Mad Maestro Review

A flawed code of conduct.

Musical prodigies are few and far between. Beethoven. Mozart. Louis Armstrong.

Stevie Wonder. Fat Albert. Yes, Fat Albert.

I know what you’re thinking, but I contend

that Fat Albert was brilliant. How many other musicians have the fine schooling

and nerve to play a radiator? A radiator, people. Musical talent

like that doesn’t come along every day.

Now

add another musical maestro to that hallowed list… Takt. Takt is an out of

luck junior conductor. He’s got the mad skillz, but his musical band is short

several players.

It seems the old Concert Hall in Bravo Town is about to be torn down, bulldozed

away in the name of progress. Goodbye musical culture, hello mini-mall. Luckily,

Symphony, the resident fairy of the Concert Hall, has found the Concert Hall’s

savior in Takt.

Mad Maestro is a music game riding the coattails of forerunners like

Parappa and Beatmania. This time

the theme is classical music, as you play the role of the conductor keeping

the volume and tempo of your orchestra.

The original Japanese Playstation version of this series (yes, it’s a whole

series, originally called Bravo Music) included a conducting wand. While

I never got to play it with that peripheral, it has to feel closer to the real

thing. Suffice it to say, pressing and pounding a button with your thumb is

quite a stretch from waving your arm in the air.

The plot is lame, and Takt rather lifeless and mute. Other than recruiting

and aiding some atypical musicians, such as aliens, a fashion model, and a guy

in a bear suit, the story is just a prop to get you to the next song. There

are a few quirky asides here and there, but I would have liked to see something

edgier in the plot along the lines of Incredible

Crisis
and Mister Mosquito (which was also developed by Fresh Games,

the minds behind Mad Maestro).

Overlaid across the screen are either 4 dots (or ‘Cue Points’) in a square

for 4/4 time or 3 dots in a triangle for 3/4 time. A cursor moves around these

dots, completing little laps. Pressing the button signifies a cue for a beat

and allows your cursor to round the corner to the next cue marker.

The amount of pressure you use to hit button changes the volume. You can adjust

the amount of pressure in the options – light taps, normal button presses, and

then completely hammering the key.

At

certain points, you use the D-pad to supposedly direct orchestral cues, but

it’s really nothing more than something for your left hand to do. Why can’t

the D-pad be used to separate the different sections, with “up” directed towards

your strings, “left” to your winds, and “down” to the percussion? Hmmm.

Mad Maestro is missing an essential element in a music game – true

musical freedom and a chance for freestyling. Settling for just the volume and

tempo doesn’t fulfill the full and mighty power of a conductor.

The game keeps track of your adherence to all the different cues with the

‘Tension’ bar, roughly the same as the ‘Cool’ meter in Parappa. The better

you do, the higher you raise your bar. Once the bar is full, you reach Angel

mode. If you make some major mistakes while in this mode, you get knocked hell-ward

into a Devil mode. Simply finish out the classical piece while in Angel mode

to beat the stage.

The graphics are very simple and work fine, though everything that happens

in the background looks like PSone graphic and character modeling, only with

smoother lines and edges. But with all the wacky activity in the foreground,

you will pay little attention to the craziness in the back.

The classical music selection covers a decent range, from the Ride of the

Valkyries
to things you’ve never heard of by Muggorsky. But for a music

game, the music sounds pretty weak. While it comes out better than bleeps and

bloops, these tunes still sound electronic at their core due to the MIDI recordings.

It really takes the bang out of the classical tunes.

From a gamer’s perspective, Mad Maestro is missing a lot. Pressing

one button over and over at different pressure levels doesn’t ring my bell,

and I doubt it will ring most of yours. Though I guess it can offer kids a good

start to keeping a steady beat, it doesn’t offer enough for more mature gamers.

I’ll stick with the world’s greatest jug band,

thanks.







  • Learn how to keep the beat
  • Classical music
  • In MIDI format?
  • Sections of the orchestra aren't separated
  • Bland gameplay
  • Missing conducting stick peripheral

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