Eveline Novakovic (née Fischer) (born 1969 in Christchurch, Hampshire)[1] is a British video game music composer who contributed music to Donkey Kong Country,[2] composed most of the soundtrack for Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!,[3] and provided voice acting and sound effects for several other Rare projects. Notably, she voiced the main heroine, Joanna Dark, in the Nintendo 64 game Perfect Dark.[4]

Eveline Fischer
Born1969
Christchurch, England
OccupationVideo game music composer
Years active1994–2007
EmployerRare
Known forDonkey Kong Country, Perfect Dark

Biography

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Born to a mother who was a fan of theatre and ballet, and a father who introduced her to new genres and artists, Novakovic studied piano, church organ, and violin.[5] She first studied music at Durham University, then pursued a Master's in Medieval Music at Newcastle University and a Postgraduate Diploma in Electroacoustic Composition at Bournemouth University.[6]

Novakovic joined video game developer Rare in 1993 when the company was transitioning from the NES to SNES.[5] At that time, the British company had only one composer, David Wise, who worked for the company as a freelancer. As one of only two women working on the development teams at that time, and the only in-house musician, Novakovic described the initial experience as "daunting to begin with," but eventually noted, "what I found though was a genuine camaraderie from the top down."[5]

Her first project for the console was Donkey Kong Country, alongside David Wise and Robin Beanland, where she was responsible for seven tracks, including "Simian Segue", "Treetop Rock", and "Voices of the Temple".[5]

Despite the "overwhelmingly positive" critical reception to Donkey Kong Country's soundtrack, Novakovic moved on to work on the soundtrack for Ken Griffey Jr.'s Winning Run for the same console.[5] After the success of Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest, Rare greenlit a sequel, and Novakovic was called by Wise to handle much of the soundtrack, including tracks such as "Nuts and Bolts", "Water World", and "Mill Fever".[5]

Following Double Trouble!, Novakovic worked on titles for the Game Boy console. She arranged and implemented Robin Beanland’s score for Conker's Pocket Tales for the Game Boy Color and also converted her own Donkey Kong Country 3 soundtrack for the Game Boy remake: Donkey Kong Land III.

After her work on Game Boy, Novakovic began to explore her increasing interest in sound design. She contributed voices to a number of Nintendo 64 games over the next few years, including Perfect Dark, where she voiced the main character Joanna Dark.[5]

In 2005, Novakovic left Rare after completing voice work for Kameo: Elements of Power for the Xbox 360[6] and eventually retired from the games industry in 2007.[5]

Influences

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Novakovic has described her music tastes as a blend of jazz, blues, medieval music and percussion.[6] She has cited major musical influences historic artists such as Sergei Rachmaninoff, Francis Poulenc, Gabriel Fauré, Franz Liszt, Bach, Charles-Marie Widor, Carl Orff, César Franck, and contemporary artists like Marie Claire Alain, Ella Fitzgerald, Nina Simone, Duke Ellington, Oscar Peterson, John Williams, Hans Zimmer and Amadinda.[6]

Personal life

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Eveline was credited by the name E. Fischer in earlier games she worked on. When she got married in the early 2000s, she adopted the name Novakovic.[7]

Video game credits

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Music/sound

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Title Year Notes
Donkey Kong Country (SNES version) 1994 With Robin Beanland and David Wise
Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble! 1996 With David Wise
Ken Griffey, Jr.'s Winning Run[8]
Donkey Kong Land III 1997
Banjo-Kazooie 1998 Sound Effects
Conker's Pocket Tales 1999 With Beanland
Donkey Kong 64 Development Team
Mickey's Speedway USA (GBC version) 2000
Donkey Kong Country (GBC version)
Perfect Dark
Banjo-Tooie Special thanks
Donkey Kong Country (GBA version) 2003 Sound Effects
Donkey Kong Country 2 (GBA version) 2004
Banjo Pilot 2005
It's Mr. Pants
Kameo: Elements of Power
Viva Piñata 2006 Production, Sound Effects, VO Recording and Compression Encoding

Voice acting

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Title Role(s)
Diddy Kong Racing Pipsy the Mouse[9]
Banjo-Kazooie Tooty, Brentilda
Jet Force Gemini Vela
Donkey Kong 64 Tiny Kong, Wrinkly Kong, Banana Fairy, Banana Fairy Princess, Mermaid, Candy Kong
Perfect Dark Joanna Dark, Velvet Dark
Banjo-Tooie Humba Wumba, Honey B.
Dinosaur Planet Krystal
Diddy Kong Pilot (2001 version) Dixie Kong, Candy Kong (unimplemented in 2001 version)
Banjo-Kazooie: Grunty's Revenge Honey B.
Donkey Kong Country 2 (GBA version) Dixie Kong (archived Tiny Kong recordings)
Banjo-Pilot Humba Wumba
Conker: Live and Reloaded Additional character voices
Donkey Kong Country 3 (GBA version) Dixie Kong (archived Tiny Kong recordings)
Kameo: Elements of Power Additional character voices
Perfect Dark Zero Additional character voices

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ "3 matches for Eveline Fischer in the birth records". Archived from the original on 23 July 2011.
  2. ^ "Rare: Scribes". 21 December 2005. Archived from the original on 27 December 2005. Robin did Funky's Fugue, Eveline did Simian Segue, Candy's Love Song, Voices of the Temple, Forest Frenzy, Tree Top Rock, Northern Hemispheres and Ice Cave Chant, and the rest was the doing of Mr. Wise.
  3. ^ "Rare: Scribes". 9 February 2006. Archived from the original on 13 February 2006. …everything is by Eveline except for Dixie Beat, Crazy Calypso, Wrinkly's Save Cave, Get Fit A-Go-Go, Wrinkly 64, Brothers Bear and Bonus Time (along with Bonus Win and Bonus Lose), which were by Dave.
  4. ^ "Perfect Dark Dual CD Soundtrack - VGMdb". VGMdb.net. Archived from the original on 11 December 2020. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Yarwood, Jack (27 September 2021). "A 'Rare' Interview with Donkey Kong Country Composer Eveline Novakovic". Fanbyte. Retrieved 24 October 2024.
  6. ^ a b c d "Gamer Québec - Interview with Eveline Fischer". 16 October 2018. Archived from the original on 16 October 2018.
  7. ^ "Rare: Scribes". 9 February 2006. Archived from the original on 13 February 2006.
  8. ^ "Ending credits sequence of Ken Griffey, Jr.'s Winning Run, 28 seconds in". YouTube. Archived from the original on 13 November 2019. Retrieved 12 August 2020.
  9. ^ Graeme Norgate [@Norgans] (22 November 2021). "100%" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
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