Search - Buckner & Garcia :: Pac-Man Fever

Pac-Man Fever
Buckner & Garcia
Pac-Man Fever
Genres: Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1


     
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CD Details

All Artists: Buckner & Garcia
Title: Pac-Man Fever
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: Fuel 2000
Original Release Date: 1/1/1982
Re-Release Date: 8/10/2010
Album Type: Extra tracks
Genres: Pop, Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
Other Editions: Pac-Man Fever (Re-Recorded Versions)
UPC: 030206184525
 

CD Reviews

Yes, it's a re-recording
DRD | 08/04/2005
(3 out of 5 stars)

"I agree that it's disapointing that the original LP hasn't been reissued -- I imagine Buckner and Garcia wish it would be, too. The fact is, though, for some reason Sony/CBS is sitting on it, so this is the best that we can do. Viewed in that light, I don't think this qualifies as a rip-off. The guys have stuck to 80s style arrangements. There is no attempt to "update" the sound. Yes, the vocals are showing some wear, yes there are some variations. But the simple fact is, this thing is still a total gas."
I got Pacman Fever....
Daniel J. Hamlow | Narita, Japan | 05/19/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"My video game heyday was when Pacman, Defender, Donkey Kong, Frogger, Asteroids Deluxe, Q*bert, Scrambler, Dig-Dug,... well, I could go on,... reigned supreme. However, it was Jerry Buckner and Gary Garcia's single of "Pacman Fever," which Columbia Records claimed went platinum, that gave the famed video game a shot in the arm way before its novelty was wearing off and ensured its place in American pop culture.So Buckner and Garcia's collection of video game tie-in novelty songs, including sound effects from the video games, is a cornucopia of 80's nostalgia. The lyrics for each of the eight songs includes the objective of the game, references to the defenses the player has. And the music style is heavy on 80's style keyboard synths.With the opening computer jingle that starts Pacman after the player hits 1 or 2 player, and that familiar "wacka-wacka" sound of the yellow fella eating dots, "Pacman Fever" demonstrates why so many people fed so many quarters into Pacman machines. Some Pac-slang: the back or side door is the tunnel on either side of the screen that delays monsters chasing Pacman, and the ninth key is the stage where most patterns don't work. Other sound effects include the loud bleep that sounds when a monster's eaten, and that wilting sound of Pacman dying.After the musical intro from the Frogger game, "Froggy's Lament" combines C.W. McCall's throaty macho "Convoy"-type voice asking whether the frog has his magic twanger with 80's New Wave. I don't think the frog had one in the video game--but the frog's objective of hopping inbetween traffic, avoiding snakes, and hopping on logs before making it to one of the five home slots is referred to in the lyrics. His neverending goal: keep on hopping till he gets to the top. Comments: "Go, froggy go!" and Ribbit! One of the better songs, with humorous lyrics."Faster and faster, row by row." The mid-paced "Ode To A Centipede" has the motif of the player being the hunter and the centipede being the prey, with musical stylings akin to a toned down "Holding Out For A Hero." Features the sound effects of the laser and the centipede being hit and turned into a mushrooms. Pithy but funny line: "Go ahead, run your little legs off. Do you have Nikes for them?"I never got past level 1 in Donkey Kong, but this song, the anthemic and vivacious "Do The Donkey Kong," takes me to level 4. Special effects: Mario jumping over barrels and with that squeaky clip-clopping noise of his feet."Hyperspace" which is the song for Asteroids isn't too impressive due to the subpar sound effects and neither is the "Mousetrap," Exidy's answer to Pacman featuring a mouse that had to eat cheese and turned into a dog when it ate a bone, to eat the cats chasing it. However, "The Defender," based on the game where one had to rescue kidnapped humanoids and prevent them from being turned to mutants by landers, with its furious lightning bolt laserblasts, is a riveting number with great New Wave synths and an anthemic chorus: "I'm the defender/I'm a mutant fender.""Goin' Berzerk" starts out with some quiet piano and synths before the robots' "intruder alert" is heard followed by blaster fire by the player and the usual upbeat synths. The song ties in the objective of someone shooting down robots and running from room to room in the neverending maze with his feelings for a girl, "going berserk over you." The reference to Evil Otto is the smiley face invincible to blaster fire and when the last robot is killed, comes after the player at a rapid clip.The success of each song depends in part to catchy lyrics or the the coolness of the video game's sound effects, of which Pacman, Defender, and Berzerk are the best. One suggestion that would've made this more a classic: why not a song on Q*bert? There were lots of cool sound effects in that game, yeah? P.S. there's a bonus flyer of Pacman patterns used. Game over. I mean review over."
Not the original recording!
Crazy Craig | 07/29/2005
(3 out of 5 stars)

"When I was a kid this was one of favorite albums (with the whole craze of Pac Man and ATARI). So when I saw this CD was finally released on CD I just had to get a copy.

As soon as I hit play on the CD player I could notice right away that something just wasn't right with the first song Pac Man Fever. The CD states that this CD was re-recorded digitally, which is fine, but it has this weird in and out hiss in the high frequencies, like that occur in low bitrate mp3 files.

Another problem I have with this CD is that all of the videogame samples they use in each song is not the exact portions that they used in the 80's release.

I'm not saying that this CD is horrible,but, I really wanted to relive my childhood by hearing these songs the exact way as I remembered them from the 80's.

I guess I'm just a purist."