Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Tuesday

The Music Of Final Fantasy Has Always Been Wonderful

"Final"

Like many, one of my favorite elements of the Final Fantasy franchise has always been its music. I'm enamored with the soundtrack to FFVI in particular. That was the first game soundtrack I truly fell in love with, and as such, it's the one I revisit most often.

When I see others talking about FF music, it's often from VI or beyond. It seems the earlier titles are sometimes pushed aside. I'm not sure what inspired it, but I recently listened to music from the original game for the first time in quite a while. I must say, it made for a lovely journey through nostalgia. I was struck by how well a lot of the tracks have held up. Just check out the Chaos Temple's score:

Monday

Transformers: The Movie's "Dare" is a Great Fit For Asura's Wrath

asura's wrath gameplay
This is his happy face.

In a recent edition of "Boss Rage," Youtube gamer Maximilian took on the DLC Evil Ryu and Oni battle from Asura's Wrath. As the fight with Oni drew to a close, he threw Stan Bush and Vince DiCola's "Dare" from the Transformers: The Movie soundtrack over the action. Despite its synth-fueled 1980's cheesiness, the song actually manages to fit the game quite well:

No "start at..." codes are working, so skip to 8:50 for the song.

Tuesday

The Maiden and the Page: A Look at Iron Maiden's Literary Influences

The original plan for this article was to show how a small but notable amount of popular music has been influenced by both classic and contemporary literature. I was digging into corners of my music folder I’d not seen in years, pulling out long-forgotten files and drowning in shame and nostalgia when I reached the Iron Maiden folder.

Shit got real.

I had a healthy list of artists by that stage but the thought of making a playlist of all the Maiden tracks that fit the criteria was too exciting to ignore, so, at the exclusion of all else, "The Musical Page" became "The Maiden and the Page." Up the Irons!

Friday

20th Anniversary of "The Black Album" by Metallica

As of today, Metallica fans (and heavy metal/hard rock fans...hell, just straight up music fans in general) have now enjoyed 20 years of the band's massively successful self-titled fifth album, also affectionately referred to as "The Black Album" given the dark cover art seen to the left. Released on August 12, 1991, it was an instant success both critically and monetarily, with rave reviews in countless publications and a debut as the number one highest selling album in over ten countries. It was no blink-and-you'll-miss-it affair either: The Black Album remained in Billboard's Top 200 (the top 200 albums sold in North America in a given week) for nearly 300 weeks straight, well into the late 90s. Its worldwide sales are currently somewhere around the 22 million mark. Damn!

As you can imagine, The Black Album has gone on to achieve legendary status as a quintessential rock album that pretty much everyone and their mother has heard, largely in part to its five hit singles (Enter Sandman, The Unforgiven, Nothing Else Matters, Wherever I May Roam, and Sad But True) that are played everywhere to this day, Metallica's live concerts included. Some older Metallica fans may have been alienated by its stripped down song arrangements and the daringly soft ballad-style "Nothing Else Matters", but by and large, the album has been an incredible achievement the likes of which most musicians can only dream of. It pushed Metallica into the stratosphere, and knowing their humble beginnings and the hard work and passion they (continue to) put into their career, I must say...those guys really deserved it.

On a personal note, The Black Album is far from my favorite by Metallica. Controversially, I actually prefer the follow up album Load. Yeah, try to wrap your brain around that. Still, I can respect all that it achieved for the band, and there's plenty about it that I'll always love. With some of the most personal lyrics and powerful vocals of his career, this may be the Metallica album where singer/rhythm guitarist James Hetfield shines most. I still love hearing him belt out "I'm your life - AND I NO LONGER CA-AAAARE" in the final verse of Sad But True. He has such a characterful vocal delivery, and here, it's in its peak. Also of note are the catchy solos of Kirk Hammett and a layered mix with incredible depth. Twenty years in, the album still sounds amazing.

There are plenty of metal fans out there that immediately frown at the very mention of Metallica, but even through controversial (for no reason) haircuts, experimentation in style, a lone drummer's anti-downloading campaign, and the drama-filled St. Anger era, I've stuck by. Metallica means a lot to me. They were the first band to really get me interested in music...in both listening and performing. I wouldn't be a musician today without their influence. Through Metallica, I was opened up to a whole new world of expression. To the uninitiated, it might sound silly, but it's been a priceless experience. I love those guys and I'm very happy that they made it through the more awkward years of their career and are still relevant. They're still out there giving it their all. I'm proud of all Metallica has accomplished, and I'm more than pleased to tip my hat to The Black Album, an album important not just to their career, but to millions of people the world over. Well done.

Bill Bailey plays Enter Sandman by Metallica



Oh dear. While rehearsing for Sonisphere, the amazing comedian/musician/actor Bill Bailey offered up quite a powerful rendition of Enter Sandman in this "message to Metallica." It's just so...it's just so beautiful.

Gotta love him!
 

Sunday

Slayer: Metal Storm/Ride the Unicorn

My goofy album cover for World Painted Blood by thrash metal pioneers Slayer (FUCKING SLAAAAYYYYEEEEERRRRRR) has gotten a tiny bit of attention on the webs it seems. I actually saw the thing posted on Facebook. It's kind of trippy, man. I didn't think anyone out there ever found any of this bullshit.

On to the point, one person mentioned that the world needed to see Kerry King riding a unicorn. Fuckin' A right it does. And you know what?

The King always delivers:



SO METAL. Click the image above for a larger version if you so desire!

Wednesday

EXCLUSIVE Premiere - Cover art for Slayer's "World Painted Blood" album!

Well Slayer fans, the wait for their next studio album "World Painted Blood" is narrowing, and here we have the first ever look at the album's cover art:

heavy metal music

I have to say...brooding, dark, mysterious. It's so very, very Slayer.

Update - Still need to pick this album up? Amazon has your back: