
Offworld Trading Company
Original Video Game Score
STYLE
Offworld Trading Company is a retro-futurist blend of analog synths, industrial sounds and minimalist orchestration. Inspired by the steady chatter of ticker tape, the score mirrors the pulse of capitalism: dispassionate, robotic, and relentless. Many of the sounds undergo heavy processing; even the orchestra itself is an unconventional ensemble of 11 brass players and 8 violins.
TECHNIQUE
Unlike Tin’s classical scores, where each musical phrase is carefully written out, Offworld’s score relies on a more programmatic approach. Using step-sequencers and arpeggiators, Tin programmed some basic musical behaviors into his computer, fed it rudimentary harmonies, and then recorded the outputs. He then surrounded this generative material with more traditionally composed musical phrases. The result is a score that is part robot, part human.
Tracklist
- Red Planet Nocturne
- Welcome to Mars
- Martian Mining and Manufacturing
- Sea of Sirens
- For Happy Workers, Try Adrenaline Boosts!
- Roboto Agitato
- Look at All the Money
- Thinking Machines
- Hacker Array
- Assembly Lines
- Carbon Scrubbers
- Trade War
- Homeostasis
- MULE
- Bribery
- Brave New Planet
- Glass Furnace
- Martian Glassworks, Inc.
- Offworld Price Index
- Trickle-Down Economics
- Allegro for Hydroponic Systems
- Sunrise on Mars
- Sad Robot Lament
- Sabotage
- Magnetic Storm
- Ares Defense Industries
- Electronics Factory
- EMP
- Power Surge
- Hostile Takeover
REVIEWS
Christopher Tin’s score brings a game about numbers to life, channeling the hopeful thrum of Tangerine Dream one moment, and urgency of Philip Glass the next. It’s affecting, alien, wonderful.
Though it lacks character in its story, Offworld does have terrific industrial-sounding music that hasn’t gotten old over dozens of games.
Would it be too hasty to put it alongside other iconic and haunting sci-fi soundtracks? Clint Mansell for Moon, John Murphy for Sunshine, Vangelis for Blade Runner, Hans Zimmer for Interstellar, Steven Price for Gravity, and Christopher Tin for Offworld Trading Company. Yeah, that list looks about right.