Frédéric Motte
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Frédéric Motte |
A.K.A.
- ElMobo
- El Mobo
- Moby
- Fred Motte
- Frederic "Elmobo" Motte
About
El Mobo, the artist formerly known as Moby, was born in 1970, somewhere in the North of France. French music is rather boring, but El Mobo had the chance to be raised by hippies, who were listening to american flower power music, and a bit later, 70's hard rock. His father was a drummer, and his mother was.. well... a drummer's wife. So very soon, El Mobo found himself very interested in music. But as he was very lazy, he decided it was too hard to take music lessons. Listening to his parents records made him happy enough for quite a while.
In 1983, his parents bought a computer. It was an ORIC-1, an incredibly powerful machine with 48 (fourty-eight !) Kb of RAM, a 8 colors palette, a hires mode, and sound chip able to play square signals on 3 channels at the same time !!! El Mobo very quickly learned how to program this beast, and started to compose simple tunes coded in Basic. 2 years later, he convinced his parents to sell this machine and buy a new generation computer : the brand new ORIC-ATMOS, an incredibly powerful machine with 48 (fourty-eight !) Kb of RAM, a 8 colors palette, a hires mode, and sound chip able to play square signals on 3 channels at the same time !!! Hmmm.. right...
After this smart move, he managed to sell the ATMOS and bought a Commodore 64 + floppy drive. Then, he fell in love with video game music. While his skool mates were listening to "take on me" by A-ha, or "The reflex" by 2xDuran, he was listening to "Monty on the Run" by Rob Hubbard (who ??), or "Radar Rat Race" by Martin Galway (what ??). He soon became what you could call a "nerd", collecting games and listening to computer music...
In 1985 and 1986 summers, he worked as a programmer in a small local company, to make a bit of money in order to buy a new computer. At the end of the summer 1986, he was able to buy an Amiga 500, an incredibly powerful machine with 512 Kb of RAM, a 4096 color palette, and a sound chip able to play 8bits samples on 4 channels in stereo ! And this was the beginning.
Thanks to this machine and Soundtracker, an incredible piece of musical program coded by Karsten Obarski, he started to compose sample based music. His first tries were simply pathetic, but slowly he started to learn by himself the basics of music theory. But what's the point in composing music if there's nobody to listen to it ? So, after a couple of years of training, he joined a "demo group". Basically, a demo group is group of people willing to show off their abilities in different technical or artistic areas. The programmer exhibits his coding abilities by showing his routines. The graphic artist displays pictures, logos or animations. The musician plays his tunes. Put all these things together and you get a kind of music video, played on a computer... This is what we called a "demo".
But when you join a demo group, you have to find yourself a handle. For days and days, he looked for a handle. He had to find a name which wasn't common at all. He didn't want to be the 134th "Terminator", the 86th "Fred" or the 2nd "Mwaba". So he came up with a really stupid handle : MOBY . Yeah, who would be stupid enough to choose the same ridiculous handle ?? Not me... And for years, he composed numerous tunes for Amiga demos for various demo-groups. He slowly started to make a reputation for himself. His tunes were getting better and better as the years were passing by...
In 1990, thanks to his training in demos, he got his first contract in the Video Game industry to produce his first game soundtrack. The game was called No-Exit and was released by Cocktel Vision on PC, Amiga, Atari ST and Amstrad CPC... Then he had a few other contracts, and in 1991, he decided to leave the university to start making a living on game music. As long as he would get enough money to pay the rent and buy some beer, he would be happy... Besides, he kept on doing music for demos, and reached the 1st position in most computer musicians charts of the moment... He was starting to be really famous in the demo-scene...
In 1992, he bought a crap bass from a friend, because he wanted to give it a try... and he fell in love with this instrument... slapping day and night...
But in 1994, El Mobo (the artist then known as Moby) started to work as in-house musician/sound designer at Atreid Concept, a video game developer... His job was taking all his available time, so he had to leave the demo-scene...
Later on, Atreid Concept became Kalisto Entertainment, and El Mobo stayed at the head of their Audio Department for quite a while. He composed the soundtrack of all their games.
He had to drop his old handle "MOBY" because he started to release music outside of the game and demo scene, and as you all know, there's finally some stupid ass who choosed the same handle to release his commercial music...
In 1998, El Mobo and some friends formed "Plug-in", an instrumental guitar rock band, in which he plays the bass. He produced their first EP in 1999.
In january 2001, El Mobo left his job at Kalisto in order to start his own business. 2001 saw the birth of Elmobo Studio.
In November 2002, along with Plug-in guitarist Fanalo he was hired by guitar God Ron "Bumblefoot" Thal to be his bass player during his french tour.
So, now you know more about El Mobo... You can browse this site if you're curious... Listen to his old computer music if you're not afraid... You can also listen to his more recent video game music or get an ear on his band's CD... Your choice...
Home Page
- www.elmobo.com/ (web archive)
Contributions by Frédéric Motte
Title Year Credits A.G.E. 1991 Music & Sound Effects The Brainies 1991 Music by E.S.S Mega 1991 Music and Sound Effects Fascination 1991 Music Gobliiins 1991 Music Once Upon a Time: Abracadabra 1991 Sounds by Once Upon a Time: Baba Yaga 1991 Sounds by Once Upon a Time: Little Red Riding Hood 1991 Music by Cougar Force 1990 Intro Music Galactic Empire 1990 Music Geisha 1990 Music No Exit 1990 Sound
References
- ↑ www.elmobo.com/frame-who.htm (web archive)
See Also
- Contributions by Frédéric Motte
- Search for Frédéric Motte on Wikipedia
- Frédéric Motte on MobyGames
- Frédéric Motte on IMDb