Tommy Tallarico
Tallarico performing with Video Games Live in 2016
Tallarico performing with Video Games Live in 2016
Background information
Born (1968-02-18) February 18, 1968
Springfield, Massachusetts, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Video game music composer
  • musician
  • television personality
  • live show creative director
  • producer
Instrument(s)
  • Electric guitar
  • piano
  • keyboard
Years active1991–2022
Member ofVideo Games Live
Websitewww.tallarico.com

Thomas Andrew Tallarico (born February 18, 1968) is an American video game music composer, sound designer, businessman, musician, television personality, live show creative director, and producer. He and his company, Tommy Tallarico Studios, worked on several video games since the 1990s.[1] He co-hosted the television shows Electric Playground and Reviews on the Run from 1997 until 2006.[2] In 2002, he created Video Games Live (VGL), a global video game music orchestra.

In 2018, after he became the president of Intellivision Entertainment, the company began work on and sought investors for an original video game console named the Intellivision Amico, for which Tallarico was frequently present in pitch videos. He has since stepped down from his position as CEO but remains on the company's board as president. To date, the console has yet to be released.

In 2020, it came to Tallarico's attention that a sound effect he owned from a game Tommy Tallarico Studios worked on, Messiah, was used without permission in the video game Roblox. This led to a legal dispute which ended in 2022 with the removal of the sound effect from the game. In 2022, a video by British YouTuber Harry "Hbomberguy" Brewis documented an investigation into many disputed high-profile claims that Tallarico had made concerning his career.

Early life

Tommy Tallarico grew up in Springfield, Massachusetts, later attending Cathedral High School.[3][4] He told The Washington Post in an interview he would take his father's tape recorder to the arcade to record songs as a child.[5] After graduating high school, Tallarico attended Western New England University for a year.[4] According to the Los Angeles Times, Tallarico moved to Southern California in 1991 to try and obtain a job in the video game industry.[6] Tallarico took a job as a keyboard salesman at a Guitar Center in Santa Ana, California.[4] On his first day, Tallarico met an executive from Virgin Mastertronic. Shortly after, Tallarico was given a job at Virgin as one of their play-testers.[6]

Career

Tallarico's first musical project at Virgin Interactive was for the Game Boy version of Prince of Persia. "The main focus of writing video game music back then was it had to be simple and have a great melody," Tallarico said.[4] Tallarico worked on a number of other games while at Virgin Interactive, including The Terminator.[7]

Tommy Tallarico Studios

Tallarico continued working with Virgin Interactive as head of music and video division until 1994, when he went on to found Tommy Tallarico Studios. David Perry formed Shiny Entertainment at the same time, and the two studios collaborated on Earthworm Jim and MDK.[8] In 2005, Tallarico wrote part of an orchestral score for Advent Rising performed by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir.[9]

In September 1999, the "oof" sound effect was created for the game Messiah during its development, with the involvement of sound designer Joey Kuras (then employed at Tallarico Studios) and potentially, Tallarico.[10][11] Tallarico has at times claimed that Kuras created the sound, that it was a collaboration between the pair, and that he created it himself.[11][12] The sound effect was subsequently used in Roblox from 2006 to 2020, played after a character died in-game, and became an iconic part of the game after its adoption by meme culture.[13] Tallarico, who claims ownership of the sound, disputed Roblox's use of it in June 2019.[14] This dispute ended in July 2022 when the Roblox Corporation pulled the sound from all games on its platform.[15]

Television

In 1997, Victor Lucas, founder of the Electric Playground, started Electric Playground TV with Tallarico, which provided gaming news and reviews. In 2002, the reviews section of Electric Playground, Reviews on the Run, was spun-off into its own program, which Tallarico and Lucas hosted as well. In the U.S., Reviews on the Run was broadcast on G4 TV as Judgment Day.[16][17]

In 2006, Tallarico began to spend less time on the show owing to other projects, missing almost all of 2007 and 2008. In 2009, Scott Jones took over his spot as full-time co-host with Victor Lucas.[18][19]

Music concerts

In 2002, Tallarico co-founded Video Games Live, a symphony orchestra concert series that plays music from video games, with Jack Wall.[20] Tallarico hosted and played guitar for the shows. He also created the visuals—scenes from video games, as well as lights and lasers—that are played in sync with the music.[21][22] VGL has been awarded two Guinness World Records: one for the most video game concerts performed (357 at the time the record was awarded[23]), and another for largest audience to ever view a video game music concert live (752,109 people in total, where 750,023 viewers watched online via the Youku app, and 2,086 people attended the concert in person at the Beijing Exhibition Center).[24][25]

Tallarico has produced seven VGL albums. The first album, Video Games Live Volume 1, debuted at No. 10 on Billboard Top 10 for Classical Music Crossovers.[26] The second volume, Level 2, also sold as a Blu-ray DVD concert, debuted at No. 8 on the same Billboard list.[27] In August 2013, Tallarico also opened a crowdfunding campaign for the third album Level 3 on Kickstarter.[28] According to Tallarico, Kickstarter was chosen as the means to fund the album because he had not been successful in attracting support from the recording industry, which he claimed was because music producers "don't think gamers are willing to pay for music"[29] and did not recognize the perceived "culturally artistic significance" of video game soundtracks.[28] The Level 3 campaign successfully met and surpassed its goal of $250,000.[30]

In 2014, Tallarico and electronic dance music artist BT began working on Electronic Opus. As with Video Games Live, Electronic Opus presents EDM music alongside a symphony orchestra.[31] They used Kickstarter to fund an album, with a goal of $200,000.[31] The show opened at the Miami Winter Music Conference in 2015.[31][32]

In 2016, Tallarico co-produced the Capcom Live! concert tour with Shota Nakama.[33][34]

Intellivision Entertainment

Following the death of Keith Robinson in 2017, founder of Intellivision Productions, Tallarico purchased a stake in the company from the estate. In May 2018, Intellivision Entertainment was re-formed with him as president. In the winter of that year, he announced the intent for the company to release the Intellivision Amico with the target of October 2020.[35] As of July 2022, it is reportedly still being worked on.[36]

As of September 2022, the Amico has been delayed at least three times.[37] The console has been viewed very negatively by critics, drawing criticism for its delays,[38] fundraising tactics,[39] and use of NFTs.[40] The status of the console has been described as "grim" by TechRaptor[41] and compared to a car crash by Kotaku.[42]

In February 2022, Tallarico stepped down from his role as CEO of Intellivision, remaining on board as the company's president and largest shareholder. He was replaced by the company's former chief revenue officer Phil Adam.[43]

Other

In 2002, Tallarico founded the Game Audio Network Guild (G.A.N.G.), a non-profit to recognize achievements in video game music and audio.[44] The guild hosts annual awards for achievement in game audio.[45]

In November 2022, British YouTuber Harry "Hbomberguy" Brewis published a video essay which documented many of the high-profile claims that Tallarico had made concerning his career—including the number of video games he worked on, the number of Guinness World Records he earned, being the creator of the sound effect at the heart of his Roblox legal dispute, and being the first American to work on the Sonic the Hedgehog franchise—and concluded many were either gross exaggerations or knowingly false.[11][46]

Personal life

Tallarico is vegan, and advocates for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, including donating music for the PETA browser game Super Tofu Boy in 2010.[47]

According to the LA Times, his McMansion in San Juan Capistrano "looks as if a 12-year-old with a huge bank account went wild", including a life-size Indiana Jones, several Star Wars characters, and a statue of Merlin.[48]

Video games

YearTitleRole(s)NotesRef.
1991Chuck RockTesting
Robin Hood: Prince of ThievesQuality assuranceGame Boy version
1992Prince of PersiaMusic & SFX
Muhammad Ali Heavyweight BoxingWith Michelle Sorger
Monopoly DeluxeMusic & sound coordinator
Jeep Jamboree: Off Road AdventureMusic, product manager
Greg Norman's Golf PowerProduct manager, assistant manual editor
M.C. KidsQuality assurance
Corporation
Club RacquetballSoundWith Steve Henifin
Global GladiatorsMusic, Sound FX & SamplesSega Genesis version
Batman: Return of the JokerMusic & sound
1993Another World
The TerminatorDirector of Music & FXWith Brad Fiedel, Bijan Shaheer, Joey Kuras and TeknoMan of Teknologic[49]
Cool SpotMusic, SFX & samplesSega Genesis and Super NES versions
Super Caesars PalaceExecutive musicians, actorWith Steve Henefin
RoboCop versus The TerminatorDirector of Music & FX
Color a DinosaurMusic & sound
Super Slap Shot
1994Race Days
Caesars PalaceMusicWith Seth Mendelsohn & Matt Furniss
Disney's AladdinWith Don Griffin
Earthworm Jim: Special EditionMusic & SFXWith Mark Miller
The Jungle BookDirector of Music and FXWith various others.
Heart of the AlienMusic & soundWith Jean-François Freitas
Demolition ManOriginal game music3DO version, with Keith Arem, Joey Kuras & Charlie Malone
1995Agile Warrior: F-111XSprite actor, ingame sound effectsWith Joey Kuras and Keith Arem
Madden NFL 96Music & sound
Spot Goes To Hollywood
Earthworm Jim 2With Tony Bernetich and Christopher Beck[50]
Jim Lee's WildC.A.T.S: Covert Action Teams
1996Burning Road"U.S. Remix" Composer
Golden NuggetMusic
Skeleton WarriorsMusic & SFXWith Todd Dennis, Jean-Christophe Beck and Eric Swanson
Black DawnWith Todd Dennis
1997MDK
VMX RacingWith Mark Duncan & Jon Studtmann
Duckman: The Graphic Adventures of a Private DickVoice talent, music compositionWith Todd Dennis, John Lawrence & Bill Hendrickson
Treasures of the DeepMusic and sound effectsWith Steve Woods & Todd Dennis
The 7th GuestSoundWith Steve Henifin
1998Wild 9Music and SFXWith Sonic Mayhem
HardBall 6Sound effects
WarGames: Defcon 1Music & Sound FX, voice acting
ApocalypseMovie scoring and sound effects
Beavis and Butt-Head Do U.Music & sound
1999Ultra FightersMusicWith Scott Coldwell
Redline
R/C Stunt CopterAudio script
Demolition RacerWriter, producer, performer, sound effectsWith various others
Knockout Kings 2000Sound designWith Joey Kuras
Tomorrow Never DiesMusic and Sound FXWith Sonic Mayhem, Howard Ulyate & Joey Kuras
Wings of FuryMusicGame Boy Color version
Unreal Mission Pack I: Return to Na PaliSound effectsWith Alexander Brandon & Eric Heberlin
2000MessiahMusic and sound effectsWith Jesper Kyd and Joey Kuras[12]
Arthur's Absolutely Fun Day!Music
Spider-ManWith Howard Ulyate
SacrificeSound effectsWith Joey Kuras
Evil Dead: Hail to the KingMusic composer, producer and audio production coordinatorWith Todd Dennis, Chris Rickwood & Jack Wall
2001Knockout Kings 2001Sound and audioWith various others
Maximo: Ghosts to GloryMusic & sound design
Casper: Spirit DimensionsSound and voiceWith Joey Kuras
Oddworld: Munch's OddyseeMusicOpening cinematic only
2002Scooby-Doo! Night of 100 FrightsWith Todd Dennis & Howard Uyate
Street HoopsAudio director
2003War of the MonstersSound FX
Black & BruisedVoice over producer
DevastationAdditional music
Maximo vs. Army of ZinMusic, sound design & voice actingWith various others
SpyHunter 2Cinematic audio, sound design & compositionWith Joey Kuras & Howard Ulyate
2004The IncrediblesSound FX designWith Nathan Lee Smith
The Bard's TaleMusic, audio, lyrics, sound designWith various others.
Fugitive Hunter: War on TerrorMusic producer
The X-Files: Resist or ServeAudio director
2005Advent Rising
2006AND 1 Streetball
Jaws: UnleashedOrchestrations, arrangementsWith various others
Snoopy vs. the Red BaronMusic & sound designWith Joey Kuras and Scott Ligon
Pac-Man World RallyWith Joey Kuras
2008Line Rider 2: UnboundSound effects
Defendin' De PenguinComposerWith Mike Rubino & Rod Abernathy
2009Sonic and the Black KnightMusic, arrangementsWith Howard Drossin, Richard Jacques, Jun Senoue and others
2010Flip's Twisted WorldMusic and sound effectsWith Joey Kuras
Super Tofu BoyMusic donation
2012Retro City RampageActor

Albums

YearTitleNotes
1994Virgin Games Greatest Hits, Vol. 1Compilation of tracks from various games
1996Games Greatest Hits, Vol. 2
2006Earthworm Jim AnthologyCompilation of music from Earthworm Jim with remixes
2008Video Games Live – Level 1
2010Video Games Live – Level 2
2011Play for Japan: The AlbumWith various others, charity album
2014Video Games Live – Level 3
2015Video Games Live – Through Time and Space: Chrono Piano Album
Video Games Live – Level 4
2016Video Games Live – Zelda Majora's Mask Piano Album
Video Games Live – Level 5
2018Video Games Live – Level 6

References

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