Some experiences come with a built-in soundtrack. They’re inseparable.
A certain song, a particular riff, forever hardwired into your memory of a specific time and place.
Just the other day, my dear friend Mikael Andersson mentioned how, for him, Ayreon’s The Human Equation is forever linked with Ice-Pick Lodge’s The Void . A seemingly exquisite, surreal pairing.
As usual my connection is a little less sophisticated :
Quake II and Annihilator’s Refresh the Demon.
How ? I’m glad you asked.
ICQ is the thing…
It was 1998. ICQ was still around and my nights were dedicated to Quake II.
Now, I’ve always thought Quake II got more flak than it deserved. It was a crucial step toward what we now consider the modern FPS formula. Instead of just a series of disconnected levels, it was a world. A continuous, gritty, sci-fi playground that felt connected.
Sure, that’s standard today. But back then? That was revolutionary.
And then there was the soundtrack: Sascha Dikiciyan’s (aka Sonic Mayhem) early masterpiece.
Industrial, heavy, synth-driven, full of mechanical rhythm and distortion. Exactly my kind of noise.
The Demon Appears
One evening, I’m deep into Quake II, running down endless corridors blasting Stroggs with reckless abandon , when I notice something strange..
The music feels… different.
Sort of heavier… More thrashy.
More awesome if that’s even possible.
I stop playing and just listen.
Sure Quake II’s soundtrack was always good but was it this good?
It wasn’t.
Turns out, the song wasn’t by Sonic Mayhem at all. It was “Ultraparanoia” by Annihilator, one of my all-time favorite metal bands, led by Canadian riff wizard Jeff Waters.
And when I say “led,” I mean it literally. On Refresh the Demon, Waters is the band: Playing guitars, bass, and vocals. The only other human involved is drummer Randy Black.
So how did Jeff Waters invade Quake II?
CD-ROM Sorcery
Here’s the thing: back then, PC games came on CDs, and most didn’t actually install the entire game onto your hard drive. The soundtrack was stored on the disc itself as CD audio tracks.
So when you played the game, your computer was essentially acting as a CD player, playing specific tracks directly from the disc.
That’s where the fun part comes in:
If you left a different music CD in your drive, the game didn’t care.
It just told the computer, “Play track 6!” and your CD-ROM happily obliged, whether that was Sonic Mayhem or Slayer.
In my case, it was Annihilator – Refresh the Demon.
The result? Quake II suddenly transformed into a thrash-metal bloodbath.
The giveaway came when vocals kicked in. Cue the moment of realization, followed by a slow-motion facepalm.
The Perfect Accident
Did I fix it? Of course not.
For the rest of that session, and every one after that, Refresh the Demon became my Quake II soundtrack.
To this day, when I hear Ultraparanoia, I’m instantly back in 1998, strafing around metallic corridors, shotgunning cyborgs to Jeff Waters’ riffs.
And honestly? Refresh the Demon fit better than it had any right to.
So yeah… some people had Sonic Mayhem.
I had Jeff Waters.
Best bug ever.
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