

"Trogdor (Burninating Putt Putt)" - Walkabout Mini Golf Homestar Runner Distraction Pack Soundtrack
I had the privilege of doing a bunch of music for the new Walkabout Mini Golf Homestar Runner Distraction Pack DLC. Here's the (IMO) epic "Trogdor" that resulted.
Super grateful to The Brothers Chaps and Mighty Coconut for this opportunity. It was incredible fun to work on.
(This video has just the music. The actual game, of course, includes lots of other sounds.)
This is an orchestral (and, later, hard-rock-with-orchestra) version of the well-known Trogdor theme song that incorporates the Peasant's Quest theme song a little later on. One of The Brothers Chaps referred to the imitation Brian May guitar part (2:14) as "Brian Mayonnaise" and that has really stuck with me in a good way....I think.
YouTube link if that's preferable: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cxQAOHQncMU
"This Is Not The Song I Wrote" (Red Rocks 2025) piano transcription
https://reddit.com/link/1uadul5/video/1b31mu5s1b8h1/player
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o5cLvoNAGJs
Some notes:
- Ooops, I thought I pinned the key signature to the left hand side of the video, but I guess not. Hey, it's 5 sharps (G# minor on the verses, B major on the choruses).
- Not sure how Woody is playing it, but I find it easier to play those fast octave runs at the end of 4-bar phrases (notated in the left hand alone) with one note in each hand. At first I thought Woody played it in just the left hand, but listening to the way (to my ear, at least) the left hand thins out at that point during the guitar solo, I wonder if he is playing it with two hands after all.
- The chorus is the same as the verse but with the bass notes (and therefore the harmony) transposed up to the relative major (B major from G# minor).
- Lots of "shapes" playing here. If you want to think in terms of traditional harmony, that's fine. G#m7 to Emaj9 (without the 3rd) and all that, yeah, that totally works. But I suspect when it was written, the thinking was more B/G# followed by B/E, and so on.
- Where I put a parenthetical exclamation point during the guitar solo: Pretty sure that's a whoops, rushed by a sixteenth note. It definitely conflicts with the rhythm Joe Dart plays on the same line. Joe is consistent throughout the song when that part of the progression is played. Woody is too, matching Joe, except right here. But as often happens when talented people make mistakes, even their mistakes are cool. I like the off-kilter 16th note syncopation. (And if you're not listening really closely, you'll never notice it anyway. But if you are, it's a little treat. Or at least, I think it is.)
- Those rolled chords probably all include the left hand rolling too even though I notated many of them as just the right hand (and probably didn't apply the rolling notation to a few at all). You get the idea. Play the left hand note in time or roll it with the right hand depending on what sounds best to you. (That's what you were going to do anyway, right?)
Piano transcription: Vulfpeck feat. Evangeline "Tokyo Nights" (Live at Red Rocks 2025)
Here's sheet music for Jack Stratton's piano part on "Tokyo Night" taken from Vulfpeck's 2025 Red Rocks performance.
"How Much Do You Love Me" (Vulfpeck Live at Red Rocks 2025) piano transcription
Here's sheet music for Jack Stratton's piano part on "How Much Do You Love Me?" (aka "Tell Me in a Song") taken from Vulfpeck's 2025 Red Rocks performance.