with provenances stating it was written on, slept
in, or burned as a political statement by Jane
Austen's Latin tutor? Don't be silly, this is a
Speccy light synthesiser doohickey. Tch.
Song in Lines 5 is a great deal of fun to play
around with. Yer average demo has maybe
three or four effects and so has a fairly limited
appeal.
SIL 5 has, in a very real and foolishly
exaggerated sense, billions and trillions of the
blighters and can keep you going for hours just
staring at the funky patterns in a vaguely
hypnotised sort of way. (Hey! Wooow! Etc etc.)
And, yes, the music really is that
good. In fact, for sheer
entertainment value, I'm going to
give it an outrageously high mark.