to me the sort of jarring and reality-bending high-pitched electronic sound (don't know how to describe it) in the beginning and middle portion of the song, which is absent in the rest of the soundtrack, defines a point in the story where despite how messed up all the events leading up to this point were, we still manage to make it even more batshit crazy by having caim's unbridled rage turn against his (ex) best friend inuart's jealousy-turned-hatred in a dragon duel to the (near) death- this fight isn't even about the seals anymore, caim just wants revenge for inuart's betrayal and after this point in the story, it all goes downhill when you thought the horrors this world faces could not get any worse
@@hazjones3331 i remember stating in my old comment before this go deleted i was playing this part and my mom went. Mom: boy wtf that shit is creepy.... And i explained to her why he was saying like that and she then understood why lol.
@@hazjones3331 What would be scarier is if instead of just him saying Furiae’s name, Inuart would sound like he’s on the verge of choking. As if he’s trying to strain his vocal chords into working but they just *don’t.*
The string bass line under the electronic melody is the Nibelheim motif, which appears not only in Die Walküre, the Wagner opera cited as a sample source, but also Das Rheingold, which precedes Die Walküre, and Siegfried, which succeeds it.
I really appreciate when Drakengard does variations on the same 'loop' so to speak. So 1:12 - 1:34 is different from 3:22, although it would have been easy just to repeat the same section
@@prostodenishe has 11 upvotes. When i make observations like that and get upvotes, I usually think others have seen it too...but your comment is making me wonder....Perhaps they just like the mention of the other game? These 11 upvoters just like undertale and haven't even checked to see if they feel they're similar?
The sound that shouldn’t exist in this world
to me the sort of jarring and reality-bending high-pitched electronic sound (don't know how to describe it) in the beginning and middle portion of the song, which is absent in the rest of the soundtrack, defines a point in the story where despite how messed up all the events leading up to this point were, we still manage to make it even more batshit crazy by having caim's unbridled rage turn against his (ex) best friend inuart's jealousy-turned-hatred in a dragon duel to the (near) death- this fight isn't even about the seals anymore, caim just wants revenge for inuart's betrayal
and after this point in the story, it all goes downhill when you thought the horrors this world faces could not get any worse
The Theremin? That's an actual instrument and it actually makes this pretty grounded and chill compared to a lot of the other songs imo.
A world without seals, thrown into chaos. Who fights for whom? Is there an answer?
FURIAE
FURIAE
FURIAE
FU
RI
AE
FU
RI
AE
It's even more messed up when you realise he is trying to sing but can't because it was his pact price.
@@hazjones3331 i remember stating in my old comment before this go deleted i was playing this part and my mom went.
Mom: boy wtf that shit is creepy....
And i explained to her why he was saying like that and she then understood why lol.
@@hazjones3331 What would be scarier is if instead of just him saying Furiae’s name, Inuart would sound like he’s on the verge of choking. As if he’s trying to strain his vocal chords into working but they just *don’t.*
@@fellzayel1305i would deadass love to hear that, i need more unique suffering in yoko taros work.
The string bass line under the electronic melody is the Nibelheim motif, which appears not only in Die Walküre, the Wagner opera cited as a sample source, but also Das Rheingold, which precedes Die Walküre, and Siegfried, which succeeds it.
Thanks for the info!
I have been looking for sources of these songs for so long... thank you...
FU-RI-Æ
Day day day day
FU- ri- a -e
This OST always keeps me on my toes, i literally had no expectations when i found this.. glad to see it exceeded them XD
I really appreciate when Drakengard does variations on the same 'loop' so to speak. So 1:12 - 1:34 is different from 3:22, although it would have been easy just to repeat the same section
YES this is one of my absolute favorites. thanks so much for reuploading!
Nader ?
THIS! So much THIS 😱😱😱
Christmas in Drakengard. Great. Just wish we had the tunes from the cinematic and the 'events' also
Really good. Someone could slap some chopped drum breaks over this and have a decent song. But on its own it's also incredible.
FINALLY FOUND IT
Reminds me of the band Liturgy for some reason.
jesus I thought my computer was gonna bluescreen
Compare the beginning part with Undertales Amalgam fight track.
I don't really see anything similar
Really? I didn’t test it, but I think you could even lay both the tracks on top of each other and they would almost harmonize.
@@targor9649 You just picked the wrong song. Amalgam fight it's a very dynamic track
@@targor9649 "Here we are" has a similar begining. It's an Alphys lab theme. Maybe you're talking about this theme?
@@prostodenishe has 11 upvotes. When i make observations like that and get upvotes, I usually think others have seen it too...but your comment is making me wonder....Perhaps they just like the mention of the other game? These 11 upvoters just like undertale and haven't even checked to see if they feel they're similar?