Something went wrong. Try again later

buzz_clik

This user has not updated recently.

7590 4259 914 947
Forum Posts Wiki Points Following Followers

Fly Me to the Tune

 

  
The end of Bayonetta is a lovely thing. No, I'm not talking about the fact that it keeps faking you out (although that's still neat) nor the protracted dance finale (also rates well on the neatometer). The bit I'm referring to is when the end credits roll. After all that bananas violence, having Brenda Lee coo her version of "Fly Me to the Moon" over stylised shots of Bayonetta's pole-twirling gave me a very Tarantino-esque moment.

There's definitely an art to choosing the perfect song to spice up your credits. Like choosing the next song in a mixtape, finding the right tune to capitalise on the ending to your project is a pretty vital thing to get right. You need to find something that embodies the tone of everything that came before, something that acts as the perfect punctuation mark to what you had to say. Also, it gives the audience a reason to hang around and schlep through a wall of text that they really don't have to hang around for. Obviously it's great when a song is specifically written for a game (yay, Portal) but when you find a pre-existing piece of music that slots into your project, that's a different kind of magic.

Mass Effect has one of the most fitting and memorable pieces of credits music I've heard in ages in Faunts' M4, Pt II. A sprawling and spacious song, its blending of bristling menace and ethereal melancholy brilliantly captures what Mass Effect was about. Amazing, considering it wasn't actually written for the game. Finishing Mass Effect and having the final credits wash over me goes down as one of my favourite gaming moments; the darkness of the room was dispelled by the pale glow of the scrolling text, the song was churning along and the feeling of complete satisfaction I had was indescribable. Whoever it was at BioWare responsible for plucking that song from obscurity deserves a pat on the back from everyone who ever finished that game.

Of course, it's not just video games that can have righteous final tune selection. Feeder's " Shatter", which plays over the end credits to Night Watch, is a perfect way to see out an adrenalised fantasy action flick. It also helps that it's a great pop rock song to boot. I was certainly a fan of the Welsh rockers before viewing Night Watch, but had never heard that song before, so its inclusion came as an added bonus to me. " The Hearts Filthy Lesson" by David Bowie was another great choice, as it snaked its way through the distressed crawl at the end of Seven.
 
Game or otherwise, feel free to remind me of other not-made-for-it-but-you'd-swear-it-was tunes that have served as great outros.
17 Comments

17 Comments

Avatar image for buzz_clik
buzz_clik

7590

Forum Posts

4259

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 9

Edited By buzz_clik

 

  
The end of Bayonetta is a lovely thing. No, I'm not talking about the fact that it keeps faking you out (although that's still neat) nor the protracted dance finale (also rates well on the neatometer). The bit I'm referring to is when the end credits roll. After all that bananas violence, having Brenda Lee coo her version of "Fly Me to the Moon" over stylised shots of Bayonetta's pole-twirling gave me a very Tarantino-esque moment.

There's definitely an art to choosing the perfect song to spice up your credits. Like choosing the next song in a mixtape, finding the right tune to capitalise on the ending to your project is a pretty vital thing to get right. You need to find something that embodies the tone of everything that came before, something that acts as the perfect punctuation mark to what you had to say. Also, it gives the audience a reason to hang around and schlep through a wall of text that they really don't have to hang around for. Obviously it's great when a song is specifically written for a game (yay, Portal) but when you find a pre-existing piece of music that slots into your project, that's a different kind of magic.

Mass Effect has one of the most fitting and memorable pieces of credits music I've heard in ages in Faunts' M4, Pt II. A sprawling and spacious song, its blending of bristling menace and ethereal melancholy brilliantly captures what Mass Effect was about. Amazing, considering it wasn't actually written for the game. Finishing Mass Effect and having the final credits wash over me goes down as one of my favourite gaming moments; the darkness of the room was dispelled by the pale glow of the scrolling text, the song was churning along and the feeling of complete satisfaction I had was indescribable. Whoever it was at BioWare responsible for plucking that song from obscurity deserves a pat on the back from everyone who ever finished that game.

Of course, it's not just video games that can have righteous final tune selection. Feeder's " Shatter", which plays over the end credits to Night Watch, is a perfect way to see out an adrenalised fantasy action flick. It also helps that it's a great pop rock song to boot. I was certainly a fan of the Welsh rockers before viewing Night Watch, but had never heard that song before, so its inclusion came as an added bonus to me. " The Hearts Filthy Lesson" by David Bowie was another great choice, as it snaked its way through the distressed crawl at the end of Seven.
 
Game or otherwise, feel free to remind me of other not-made-for-it-but-you'd-swear-it-was tunes that have served as great outros.
Avatar image for daveyo520
Daveyo520

7766

Forum Posts

624

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 12

Edited By Daveyo520

That pun hurt me. Hurt me deep.

Avatar image for buzz_clik
buzz_clik

7590

Forum Posts

4259

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 9

Edited By buzz_clik
@Daveyo520 said:
" That pun hurt me. Hurt me deep. "
Mission accomplished! Now excuse me while I run around the room with my shirt over my face and my arms out all airplane stylee.
Avatar image for toowalrus
toowalrus

13408

Forum Posts

29

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 3

Edited By toowalrus

She is wearing way too much clothing to be a pole dancer, but the soundtrack to Bayonetta was amazing, it was crazy, frantic, and Japanese, everything I was looking for in this game. I need to finish that game someday.

Avatar image for steve_c
Steve_C

1768

Forum Posts

1897

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

Edited By Steve_C

Not sure if i'm right, but as soon as a heard the credits I thought it was a tribute to Evangelion.
 
There are a bunch of different versions that play over the credits through the whole series and the films too.

Avatar image for fluxwavez
FluxWaveZ

19845

Forum Posts

19798

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 6

Edited By FluxWaveZ

Borderlands — There ain't no rest for the wicked...? 
 
I can't really think of any, and the one I mentioned doesn't count because it's an intro...    

Avatar image for atomic_tangerine
Atomic_Tangerine

360

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Atomic_Tangerine
@Steve_C said:
"Not sure if i'm right, but as soon as a heard the credits I thought it was a tribute to Evangelion.  There are a bunch of different versions that play over the credits through the whole series and the films too."

No man.  Just because they use the same song doesn't mean anything.  That song may make you think of some weird anime stuff, but that is you, not the song.  The song is used throughout the game, mostly because it has the word moon in it and the moon does something in that game?  I forget.
Avatar image for buzz_clik
buzz_clik

7590

Forum Posts

4259

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 9

Edited By buzz_clik
@FluxWaveZ: Heh, I went through the exact same thought process. But I do love that song being at the start of that game - it sets the scene and gets you totally jazzed for what's coming up.
Avatar image for sweep
sweep

10887

Forum Posts

3660

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 14

Edited By sweep  Moderator

Off the top of my head I can't really think of any that stick in the mind. Except the Modern Warfare outro, and only because it was Sgt. Griggs rapping. 

Avatar image for drfidget
DrFidget

272

Forum Posts

13141

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 5

Edited By DrFidget

I completely agree with Mass Effect and Bayonetta, so much so that I actually bought the 5-disc soundtrack to Bayonetta. 

Dead or Alive 4 has one of my favorite endings/credits using Amazing by Aerosmith. Guitar Hero 3s credits were pretty clever too.    

Avatar image for marz
Marz

6097

Forum Posts

755

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 5

User Lists: 11

Edited By Marz

I think i remember Neon Genesis Evangelion used the same song for the end credits of each episode.   Kind of like it better too since it was more up tempo.

Avatar image for buzz_clik
buzz_clik

7590

Forum Posts

4259

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 9

Edited By buzz_clik
@DrFidget said:
" Dead or Alive 4 has one of my favorite endings/credits using Amazing by Aerosmith. "
Oh, that's right! I totally forgot about that. Man, I'm about ready for a new DOA game.
Avatar image for little_socrates
Little_Socrates

5847

Forum Posts

1570

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 16

User Lists: 23

Edited By Little_Socrates

I can't remember if BioShock used "Beyond the Sea" for its ending credits, but it certainly was the song that defined the entire experience of the game. 
 
Nothing else comes to mind, unfortunately. Licensed music's really only been so common since the modern age of gaming with the exclusion of a few classical tracks (see "The Tetris Song").

Avatar image for red12b
Red12b

9363

Forum Posts

1084

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 6

Edited By Red12b

You had me till Freddie, then I got lost to Queen songs...Thanks for that.  
Mercury, fucking champion. 

Avatar image for steve_c
Steve_C

1768

Forum Posts

1897

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

Edited By Steve_C
@Atomic_Tangerine said:
" @Steve_C said:
"Not sure if i'm right, but as soon as a heard the credits I thought it was a tribute to Evangelion.  There are a bunch of different versions that play over the credits through the whole series and the films too."
No man.  Just because they use the same song doesn't mean anything.  That song may make you think of some weird anime stuff, but that is you, not the song.  The song is used throughout the game, mostly because it has the word moon in it and the moon does something in that game?  I forget. "
Using a song just because it has the word moon in it is pretty weak reason for it to be chosen as an end theme, but yes, the moon does play a minor role in the game.
 
It's a rare song choice for something like this. I've only heard this song used in media in this and Evangelion. But for this game to come out of Japan, and have the song playing in the credits of all places, for me it confirms it right there. Evangelion is one of the most famous series to come out of Japan and it's pretty influential. It's probably embedded in the psyche of a certain generation of the Japanese people. It seems impossible that no-one at platinum was aware of the song like that.
 
And lastly, the game itself is so full of references and homages, it would be no surprise if they extended that to the credits too, especially when it does conveniently mention the moon to make it somehow more relevant to the game tiself.
Avatar image for jambones
Jambones

1726

Forum Posts

10015

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 2

Edited By Jambones

Dude, I totally read that as " Night Trap," not "Night Watch." 
 
Now I am a little disappointed.

Avatar image for buzz_clik
buzz_clik

7590

Forum Posts

4259

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 9

Edited By buzz_clik
@Jambones: Y'know, despite being tempted by many online auctions to buy a copy, I've never played Night Trap. I'm actually really surprised I've not purchased it yet, considering how saliva-on-chin keen I was to play it way back as a horror-loving kid. I'd see it in the magazines, keep up with the outrage and lament the fact I didn't have a Mega-CD (or even a Mega Drive at that stage).
 
Of course, now I've got both requisite Sega items I'm still eager to check it out. However these days I've got loads more to buy / play and that's obviously diverting my funds / attention away. I know I'll get to it some day, though.