

We photographed the cars and split the palette, so we could do things like getting the British flag on the Jaguar.Īdam: Ray taking those top-down photos of toy cars, touching them up and putting them into the game was magic. People working there must have thought it was crazy. We walked into that place and just cleaned them out of every British car. Ray: We went to a shopping centre in Mississauga and found a shop that just sold Diecast cars. I think some of it eventually worked its way into our vernacular in the office. Nobody questioned it.īlair: We're Canadian, so we had no idea about this whole Cockney rhyming slang thing at first. If you hit the handbrake on the dirt, you got a big brown skid-mark. Ray: I was crazy about Viz magazine, so I was like, "Ah cool, we're doing a London game, we have to have 'dog's eggs' on the sidewalk." I made it so that some of the sidewalk tiles had dog shit on them. I've never been to London, but I feel like I know where everything is. I learned the entire layout of London to get the map right. You had to immerse yourself in this world and see what ideas would spring up. I remember watching Bullet and The Italian Job. It is the only song from GTA to do so, all the others songs are from GTA 2.Blair: It was our homework to watch old 1960s English movies – anything with a car chase in it, basically – to get a feel. This version can also be heard on the radio in some cars.The main theme of GTA Advance is an instrumental version of a song from GTA: Slumpussy's "This Life".

GTA LONDON SOUNDTRACK SERIES
The game uses a generic police radio track used in countless films, series and games ( "5 George K, number 30 Broad street" is said in the track).In a ranking of the shortest stations in the game series, The Fergus Buckner Show FM, from GTA, ranks as the fifth shortest in the series, and the shortest that is not from GTA London.There are only 2 DJs named: Fergus Buckner and Eddie Symons.The number of songs in this soundtrack is 19.CCC Featuring Robert DeNegro - "Blow Your Console" (C.Conner/R.DeNegro).Da Shootaz - " Grand Theft Auto" ( Craig Conner/Robert DeNegro) (plays in the game's main menu).Authors of the songs, at the side, in superscript. As all the songs are original creations, for all of them the year of release is that of GTA: 1997. Radio stations The songs are listed in the same order as they appear in the game manual. The radio stations can also be played outside the game by putting the game disc into a normal audio CD player, as long as track 1 (which contains the game data) is skipped over. The next time the character enters a vehicle, a song from the CD will randomly play.
GTA LONDON SOUNDTRACK PC
As a result, PC players can remove the CD once the game is loaded and replace it with an audio CD. On the PC version of the game disc, the radio station audio is stored in standard CD audio tracks. Brooklyn Underground FM: Drum and Bass, Techno.It's Unleashed FM: Hard Rock, Alternative Rock, Trance.The radio stations that the player can listen in GTA are as follows:

However, the soundtrack is listed in the booklet which comes with the game. Most of the names of songs or the radio station names are never mentioned in-game, the exceptions are Head Radio FM and The Fergus Buckner Show FM (also, the DJ of Radio '76 FM names his radio "Funk FM"). The first Grand Theft Auto, also commonly called GTA, has seven radio stations and a police radio track, all of which can be heard once the player enters a car, setting a feature that would become a mainstay in the game series.Īll the songs in this soundtrack are original creations produced by the Rockstar staff (none of them are licensed content). The CD of GTA with the credits for the soundtrack listed. For the radio stations in the Game Boy Color version, see Radio Stations in GTA (GBC).
