Skyhigh 20 About Rambones of ex-TST
From C64 Diskmag Wiki
About Rambones of ex-TST We are live at the Party 5 in Fredericia, Denmark. The date is 28th of December and the time is 22.40. I have had the luck to bump inti an old legend. To tell you the truth, then it was actually Authentic of Excess * Acrise who had the pleasure to do the bum- ping. Well to cut this story short. Long before I ever heard about this lovely scene I used to collect old demos. One of the groups I for some reason remember is the long gone TST, or The Supply Team. Maybe you haven't heard of this before but now you will. Ok no more hiding, let's get down to bisness.. I have the pleasure to present no one else than Rambones of ex-TST. * Yo Rambones, first of all; nice to meet a person from one of my greatest 'idol-groups' from back then Quite a big surprise to actually talk to one from the past. Anyway, please give us an introduction of the person behind the handle : Rambones. - My name is Jan Diabelez Arnt Harries, and I'm 26 years old, soon 27. I got my C64 in August 1985, and have loved it ever since. Many people have not been able to understand my handle Rambones, and often misspelled it Rabones. This is it: I was a skinny person and weighed only 40 kilos. I liked the film music from Rambo, and I took that name, because of the music, not the muscles. My friend Hagar then s aid one day: you are nothing but skin and bones, why don't you call yourself Rambones. And so I did. * Well, at least you have a valid reason for your handle, not just an invented one. BUT, you almost slipped between my fingers, so I will continue where I left. Please tell us a bit about your 'career' on this machine. I mean what groups have you been into and when did you have your glorious years in TST? - I got my C64, needed some games, and was invited by a guy called Per to buy games from another guy named Torben Sj£rslev Nielsen (TSN). After having known TSN for 10 minutes, he decided I didn't have to pay for the games, and till this day he's still one of my best 2 friends. He then taught me BASIC, and together we learned MNemonic. My career is really simple: I wanted to be a great coder, but my interrest in composing my own music was bigger, and so I spent most of my time with Soundmonitor which was all there was at that time, and I only do music today. TST was founded in 1985 by Karsten Pahuus Petersen (KAZE), and we were on C64 until early 1989, when we had to give in to the wonderful magic of Amiga. There are a few of my own demos that I'm proud of, but I'm even more proud to have been together with my 3 friends now for 10 years. We never made it on Amiga, 10 demos, that's the story. I have never been in a group since. I swapped with everybody that wanted to do so, and that's the main reason that TST had more than 300 contacts thru 85-89. If you have many contacts your demos will spread worldwide. It doesn't matter that some of them were lamers, cause so was I when I started, and now I am again :) * Lamers, damn I hate that word... I prefer the better one : newcommer. But enough about that. (Yes!!!) No something more exiting. I don't know all the demos on the C64 from TST, but there is one particulary which has been interpreted into mind : NO LIMITS! This demo had one killer routine; the whole screen sprite scroller. Yes I still love it. Of todays standard it might not seem like much, but it simply sticks!. What other demos should I have had remembered from TST? -Well, I'd like you to remember my Zound-Muzak 1-3, which were my first attempts on music. and then offcourse New Limits! and Mip Mip Police, which was simply state of the art. :) * Mip Mip Police!!!! He he what a cool name. Well I also remember that not everything where happines back then. I can not recall the name of the demo, but I know that in at least one of them you had some quar- rels with another group. Could you fill in the missing details on this one? -Yes, the history of TST is that of WAR!!!!! hehe... At that time we were only kids (12-15) years old, and when Wizz and Kaze (better known as WIZE), left TST, to join Wizax, TSN and myself felt let down by them personally, and so we used our demos to hack on eachother, while we were still friends and copied stuff and made demos together every day. There never was a real war, it was childrens lack of communication skills that provoked the wardemos to be made. But if you have to know about F.A.S.T.: hehe, I lost 1 contact due to the war, and got 1-n new. And besides from that, I swapped with some of the groups supposedly 'against' TST. (funny.) :) TST started out in 1986 by doing war against Danish Gold, just to get some attention. * Hmmm, this gives the story an entire new angle to me. What might have seemed like a kind of war was more or less an internal struggle which was taken out in the public. Well change of subject. Now we are almost writing 1996 (we are when this is released!!). How do you see the entire thing now. I mean the computer business, the C64 that is? -For me the C64 is a part of my growing up, and I will never dispose of it, nor my data. Today: the C64 is a part of the users upbringing, if you're a newcomer. If you're a pro, it's nostalgia. * Well a quite small answer. Erhm, it shall be no se- cret that we are talking inbetween these questions aswell, and you just mentioned your point of view concerning the computer of today. You see it more like a 'every mans' tool to reach his goal. Please explain what you mean by that! -When I was 5 years old I wanted to play piano, but not enough money. So I played my grandfathers violin. Then I got money for my C64 and used it as a piano. I am and want to be a musician forever. So, that's why it's a tool to me. I am educated in computers also, and while studying I learned to use computers as a constructive tool rather than wasting your time by using a computer just for using it. * Well I do see your point there. Maybe it is moving in that direction. People have started to really USE their computer instead of just having it as another piece of furniture. Well as mentioned in the beginning of this interview then we are here live at TP5. Here we had a very fine example on this. In the wild compo we saw examples of works from people who works professionally with their computers. A nice touch to see these two areas merge. I agree 100%. But something else (again!). Now you are here in the atmosphere again, isn't there something which draw you back again. In other words, could you imagine yourself returning to any computer scene in the fu- ture. And if yes which one? No, I haven't planned on starting in the C64 or any other 'computer' scene. I'm allready in a scene. It's my own scene: I have a computer and a modem, and still a lot of friends on the mail-swap side. I am on the internet, and it seems that the border of the 'scene' has moved a lot since 1990. Everything is flowing together and forms a higher picture which no one can see clearly. But there will always be a scene anyway, it's called a subculture. * Said in other words, the scene is more of a multi- computer scene now, with deep roots and behaving around the Internet? - Yes, but the internet is just a link or a passage- way for communication. The real contact lies in the mutual wish to create art: demos/gfx/music etc. * Well I agree on that too. Hmm, the gfx compo is having a rerun now, and the light has been turned off. So to be honest, it's quite hard to concentrate anylonger. So I think it is time to brutally end this interview. Is there any thing you have on your mind, which you would like to share with the rest of us? Any little story from back then!!! What about this dear computer type, the C64, what do you think will happend with it? -I know that there will be C64 groups until there is no more working C64's left. But it won't even happen, cause people are building their own new and improved C64 allready today. So maybe it will never stop.? :) I have made a small project with some friends from the internet. If you collect C64 music, and want more (more than 3800 now), write to me and maybe join forces with us. write to: XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX I wish you all a great journey, into the unknown. * I will wrap all this up by saying that it has been a pleasure and a thrill to talk with someone from back then; back in the 'good old days'. I wish you the best in the future, and who knows; maybe I will bump into you again. Best of luck! BIZ KID BIZ KID And he pressed f1, and there was a new side...