Tag: Dead

  • ‘Pure terror in musical form’: Dead Space’s composer shares its unsettling secret

    ‘Pure terror in musical form’: Dead Space’s composer shares its unsettling secret

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    What does “horror” sound like to you? Is it the slow thump of a heartbeat, gradually speeding up as adrenaline and cortisol start to flood the nervous system? Is it the wet thwack of meat on metal as something, somewhere, gets rent asunder? Or is it more understated – a soft whisper in the ear when you weren’t expecting it, half-heard shuffling footsteps, the suggestion of a breeze when the air is supposed to be perfectly still?

    Dead Space, the horror game from EA and Visceral that launched for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and PC back in 2008, managed to get into your head, and under your skin. Complementing the game’s extra-terrestrial, Cronenberg-esque body horror was the mental deterioration of protagonist Isaac Clarke; an engineer stranded aboard the USG Ishimura. He’s not a warrior. He’s not a soldier. He’s just some guy, on a ship teeming with hostile alien lifeforms, whose poor little brain is starting to unravel. For the entire game, you never leave his heavy, blood-soaked boots.

    “There’s a very simple technique I came up with that, to me, musically illustrated Isaac’s emotional state,” explains Dead Space composer, Jason Graves. “You can hear it in the very beginning of track four on the soundtrack, Fly Me To The Aegis Seven Moon, and it’s used throughout the entire score. It’s a slowly wavering, single note. Very anxious-sounding. That note builds and expands as the rest of the orchestra slowly dominates and overpowers it.”

    Graves’ technique for getting you to empathise with Isaac mimicked what the audio engineers were doing with the rest of the game’s sound. Dead Space employed breathing sound effects and a dull heartbeat in the background to keep you physically in-step with Isaac. The lower your health, the more ragged your breathing became. The closer to death you were, the quicker your heart would beat. You might not have noticed these things consciously … but chances are your body did.

    Dead Space’s aim was to expand the boundaries of a horror experience in gaming, taking on all the action beats of Resident Evil and Silent Hill and complementing them with the psychological thriller aspects of cinema. “Kubrick is famous for implementing classical recordings in his films,” reflects Graves. “His use of Penderecki’s music in The Shining was my lightbulb moment for Dead Space. I stumbled across the ‘all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy’ typewriter scene one evening on television and thought ‘that’s what the score needs to sound like!’”

    ‘The closer to death you were, the quicker your heart would beat … Dead Space.
    ‘The closer to death you were, the quicker your heart would beat … Dead Space. Photograph: EA

    Graves explains the appeal of the scene; it was a natural, acoustic sound – a normal orchestra performing their instruments – but the techniques they were using made the instruments sound otherworldly. “Like musical necromorphs,” he laughs. “The key to this sound was musical chance, or aleatoric techniques.”

    “The point of aleatoric music is giving the player the freedom to decide what to play within a given set of instructions. It might be ‘play the highest note as loud as possible,’ ‘play random open string harmonics very quietly’, or ‘play these five notes as quickly and loudly as you can. These kinds of directions are incredibly fun for the musicians. They act like they are back in school. I had several takes ruined by laughing at the end.”

    As unlistenable as aleatoric music sounds, it made perfect sense to commit the technique to a horror game. Especially a horror game with the goal of featuring the scariest soundtrack the world has ever heard. “I spent many, many months poring over scores from the mid-20th century and studying their techniques, convinced that this aleatoric sound of cacophony and confusion was the key to unlocking pure terror in musical form.” says Graves. “After all, what is normal-sounding music but comforting repetition, proper form, tonal balance and tuned, enjoyable sounds? If you take away all those things, you are robbing the listener of every core value that makes music comforting and pleasurable.”

    Graves was intent on making you, the player, as uncomfortable as you could be. This wasn’t going to be your traditional score; the original brief he received, which asked for “modern, Hollywood action music with some horror thrown in”, had been jettisoned. This was a cold, new frontier now: “nothing repeats, there is no tonal centre – it’s literally every man and woman (in the orchestra) for themselves.”

    ‘Nothing repeats, there is no tonal centre – it’s literally every man and woman (in the orchestra) for themselves’ … Dead Space.
    ‘Nothing repeats, there is no tonal centre – it’s literally every man and woman (in the orchestra) for themselves’ … Dead Space. Photograph: EA

    Dead Space was a passion project for Graves. He devoted more than two years of his life to it, and he came away with “over nine hours of recorded technique from each individual section of the orchestra”. Control over each element was essential for how the final product would sound, and how the music would be fed into the game engine. “This kind of music implementation hadn’t been done in games before,” he recalls. “EA was using its own proprietary music engine and really pushing the limits.”

    Was it easy? No. Was it effective? Absolutely. Dead Space remains one of the most essential horror games – influential enough to justify a remake, which will be out next week.

    “All creative people have their ‘trial by fire’ moments,” says Graves. “Projects that transform how they creatively process and work from that point forward. That’s what Dead Space did for me. Literally, every decision about the score – conception, recording techniques, musicians, recording studios and implementation – were, for better or worse, up to me … Constantly trying new things and pushing boundaries, that’s how you grow as an artist.”

    The end result is an unsettling triumph, a curated, player-driven exercise in tension and technique designed to get in your head and stay there, long after you’ve finished playing.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Husband accused of killing, dismembering wife allegedly Googled ’10 ways to dispose of a dead body’ – The News Caravan

    Husband accused of killing, dismembering wife allegedly Googled ’10 ways to dispose of a dead body’ – The News Caravan

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    A Massachusetts man accused of killing and dismembering his missing wife, Ana Walshe, 39, allegedly Googled “10 ways to dispose of a dead body if you really need to,” according to prosecutors.

    Brian Walshe, 47, of Cohasset, appeared in court Wednesday morning on charges of murder and improper transport of a body. Not guilty pleas to the charges were entered on his behalf. Walshe was already in custody after pleading not guilty to a charge of misleading investigators.

    Brian Walshe stands during his arraignment in Quincy District Court, in Quincy, Mass., Monday, Jan. 9, 2023, to face charges in connection with misleading investigators. Walshe has been charged with the murder of his wife, missing Cohasset woman Ana Walshe.

    Greg Derr/AP

    Prosecutors believe Walshe made a series of Google searches including: “how long before a body starts to smell”; “how to stop a body from decomposing”; “how to embalm a body”; and “what’s the best state to divorce.”

    Walshe also allegedly Googled “dismemberment” and “what happens when you put body parts in ammonia,” prosecutor Lynn Beland said. There were more Google searches for “hacksaw best tool to dismember” and “can you be charged with murder without a body,” according to Beland.

    PHOTO: Brian Walshe, of Cohasset, faces a Quincy Court judge charged with impeding the investigation into his wife Ana' disappearance from their home, on Jan. 9, 2023.

    Brian Walshe, of Cohasset, faces a Quincy Court judge charged with impeding the investigation into his wife Ana’ disappearance from their home, on Jan. 9, 2023.

    Greg Derr/The Patriot Ledger via AP, Pool

    Blood, a bloody knife and another knife were found in the basement of the Walshes’ Cohasset home, Beland said.

    Prosecutors said police also recovered 10 trash bags containing blood-stained items including: a hacksaw, towels, rags, cleaning agents, carpets, slippers, Prada purse and Ana Walshe’s COVID-19 vaccine card. Investigators found DNA from Ana Walshe and Brian Walshe on the slippers, according to Beland.

    PHOTO: In this image posted to her Facebook account, Ana Walshe is shown.

    In this image posted to her Facebook account, Ana Walshe is shown.

    Ana Walshe/FaceBook

    Ana Walshe was reported missing by co-workers in Washington on Jan. 4. At that time, Brian Walshe claimed he last saw his wife early on Jan. 1, as she prepared to take a ride share to Boston Logan International Airport for a “work emergency,” but investigators said she never caught a ride and never boarded a plane.

    Investigators said they tracked Ana’s phone on Jan. 2, and it pinged in or near her Cohasset home.

    Brian Walshe was charged with misleading the investigation on Jan. 8. At that time, investigators revealed they found blood and a broken knife in the family’s basement and had surveillance video of Brian Walshe, wearing a medical mask and surgical gloves, purchasing $450 in cleaning supplies with cash at a Home Depot in nearby Rockland.

    FILE PHOTO: Brian Walshe is pictured in this undated Registry of Motor Vehicles photo contained in court papers filed by federal prosecutors in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., on May 9, 2018.

    Brian Walshe is pictured in this undated Registry of Motor Vehicles photo contained in court papers filed by federal prosecutors in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., on May 9, 2018.

    U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts/Handout via REUTERS

    Walshe was wearing a monitoring bracelet as he awaited sentencing for selling fake Andy Warhol paintings to an art buyer in California. He was under house arrest but was allowed to leave home for things like doctors’ appointments and grocery shopping. The bracelet did not have GPS tracking.

    Police conducted a sweeping search at a Peabody landfill. The landfill was the destination for a dumpster that was outside Brian Walshe’s mother’s apartment building in Swampscott. He had visited his mom in the days following his wife’s disappearance, claiming he went shopping for her. Police found no receipts from the stores he mentioned.

    Investigators have not recovered a body.

    Brian and Ana Walshe have three children. Norfolk District Attorney Michael Morrissey said Ana Walshe’s disappearance was the second case of domestic violence his office had seen in recent weeks.

    “Our thoughts are very much with the families these crimes have left behind,” Morrissey said.

    Brian Walshe is being held without bail and is set to return to court on Feb. 9.

    ABC News’ Teddy Grant and Meredith Deliso contributed to this report.

    (This news/post has been generated from abcnews.go.com and its was posted in their US category. CT is not responsible for the above information.)

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  • Husband accused of killing, dismembering wife allegedly Googled ’10 ways to dispose of a dead body’ – The News Caravan

    Husband accused of killing, dismembering wife allegedly Googled ’10 ways to dispose of a dead body’ – The News Caravan

    [ad_1]

    A Massachusetts man accused of killing and dismembering his missing wife, Ana Walshe, 39, allegedly Googled “10 ways to dispose of a dead body if you really need to,” according to prosecutors.

    Brian Walshe, 47, of Cohasset, appeared in court Wednesday morning on charges of murder and improper transport of a body. Not guilty pleas to the charges were entered on his behalf. Walshe was already in custody after pleading not guilty to a charge of misleading investigators.

    Brian Walshe stands during his arraignment in Quincy District Court, in Quincy, Mass., Monday, Jan. 9, 2023, to face charges in connection with misleading investigators. Walshe has been charged with the murder of his wife, missing Cohasset woman Ana Walshe.

    Greg Derr/AP

    Prosecutors believe Walshe made a series of Google searches including: “how long before a body starts to smell”; “how to stop a body from decomposing”; “how to embalm a body”; and “what’s the best state to divorce.”

    Walshe also allegedly Googled “dismemberment” and “what happens when you put body parts in ammonia,” prosecutor Lynn Beland said. There were more Google searches for “hacksaw best tool to dismember” and “can you be charged with murder without a body,” according to Beland.

    PHOTO: Brian Walshe, of Cohasset, faces a Quincy Court judge charged with impeding the investigation into his wife Ana' disappearance from their home, on Jan. 9, 2023.

    Brian Walshe, of Cohasset, faces a Quincy Court judge charged with impeding the investigation into his wife Ana’ disappearance from their home, on Jan. 9, 2023.

    Coffee House Death Investigation (P…

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    Greg Derr/The Patriot Ledger via AP, Pool

    Blood, a bloody knife and another knife were found in the basement of the Walshes’ Cohasset home, Beland said.

    Prosecutors said police also recovered 10 trash bags containing blood-stained items including: a hacksaw, towels, rags, cleaning agents, carpets, slippers, Prada purse and Ana Walshe’s COVID-19 vaccine card. Investigators found DNA from Ana Walshe and Brian Walshe on the slippers, according to Beland.

    PHOTO: In this image posted to her Facebook account, Ana Walshe is shown.

    In this image posted to her Facebook account, Ana Walshe is shown.

    Ana Walshe/FaceBook

    Ana Walshe was reported missing by co-workers in Washington on Jan. 4. At that time, Brian Walshe claimed he last saw his wife early on Jan. 1, as she prepared to take a ride share to Boston Logan International Airport for a “work emergency,” but investigators said she never caught a ride and never boarded a plane.

    Investigators said they tracked Ana’s phone on Jan. 2, and it pinged in or near her Cohasset home.

    Brian Walshe was charged with misleading the investigation on Jan. 8. At that time, investigators revealed they found blood and a broken knife in the family’s basement and had surveillance video of Brian Walshe, wearing a medical mask and surgical gloves, purchasing $450 in cleaning supplies with cash at a Home Depot in nearby Rockland.

    FILE PHOTO: Brian Walshe is pictured in this undated Registry of Motor Vehicles photo contained in court papers filed by federal prosecutors in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., on May 9, 2018.

    Brian Walshe is pictured in this undated Registry of Motor Vehicles photo contained in court papers filed by federal prosecutors in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., on May 9, 2018.

    U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts/Handout via REUTERS

    Walshe was wearing a monitoring bracelet as he awaited sentencing for selling fake Andy Warhol paintings to an art buyer in California. He was under house arrest but was allowed to leave home for things like doctors’ appointments and grocery shopping. The bracelet did not have GPS tracking.

    Police conducted a sweeping search at a Peabody landfill. The landfill was the destination for a dumpster that was outside Brian Walshe’s mother’s apartment building in Swampscott. He had visited his mom in the days following his wife’s disappearance, claiming he went shopping for her. Police found no receipts from the stores he mentioned.

    Investigators have not recovered a body.

    Brian and Ana Walshe have three children. Norfolk District Attorney Michael Morrissey said Ana Walshe’s disappearance was the second case of domestic violence his office had seen in recent weeks.

    “Our thoughts are very much with the families these crimes have left behind,” Morrissey said.

    Brian Walshe is being held without bail and is set to return to court on Feb. 9.

    ABC News’ Teddy Grant and Meredith Deliso contributed to this report.

    (This news/post has been generated from abcnews.go.com and its was posted in their US category. CT is not responsible for the above information.)

    (We don’t allow anyone to copy content. For Copyright or Use of Content related questions,



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  • One Dead, Three Injured In Motorcycle Accident At Bhaderwah

    One Dead, Three Injured In Motorcycle Accident At Bhaderwah

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    A motorcyclist carrying two pillion riders while on his way from Nayi Basti to Drudu hit a man, resulting in the death of one person and injuring three others in this accident on Saturday.

    A police official told The Chenab Times that a motorcyclist carrying two pillion riders hit a man at Drudu Bhaderwah.

    “In this accident, one 40-year-old Rajesh Kumar son of Daya Krishan resident of Diggi Bhalra (Bhaderwah) died while three persons were injured, including 40-year-old Payar Singh son of Hushari Lal and his 17-year-old daughter Madhu Devi, residents of Drudu Nayi Basti, and 59-year-old Sat Lal son of Hem Raj resident of Nayi Basti,” he added.

    He further said that a case had also been registered under the relevant section.


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  • Mother-daughter Duo Dead, Man Injured As House Collapses Due To Landslide In Surankote

    Mother-daughter Duo Dead, Man Injured As House Collapses Due To Landslide In Surankote

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    A Mother-daughter duo died while a man was injured after a house collapsed due to a landslide in Bufliyaz village of Surankote area in Poonch district on Friday.

    An official told the news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO) that the incident took place near the site of a project for upgradation of road from Rajouri to Surankote.

    He said that a landslide came crushing down on a residential house, burying three family members, following which a rescue operation was launched.

    “After hectic efforts all three were rescued and were taken to SDH Surankote, where mother-daughter duo was declared dead on arrival. The male member of the family was referred to GMC Associated Hospital Rajouri,” he said.

    Deceased have been identified as Naseem Akhter (34) wife of Mohammad Latief and her daughter Rubina Akhter (09) and the injured has been identified as Mohammad Latief son of Mohd Hussain.


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  • Imran Khan Including Six Others Injured In Firing At Rally In Pakistan’s Punjab, One Dead: Reports

    Imran Khan Including Six Others Injured In Firing At Rally In Pakistan’s Punjab, One Dead: Reports

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    Former Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan was injured in firing during his rally in Gujranwala in Pakistan’s Punjab province and was rushed to a hospital. He was moving inside an SUV while having his right leg wrapped.

    When Imran Khan was speaking from atop a container truck to address his ongoing “long march” to Islamabad against the Shehbaz Sharif government, the attacker, who has since been apprehended, opened fire at him from below.

    About 200 kilometres from Islamabad, the incident occurred nine months after he was unseated from office for losing the trust of the army establishment.


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