Buttons, from left to right: Go to the previous song Stop the current song Play the current song once Go to the next song Play all songs after this one in order Play the current song and repeat when finished Note: Pressing any button while the "play all songs" or "repeat current song" buttons are pressed will cause those functions to stop. They must be manually reactivated.
First and foremost, the ORIGINAL FULL VERSIONS of these songs have been preserved on Archive.org! They can be found here: https://archive.org/details/massavesessions If you can't access Archive.org, I've uploaded them all to Google Drive too (copy and paste all five lines here to make the full URL; be sure to copy the hyphens too!): https:// drive. google. com/drive/folders/1mv6Gi- jWanUqJKv7EXNxoQXTPKwclqD- For Scratchers who can't access Archive.org or the Google Drive folder, this project is for you! To download the songs to your computer, just click on the "Song List" sprite and go into the Sounds tab. For each song you want to download, right-click on its icon and choose "export." It may then ask you where to save it on your computer, but after that you should see them in your Downloads folder or wherever else you saved them! For context... You might have wondered at some point who exactly made all the sounds and costumes that come bundled with Scratch. I sure did, and I found out that some files from Scratch 1.4 have attached metadata listing info about the track title and artist. I found out that the music loops "Techno" and "Techno2" were both produced by the group gloob(ic), and the album the loops were from was called Mass Ave Sessions. Up until a few years ago, they could be found easily online at http://www.gloobic.com/massAveSessions.html# The website itself has since been taken down, but is still accessible via the Archive.org Wayback Machine. For more gloob(ic) lore, the only surviving gloob(ic) media posted officially online that I know of is a music video on YouTube titled "Here the Nothing." It's got some cool music and interesting choreography, you can find it by searching "gloobic here the nothing" (without any punctuation) in the YouTube search bar. The two members of gloob(ic), Eric Gunther and Jeff Lieberman, also helped direct the music video for OK Go - End Love back in 2010! Lieberman also has his own Wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Lieberman_(artist_engineer) If you want to, feel free to also check out my homemade looped versions of these songs: https://scratch.mit.edu/projects/318575384/ Credits: All songs here were composed and performed by Jeff Lieberman and Eric Gunther of gloob(ic), and all the music in this project should be attributed to them. Coding: @turtlehat Interface Art: @turtlehat Thumbnail: @turtlehat, with a logo from the old gloob(ic) website Background: Scratch Team, from Scratch 1.4 and Scratch 2.0 #music #musicloops #techno #gloob(ic) #gloobic