ALIBI Music continues to deliver Hollywood sound to game developers with the release of five new video game music loop albums from the same composers serving major film and television productions. ALIBI’s growing collection of looped music now totals 115 albums for 1,154 tracks.
Structured to work seamlessly in any video game/AR/VR environment, this background music (BGM) spans multiple genres and can be used in both horizontal and vertical music techniques. As always, each video game music loop track includes clear intros and outros designed to come in at any downbeat, while instrument stems provide tremendous adaptive possibilities.
ALIBI’s five newest video game music loop albums are:
- 8-Bit Videogame – A nostalgic collection of delightfully retro chiptune tracks drawing influence from the early years of home console entertainment and invoking classics such as Sonic the Hedgehog, Super Mario, The Legend of Zelda and Streets of Rage. Suited to RPG, adventure, puzzle and platform games.
- Action Underscores – A stunning collection of driving, pacing orchestral music beds designed to invoke suspense and dark heroic drama. Featuring relentless staccato strings, anthemic brass and powerful epic drums, each of these tracks is perfect for dark action and thriller games.
- Electro Sweet – These sweet and friendly electronic tracks work great for casual game BGM. Listen
- Cinematic Ethereal Drama – A collection of epic and emotive hybrid orchestral music perfect for sci-fi and futuristic games.
- Heroic Adventure – Epic, powerful orchestral cues for fantasy adventure, superhero action-thriller and dramatic sports games.
ALIBI’s production music has been used in such high-profile recent projects as the official game trailers for MechWarrior 5: Mercenaries, Call of Duty Black Ops Cold War Season 3 and Project CARS GO, among numerous others.
Austin Stowell Gets Emotional About Portraying Stoic Jethro Gibbs In “NCIS: Origins”
Once again, Austin Stowell is having the best day ever โ all thanks to him winning the role of legendary TV character Leroy Jethro Gibbs in "NCIS: Origins."
"Since I got this job, it has just been day after day after day of the greatest day of my life," says Stowell, smiling.
The actor has his shoulders back and chest up to portray the ex-Marine-turned-naval investigator, set 25 years before audiences first met "NCIS" star Mark Harmon.
Harmon and his son Sean are behind the idea of this origin story of the special agent, who was on-screen for 19 seasons from 2003 to 2021, solving crimes for the Naval Criminal Investigative Service in Virginia.
Stowell says he'll be doing his best to live up to the role Harmon made famous and give viewers a new perspective on "how the hero was born."
Harmon, who narrates and pops up occasionally in the show, has been very supportive of Stowell, making himself available to chat about life, visiting the set and even texting (something technophobic Gibbs would never).
"Mark and I talk a lot about what it means to be the leader of a team, about what it means to be a leader of this set and crew," he says. "Those conversations have been invaluable to me because I don't know what it's like. I've never been No. 1 on a TV show before."
The lessons he's learned: be on time, be kind, respectful and professional.
He's also studied up on the "NCIS" universe, something he knew about but wasn't yet a super fan.
In a pop quiz Stowell correctly names all the franchise's four spin-off shows and only stumbles when it comes to rule three of Gibbs' famous guidelines: "Never believe what you are told."
(He keeps the full list to read from time to time.)
As for the enduring... Read More