4keven4 said:
hehe
umbe gahapanko san andreas thawa parak
nathnam balapan sound track eke
balapan
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Theft_Auto:_San_Andreas_soundtrack
public enemy
slick rick unge sinduth thinawa
boys 2 men as well
mama ban sa missons 23k evara kala ban
eka hoday
patta
but VC is the best
becz it has the best music
look
Despite all its other great qualities, Grand Theft Auto: Vice City's audio turns out to be one of the best things about it. Like all the other GTA games before it, Vice City features a soundtrack that consists of the various radio stations you'll be listening to as you drive around in stolen vehicles. These are themed after the sorts of stations you'd expect to hear in '80s-era Miami: There's a new-wave station, a rock station, a rap station, a metal station, and even a Spanish-language station, plus a couple of talk-radio stations for good measure. Suffice it to say that there are hours upon hours of recognizable radio hits from all genres of '80s music on this soundtrack, so even if you never touched the game's controls, you'd practically be getting your money's worth out of this game just by virtue of its being an excellent compilation of '80s tunes. The radio stations all have their own DJs, many of whom are very well written characters in their own right, and you'll even hear radio spots that cleverly mock the sorts of products that made the rounds in that era. Vice City's audio ultimately deserves most of the credit for establishing the game's atmosphere, and other than the soundtrack and voice acting, the sound effects for all the various vehicles and weapons are spot on.
Vice City includes a large collection of licensed music from 1986 and before that can be listened to by means of various in-car
radio stations. Each station covers a particular
music genre, such as
rap music (Wildstyle),
rock (V-Rock) and (most predominantly)
pop music (WAVE 103, Flash FM). The tracks are for the most part works from various real-life artists, such as
Electric Light Orchestra,
Judas Priest,
Toto,
Blondie,
Iron Maiden,
Ozzy Osbourne,
INXS,
Michael Jackson,
Bryan Adams,
Luther Vandross,
Kool & the Gang,
Spandau Ballet,
Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five and
Eumir Deodato. Additionally, a talk station (KCHAT) and a
public radio debate show
Pressing Issues (VCPR) are included. The radio stations and the game's storyline also feature a fictional heavy metal band called
Love Fist. The multi-
CD soundtrack to the game was an instant best-seller.
In addition to music and interviews, the stations also include satirical commercials, such as the Degenatron, a fictional
video game console (
Save the green dots with your fantastic flying red square!), likely a parody of the
Atari 2600. The commercials and the game setting are consistent: Degenatron advertisements appear on billboards, and ads air for stores in which the player can actually shop, such as Ammu-Nation. Months before the release of
Vice City, Rockstar Games created a
Degenatron "fansite", which allowed users to actually play the "
emulated" games.