But it went deeper than the mainstream hits of the era. It's just a perfect collection of glossy '80s pop music.
Taking full advantage of the story's 1980s setting, it filled Vice City with a massive selection of straight-up classics: Broken Wings by Mister Mister, Two Tribes by Frankie Goes to Hollywood, Atomic by Blondie, Gold by Spandau Ballet, (Keep Feeling) Fascination by The Human League. After the runaway success of Grand Theft Auto 3, Rockstar now had the revenue to buy the rights to any song it wanted. The DJ patter only got better with each sequel, but in terms of music, everything changed in Vice City. These stations really are an intrinsic part of what makes these settings so convincing and enduring. You're laughing at the dumb jokes, but also buying into the city as a functioning place with a life of its own outside of the dozen gangsters the protagonist hangs out with. When oddballs call into talk stations like Vice City's VCPR or GTA 3's Chatterbox FM, it brings the culture and personality of the city to life without you really realising it's having that effect. When the presenters reference things in the world around you-locations, characters, companies-it gives you a sense that the city you're in is a place, not just a playground for you to cause mayhem in. But it also does something more important: it makes the city you're in feel bigger, livelier, and richer. The tongue-in-cheek chatter between songs and fake commercials were superb too, with corny DJs like Head Radio's Mike Hunt (say it fast) perfectly capturing the overbearing, obnoxious vibe of commercial American radio stations-something future games would take much further.Īt the most basic level, this humorous DJ chatter gives you something entertaining to listen to while driving between missions. But the songs created especially for the game were just as good, particularly the catchy, extremely late '90s pop songs found on Head Radio- Good Thing and Change being clear standouts. Hip-hop station Game Radio played tracks by Royce da 5'9" and Black Rob.
The songs on reggae station K-JAH were all taken from a 1981 album by famed dub producer Scientist. Throwback station Flashback 95.6 famously featured music taken from the Scarface soundtrack, a film that heavily influenced the early 3D games. Grand Theft Auto 3, the first 3D game, featured a mix of licensed music and bespoke songs. Related: The GTA Remastered Trilogy Is Your Chance To Fly The Dodo, The Worst Vehicle In Video Game History Even before it made enough money to afford 'real' songs, music was still a vital part of GTA. The bass-playing in Pootang Shebang is just ridiculous. It's an incredibly fun, diverse selection of properly great music, from Grand Theft Auto by Da Shootaz (the game's memorable main theme, also known as Joyride), to low-key bangers like the ridiculously catchy Complications, or the deliciously funky Pootang Shebang, both composed by Conner under the names Ohjaamo and Stylus Exodus. Developer DMA Design wanted to include contemporary licensed music in the game, but getting the rights proved to be prohibitively expensive-so the audio team just made their own. In the original GTA the tunes on the radio were created specifically for the game by Craig Conner, Colin Anderson, and Grant Middleton under various aliases.
Of course, the series hasn't always licenced its music. Music and Grand Theft Auto are intimately, inseparably linked. Those are some of mine: you probably have a fair few of your own. Getting into a vehicle for the first time in Vice City and hearing the strains of Michael Jackson's Billie Jean. Driving around GTA 3's Liberty City in the rain with the haunting operatic aria O Mio Babbino Caro playing on Double Clef FM. Crossing the desert in San Andreas to the tune of America's Horse With No Name. Ask someone about their fondest GTA memory and it probably won't be a mission they remember-it'll be a moment tied to a piece of music. The radio stations in the Grand Theft Auto games are not just random selections of songs: they're tastefully curated journeys through many different genres, designed to evoke a very particular sense of mood, time, and place. When it comes to putting licensed music in video games, no one can touch Rockstar.