For the slightly less "adventurous" in terms of music, here are two great alternatives that provide modern remixes of Amiga and C64 music. I often find that the remixes are better at evoking the feeling I remember in cases where the originals often feel underwhelming when hearing them again. I think the originals are in general easier to listen to for those of us who grew up with the sound (I do listen to quite a bit of the originals too, as well as other chiptune / retro music)
Quality is varying; sort by rating, and check out some of the IK+, Delta and Commando mixes as "easy" introductions where the original tracks have kept well)
http://www.amigaremix.com/ is also great, but the irony is that because the Amiga sound is/was so much more sample driven, I find that there are fewer remixes I like; often because the originals are good enough that bad remixes are much more obvious.
daXX is a consistently quite good arranger to look for (also for C64 remixes). There are many other good ones, but daXX is good for consistency across the board.
Reyn Ouwehand is also highly notable, especially for being a guy that composed original music for the C64 and Amiga (such as for Last Ninja 3), that then went on to a career in the music industry, and has continued to do remixes of C64 and Amiga tracks as a hobby.
http://remix.kwed.org/
Quality is varying; sort by rating, and check out some of the IK+, Delta and Commando mixes as "easy" introductions where the original tracks have kept well)
http://www.amigaremix.com/ is also great, but the irony is that because the Amiga sound is/was so much more sample driven, I find that there are fewer remixes I like; often because the originals are good enough that bad remixes are much more obvious.
daXX is a consistently quite good arranger to look for (also for C64 remixes). There are many other good ones, but daXX is good for consistency across the board.
Reyn Ouwehand is also highly notable, especially for being a guy that composed original music for the C64 and Amiga (such as for Last Ninja 3), that then went on to a career in the music industry, and has continued to do remixes of C64 and Amiga tracks as a hobby.