Music of Wild Arms

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Albums for the video game Wild Arms contain music from the original title of the Wild Arms series developed by Japanese software company Media.Vision. Two separate albums, one released alongside the 1996 PlayStation game, and the other ten years later, contain the original background music from the game, while a single drama album contains a spoken-word interpretation of events in the game. All music featured on each album was composed by Michiko Naruke and carries a contemporary American Western feel intermixed with electronic instrumentation. [1] As each album was only released commercially in Japan, track names contain original Japanese character names and spelling.

Contents

Wild Arms Original Game Soundtrack

Wild Arms Original Game Soundtrack
Wild ARMs OST.jpg
Soundtrack album by
Released JPN January 22, 1997
JPN October 1, 1999 (re-print)
RecordedHitokuchizaka Studio
(Keio University)
Genre Video game music
Length68:17
Label Antinos Records
SPE Visual Works (re-print)
Producer Michiko Naruke, Kazuhiko Toyama
Michiko Naruke chronology
@MIDI's Drive
(1996)
Wild Arms Original Game Soundtrack
(1997)
@MIDI's Love
(1997)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Soundtrack Central link

The Wild Arms Original Game Soundtrack is a music soundtrack for the video game Wild Arms , and was released one month after the PlayStation title on January 22, 1997. The album was marketed and sold exclusively in Japan, and was issued a re-print two years later in October 1999. [1] While the original release was published under the now-defunct Antinos Records label, the re-issue was sold under Sony Pictures Entertainment Visual Works, later known as Aniplex.

Album information

All tracks were composed by Michiko Naruke, who would be responsible for the majority of the Wild Arms series' soundtracks in the coming years. [2] The music of Wild Arms is highly reminiscent of classic American Westerns and related films, which coincides with the game's setting in a fantasy world made to resemble the American Old West. While the tracks contains a number of synthesized instruments, recurring sounds include mandolins, acoustic and electric guitars, woodwind instruments, trumpets, and whistling alongside a score composed in a classical style. [3] Arrangement for each track was handled by Kazuhiko Toyama. [4]

The soundtrack contains a total of 36 tracks, representing less than half of all the total background music in the game. [3] All tracks are contained on a single disc, with the order and arrangement of the pieces being different than their presentation in actual game-play. Among the songs present are the original Japanese ending theme "Swearing to the Blue Sky" performed by Machiko Watanabe [5] that was not used for the North American or PAL region releases of Wild Arms, and "Clash and a Promise", which features a choral accompaniment by students of Tokyo's Keio University sung in Latin. [6]

Wild Arms Complete Tracks

Wild Arms Complete Tracks
Soundtrack album by
Released JPN April 5, 2006
Genre Video game music
Length119:15
Label King Records
Producer Michiko Naruke, Kazuhiko Toyama, Takeo Miratsu
Michiko Naruke chronology
Wild Arms: The 4th Detonator Original Score
(2005)
Wild Arms Complete Tracks
(2006)
Wild Arms Music the Best -feeling wind-
(2006)

Wild Arms Complete Tracks is a VGM soundtrack for Wild Arms featuring music from the PlayStation title in its original format released in Japan in April 2006. Unlike the previously released Wild Arms Original Game Soundtrack, which only contained a limited number of pieces from the game, Complete Tracks features 79 pieces of background music across two discs, including all selections from the original album. [7] The album was distributed by King Records, a subsidiary of literary and manga company Kodansha Limited. [5]

Album Information

All tracks were composed by Michiko Naruke, and lend themselves to the American West thematic present throughout the game. Like the Wild Arms Original Game Soundtrack, it contains a number of tracks representing a wide variety of synth instruments, with accompanying vocals on select tracks. Though the album houses all the music from its predecessor, it contains an additional 43 tracks of previously unreleased tracks. [7]

An additional production credit was given to Takeo Miratsu, who served as an arranger for certain tracks, while Michiko Naruke and Kazuhiko Toyama retained their roles as arrangers and primary album supervisors. [7] The track "Holy Mother of Darkness" contains addition choral music from Keio University's chorus, originally recorded in 1996 and released with the Wild Arms video game in Japan. [6]

Wild Arms Drama vol. 1

Wild Arms Drama vol. 1
WildArmsDrama.jpg
Soundtrack album by
Released JPN 1998
JPN June 29, 2002 (re-issue)
Genre Drama / Video game music
Length48:18
Label Movic Co., Ltd
Producer Michiko Naruke
Michiko Naruke chronology
@MIDI's Dance
(1998)
Wild Arms Drama vol. 1
(1998)
@MIDI's Battle
(1999)

Wild Arms Drama vol. 1 (later released as simply Wild Arms Drama CD) [8] is a spoken-word drama album containing voice actors performing scenes from the video game Wild Arms . The acting is accompanied by background music from the game's soundtrack composed by Michiko Naruke, who also served as the album's producer. Originally released one year after the Original Game Soundtrack in 1998, [9] Wild Arms Drama was later re-issued in June 2002, both times under the Movic record label. [8]

Album information

Wild Arms Drama serves as an interpretation of various scenes from the original game, which itself featured only written dialogue. [10] As the album was only intended only for Japanese audiences, it is performed entirely in the Japanese language, with sound effects and background music added to increase realism. The album is divided into seven disproportionately sized chapters that take place at certain points throughout the original game, each one following events in the same order as they would appear in normal game-play, with extended and entirely new dialogue added to enhance the story. Background music featured on the album consists of unaltered tracks from the game's soundtrack, and sets the mood and location of each scene.

Originally meant to be the first part in a series of similar albums, Wild Arms Drama vol. 1 remained the only drama CD released for the original Wild Arms for four years until it was re-released in 2002 with the "volume" designation removed. This album later began the trend of issuing only a single drama album for successive games of the Wild Arms series. [11] [12]

Related Research Articles

<i>Wild Arms</i> Japanese media franchise

Wild Arms, also written as Wild ARMs, is a media franchise developed by Media.Vision and owned by Sony Computer Entertainment. The franchise consists of several role-playing video games and related media. Since the launch of the original Wild Arms title in 1996, the series has gone on to encompass several media, including toys, manga, mobile phone applications, and a 22-episode anime.

Michiko Naruke is a Japanese video game music composer, well known for her work in the Wild Arms series.

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<i>Wild Arms</i> (video game) 1996 video game

Wild Arms is a role-playing video game developed by Japanese company Media.Vision. Originally released in Japan in 1996 for the PlayStation, it was later translated and released in North America in 1997 and Europe in 1998 by Sony Computer Entertainment. It features a fantasy setting and motif and 2D computer graphics for normal gameplay, while battle sequences are rendered in 3D.

The Metal Gear video games consist of 17 different albums, totaling over 940 hours of music within the 11 games. There were four different music labels used for the albums in different games. These include Sony Entertainment, Konami Digital Entertainment, Phantom Studios, Sumthing Else Music Works, and King Records (Japan). The most used record labels were Konami Digital Entertainment and King Records. Konami was used for Metal Gear 20th Anniversary: Metal Gear Music Collection, Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots Original Soundtrack, Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker Original Soundtrack, and the Metal Gear 25th Anniversary: Metal Gear Music Collection, Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance. King Records was used for Metal Gear 2: Solid Snake Original Soundtrack, Metal Gear Solid Original Game Soundtrack, Metal Gear/ Solid Snake: Music Compilation of Hideo Kojima / Red Dis, Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty Original Soundtrack, and Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty Soundtrack 2: The Other Side. Several different producers were used for different games. These include Konami, Masahiro Hinami, Noriakio Kamura, Norihiko Hibino, Tojima, Harry Gregson-Williams. Konami producing 6 out of the 11 Metal Gear games. The games used many different genres of music throughout the games. They are as follows: breakbeat, classical, drum and bass, electronic, hip hop, jazz, ambient, acoustic, Latin American, electronic rock, industrial metal, alternative metal, hard rock, power metal, neoclassical, romantic music, lounge, and rock and roll.

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