Republished on Thursday, 2th December 2014: We're bringing this article back from the archives to celebrate the PSone's big 20th Anniversary this week. The original feature follows.

Originally published on Friday, 14th September 2012: Following the recent closure of Studio Liverpool, we decided the time was ripe to investigate the story behind one of the most famous franchises to emerge from the developer: WipEout. One of the first PlayStation titles to really show off the raw 3D muscle of the system, the famous anti-grav racer was created by a team of around ten people and took approximately fourteen months to complete, with the bulk of that time being spent exploring untested and unknown prototype hardware. A ground-breaking technical achievement, it was equally famous for the fact that it managed to seamlessly incorporate music from professional dance artists, something which games had been trying to do for years - with varying degrees of success. It’s perhaps this element of the game that sticks in the mind of people who experienced it for the first time back in 1995.

The game’s designer was Nick Burcombe, who started his illustrious career in 1989 at Psygnosis - the UK company which would eventually be swallowed up by Sony Europe to create Studio Liverpool. He reveals that the use of music in the game wasn’t for marketing purposes, but was primarily to accentuate and intensify the experience. “It wasn’t a commercial decision, but a purely artistic one,” he insists. “We were really into the kind of music when we developed the game, so it made sense to feature it in some capacity. The choice to combine WipEout’s excessive speed with techno an organic one; it just felt natural. Sony’s marketing department made good use of it afterwards, deftly positioning WipEout as part of a new generation of cool games.”

Burcombe’s memory is so sharp that he can even pinpoint the exact moment when the decision to use techno music occurred. “I was playing the last race of the 150cc cup in Super Mario Kart on the Super Nintendo, and I’d muted the game audio so I could hear my own music,” he explains. “Age of Love was playing on the stereo in the background. I’d tried about ten times to beat the last race, and on this final attempt I was in second place by the time the music was about 2:10 mark. The final laps took place where the track was at 2:45 and it felt so exhilarating; it was as if the music was pushing me on into a deeper gameplay experience. I made it across the line with about a tenth of a second between me and Bowser, who was pushed into second place. Psygnosis artist Digby Rogers was in the room at the time and he was literally on the edge of his seat by the end of the race; he commented that it was the most amazing thing he’d ever watched on TV! That’s ultimately where the concept of marrying the thrill of racing with the intensity of techno came from.”

The Genesis of WipEout

The next step for WipEout was a pre-rendered CGI sequence created by Jim Bowers (who based the ships on designs he had previously created for the Amiga and Atari ST title Matrix Marauders) set to music by popular UK dance act The Prodigy. This allowed Burcombe to solidify his ideas for the game even further, and resulted in the concept getting some unlikely exposure via Hollywood. “Jim’s original dogfighting chase scene was used to gain support for the game, and it worked - people just seemed to get it,” Burcombe says. “Much later on, Jim approached us with the opportunity to expand the sequence for scene in the movie Hackers, which was in production around the same time and starred Angelina Jolie and Jonny Lee Miller. I used this opportunity to clarify further some of the gameplay mechanics and rules for WipEout.”

While WipEout’s celebrated soundtrack - which showcased the talents of Orbital, Leftfield and Chemical Brothers, as well as songs from legendary in-house Psygnosis music producer Tim “CoLD SToRAGE” Wright, who we’ll get onto shortly - would go on to gain critical acclaim, Burcombe’s original play list reads like a who’s who of early ‘90s techno acts - many of which will be totally unknown to anyone over the age of 30. The full list, which has never been published until now, included:

Cygnus X – Orange Theme

F.U.S.E – Substance Abuse

Tomas Heckman – Amphetamine

Dave Clarke - Red 2

CJ Bolland – Horsepower

Pump Panel – Ego Acid

Prodigy - No Good

F.U.S.E – F.U.

Although the musicians of today are all too happy to sign lucrative licensing deals so their songs can be featured in video games, back in the early ‘90s the situation was very different. “The idea of a proper recording artist allowing their work to be featured in a video game was almost laughable,” explains Burcombe. “Because of this, it was harder than you might imagine to get people on board. However, bands like Orbital - who were and still are very forward-thinking - could see the link and were incredibly keen to be involved.”

Because Psygnosis could only secure three tracks from professional artists for the original WipEout, the aforementioned Tim Wright had to step up to the plate and compose a selection of songs for the game, all the while sticking to the main theme dictated by Burcombe’s own musical tastes. His aural contribution to the title cannot be understated; outside of the trio of licenced songs, the entire soundtrack of WipEout is down to Wright.

“When I was first asked to write the music, I saw it as just as another game to work on to be honest,” he explains. “I'd just finished working on another PSone game called Krazy Ivan, which called for Industrial Techno tracks, so I was kinda in the right electronic ballpark - or so I thought. Then I was shown the short movie-style clip that Jim Bowers had been working on, a version of which would later be included in the film Hackers. That changed my mind, and inspired me to think that this game could be something quite special, something different.”

Working on the game would prove to be more difficult than Wright suspected, and required him to change his usual style. “I remember playing the first track I'd composed to Nick,” he recalls. “He said something like, ‘yeah, it's a decent track, but it's a bit too industrial, too old school electronic. We need something a faster paced and more clubby’. Clubby? I didn't have a clue. I really didn't care for dance music at all at that stage. I was a child of the 80s, so it was going to be a bit of a struggle. Around that time, Psygnosis was moved from the Liverpool Docks to new shiny offices constructed from metal and green tinted glass. I reasoned that a new futuristic environment might encourage me to create new futuristic sounds, so I sat down in my brand new studio, armed with Time & Space Volume 1 & 2, an AMIGA A1200, a Roland JD800 and an AKAI S2800 sampler, and I started to knock some ideas around.”

"All of the songs were composed within a very short time frame whilst consuming copious amounts of Red Bull and takeaway pizza" - Tim Wright

Wright has always believed that the musical direction he took on the first WipEout was largely influenced by the samples he was working with, but a recent discovery has made him reconsider his recollection of events. “Around the time I was writing the WipEout tracks my brother Alistair - totally coincidentally - gave me a cassette tape labelled ‘Goa Trance’. I'd listened to that tape a few times in the car and then basically forgotten about it. I found the tape again a few days ago and popped it into my old Sony Walkman cassette player and pressed play. I was greeted with track after track of CoLD SToRAGE/WipEout-eqsue music. I was gob-smacked; I'd never really heard any other music that was that similar in style to my original WipEout music, but maybe that tape had inspired me in some way? I'm not sure who the composers are, and I've tried using Shazam and other services to identify the tracks, but without success.”

Musical Magic

Regardless of where Wright’s inspiration came from back in the middle of the 1990s, the indisputable fact is that he crafted some of the most memorable tunes of the period. “All of the songs were composed within a very short time frame whilst consuming copious amounts of Red Bull and takeaway pizza,” he admits with a chuckle. “I have really fond memories of working on those songs into the small hours, and watching the sunrise over Liverpool as I pumped the tracks out into an empty building.”

Somewhat ironically, Wright’s masterpieces came at time when games like WipEout were looking to mainstream musicians to provide their soundtrack, as opposed to video game composers like Wright himself. It’s a testament to the quality of his work that despite the eventual influx of new artists on the sequel, WipEout 2097, Wright’s compositions continued to rub shoulders with the output of 'proper' commercial acts. “By that point it was easy to coax big name acts on board,” he continues. “So personally speaking, to get my music on the games at this stage was a massive vote of confidence.”

However, while the musical side of WipEout was progressing nicely, Burcombe and his team had other issues - the most pressing of which was the primitive nature of Sony’s new development hardware. “It was a bit of a nightmare coding for the system at that time, as it was still in the very early stages of development,” he explains. “We had one of the earliest prototype PlayStation dev kits in the UK - it was about the size of a photocopier and was festooned with noisy fans which attempted to keep it cool during use. When a game was running the sound this thing created was almost unbearable - it was like a jet engine! Amazingly, it was only running at third of the eventual speed of the production console, a fact which created further problems because it’s very hard to code a game when you don’t fully understand what the hardware is capable of. We were almost coding blind, to a certain degree, but the team pulled it off.”

Burcombe’s role as lead designer meant that he didn’t have to get his hands too dirty with actually coding the game, but he could tell that it was a real struggle for his team. “Limited experience, primitive design documents and processes and unfinished dev hardware combined to make the production process a real challenge,” he comments. “I saw several months go by with not much progress, and at one point we even showed it to Sony Computer Entertainment CEO Ken Kutaragi and he told us we’d never get it completed in time for the launch of the PlayStation. I think the original goal was to keep it at 60hz in a higher resolution, interlaced. After it became clear that we simply couldn’t achieve that, we lowered our technical sights a little and went for the standard PAL resolution and 30hz. Lots of work went into discovering how to do stuff like building a 3D pipeline and what best practices were. When I sit here now and consider the complexities and challenges of development, it’s amazing that we even managed to produce the game at all. It was truly bleeding-edge stuff.”