I like choosing music for my games. For space opera-ish games (of the Star Wars or the Grim Dark variety) I typically pick leitmotifs. Lots of sound and fury.
I've been trying to think of what sort of music fits the pre-apocalyptic setting I'm working on.
Leighton Blair |
I'm spoiled for choice. John Blow, Henry Purcell, John Field, Handel, Haydn, Clementi, Johann Christian Bach, William Boyce, Mozart, Beethoven, Mendelssohn... all the way to Gilbert and Sullivan. Restoration to late Victorian; all work, more or less.
But while Creatures of the Prometheus is fitting, but will it strike a chord with my players?
Jacob Huysmans |
Bioshock Infinite may not have been the greatest video game of all time... but it's one of the rare pre-apocalyptic video games. Hidden in the soundtrack are little anachronistic tunes like this ragtime cover of Tainted Love.
It's a neat technique. It's very off-putting. In the background, sometimes, distantly, you can hear music that's wrong. Was Eye of the Tiger a souped-up cover of a jazz standard... or is it the other way around?
I think I'm going to include a lot of covers. Ideally, ones that sound barely plausible as "original" versions covered by later artists. Style isn't super important, but I'd like to avoid purely electronic or highly produced sounds. The music should feel like it could bleed out of salons, parlors, music halls, gin dens, and other seedy or experimental locales.
Examples:
Keep Me In Your Heart (Strings only version)
Shiny Happy People
Shake Sugaree (excellent for a pawn-rich city).
Girls Just Want To Have Fun
Additional Tigers
The Westworld covers are nice but a little too strongly western-themed. Player pianos are distinct instruments.
William Hogarth |
I should rant about Michael Nyman more often. He's to Peter Greenaway what Danny Elfman is to Tim Burton. And if you've never heard of Peter Greenaway, start here.
Anyway, I love his work. It breaks all of the rules listed above. It's not diegetic. It's unnatural, layered, produced. But I think that's why it works for a pre-apocalyptic setting. It'll glue the covers and classical pieces together, providing some much-needed high-tempo nonsense.
Plus, he pairs particularly well with Purcell.
In Conclusion
I hope that this was a useful insight into how I choose music, or that you at least found something strange to listen to. If you think of any tracks that might fit my (admittedly bizarre) criteria, post 'em in the comments.
In the Incongruous Covers topic I would recommend Richard Cheese. He has a lot of covers in the style of the Eye of the Tiger cover that you mentioned. Examples:
ReplyDeleteBeat It (Michael Jackson): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XF7vnx479Gw
Enter Sandman (Metallica): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ScVfwoKIWds
Holy shit incongruous covers is the *best* thing
ReplyDeleteSKERPLES WHY?! WHY DID YOU HAVE TO INDIRECTLY REMIND ME THAT "THE COOK, THE THIEF, HIS WIFE, AND HER LOVER" IS A THING?!
ReplyDeleteAhahaha! You mean it's not a Thanksgiving tradition in your house?
DeleteIncongruous Covers
ReplyDeleteLaibach is the master of the incongruous covers. Here, some examples:
Europe: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-E72v6G9JHY
The Beatles: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OTQcJx7xqAc
Queen: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZZAD7W3M4zc
Johann Sebastian Bach: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuUnXwQpN3A
Even National Anthemns, America: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U3mfNRdy7Os
Russia (my fav): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=erl0Tn7r05I
or Slovenia: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=flV_q_sg6pI
I've been fascinated with "The Falls" ever since I first read about it, and the fact that the music is so awesome makes want all the more to actually see it. I particularly love the Bird List Song, to the point it's the ring tone on my phone and has been for ages.
ReplyDelete