Think of how much we know about Ferrix after just a few episodes of one season. They bury their dead in ceremonial bricks. They use drum patterns to signal each other when Corpos are near. They have a charitable social club for prominent women. They keep their work gear out in the open because they don’t fear theft. The gong that starts the work day has ritual significance. Their grandest building is a historic hotel leftover from colonial times. This feels like a real place. It’s lived in, it has a culture. So when it’s occupied by the empire, we have a real sense of what is lost, and what the people are fighting for.
Compare with the latest season of the Mandalorian, where Nevarro gets bombed and (presumably) a bunch of its inhabitants are killed. It's a moment of spectacle, but there's no real feeling attached because Nevarro, three seasons in, is still just a backdrop and its people are just extras in costume. It's hard to believe these two places can exist in the same fictional universe.
yeah I love how they treat the droid like a person in andor, it's just another member of this community, the only other one we've really seen like them is the one from solo and that narrative mocks it for trying to fight for it's rights
3PO and D-O also speak and have strong personalities. We were meant to feel bad for D-O as well. It was just too forced for an unfamiliar character. Here, we had enough to get to know the droid.
Gets to you, doesn't it? That's what a reckoning sounds like. You want it to stop, but it just keeps coming. It's when it stops. That's when you really want to start to fret.
That’s my favorite part. Most creators and engineers would have just gone for the pristine studio sound which just always immediately feels disconnected.
It sounds like a funeral march by the Ferrix steelworkers union band, outsmarting the authorities by using the music as a cover for perfectly choreographed civil disobedience. It shows the hidden power of a cohesive community that authoritarianism just doesn't know how to deal with.
I love the way that it communicates their anger and rebellion directly to the imperial troops in front of them. Then switches to a Major chord as they circle in towards each other.
in essence this is Cassian attending his own funeral too. Here he gives his life to the rebellion for real and fully commits to the cause. His old self truly dies here with marva. Also he never gets his stone.
Andor really is the only part of Star Wars that doesn't feel like a soulless toy commercial. It is genuinely one of the greatest works of serialized science fiction ever made. I can't reason with Star Wars fans who dis like it for not having more clones and jedi and cameos.
I can’t either but I also haven’t met them. That sounds like SW Theory talk. lol. I do think we should appreciate that the movies that came before though really made this show possible.
Andor makes the rest of Disney's, er, occupation of Star Wars worth it. There can be another dozen flops for all I care, flops always happen anyways, but for the production crew and cast of Andor, it's a privilege to have made something as phenomenal as this show, and it's a privilege that one way or another an audience could see it firsthand, or learn about it from the accolades of others, and love it in spite of what expectations preceded it. A great work of art is in the moment, not what's to come or what has been.
People who dislike Andor are the same who dislike Dune, and it's sad because it shows how the average audience is conditioned to appreciate cheap and fast action, flashy visuals, and epic fights. Character development, world building, quality writing and storytelling and incredible dialogues are secondary if not tertiary concerns in mainstream media entertainment. You can't reason with those people because to put it bluntly, they just lack the intellectual acuity to enjoy a series or a movie that is slow-paced and takes its time to tell a gripping, mature story. For me Andor is mind-blowingly awesome, on a level that i never expected to see in Star Wars, even before the Disney era. It is a brilliant show by all standards, not just by the ever-lowering Star Wars standards. That show was made for adults, by people who understand that the kids who grew up with Star Wars are now grown ups.
I think it will for this series. Gilroy really knows what he’s doing and cares about the quality more than fan service. Go figure, it leads to an incredible result. As for the rest of the content, it will certainly be a step back in quality but I wouldn’t be surprised if Star Wars creators are taking some hard notes right now. Keep in mind that the majority of Mando season 3 and Ahsoka was finished though before Andor released so this will be a long term change.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis I moderately like Mandalorian S1 but it does not come close to how much I loved Andor. I hope they keep that spark. Mandalorian S2 was a letdown for me. Did not watch the third. My worry stems more from studio execs than the creatives. Either cutting funds because "it is a hit anyway" or messing with it for mass appeal. Just look at what AMC did to Walking Dead.
That’s fair. Mando season 3 isn’t out yet. The execs have proven to be clueless in the past but perhaps more directors will allow themselves to ask for what they want going forward. Ultimately, at least we have this show.
@@willnash7907 I come from the future to tell you Mandalorian Season 3 is also, so far, a let down :( I really can't wait for Andor to come back and fill our hearts with joy... at least one last time before Star Wars goes for good with its last breath.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis its fanservice is something different, its extremely faithful to the universe, and that was something i really enjoyed as to me, the universe is far more fascinating than any character in it
It definitely had a bit of that feeling. Like anyone could be taken out at any moment. Everybody was ready to pull the trigger on someone in this episode.
Ferrix is a family and this music is just so perfect. It starts off as a mourning and then after the pause it turns into love and care and then into rebellion it’s so beautiful
The build up from ep1 to the season finale is truly masterful and one of the best I’ve ever seen. I love it. Andor is the best live action Star Wars material since the original trilogy. Best material along side rogue one Disney has produced by far!
I hope we see that there other instances like this all over the galaxy in season 2. Maybe not just like this, but little micro-insurrections that people/survivors flee from to build the rebellion.
This was my favorite music in the show. All of the music in Andor was absolutely phenomenal, but the funeral march gave me chills when it played with this scene. I was barely breathing, and the tension was so strong by the time everyone finally gathered in the town center. And then Maarva's posthumous speech. And then that Imp kicked over Bee. And the tension snapped, and there was chaos.
Gilroy was a master of timing and Britell’s music complements it well. Since this is where they began in planning the entire show, this music likely was an origin for many of the other pieces we hear throughout the series.
When I saw this scene… I just thought: This is no longer a Star Wars show. This is a story of war. A tale of loss…tears… cruelty… and defiant bravery. Nothing is sugar coated. These people have been through so much, but they all share a deep love for each other that not even a horrific system like the Empire can stamp out 🥹
Ferrix really took the whole “they can’t take us all at once!” Thing really seriously, making a massive band for the funeral 😂 Andor is the best Star Wars since probably the og trilogy. It feels so real, the characters are compelling, the actions of people feel like they matter. It’s not about the big powerful Jedi and warriors, it’s about everyday people and their struggle against the empire. And Luthen’s look during Maarva’s death speech is amazing. He’s realizing what’s happening: the world is standing up. These notes aren’t just a funeral march for Maarva, it’s a funeral march for the Empire. The march that shows the end of the empire’s free rein on the galaxy…
It was all about pacing. We bought into everything the characters did because the creators took the time to let us understand them. We were immersed in the funeral march because we understood Ferrix well enough to care.
I was thinking how cool it would be to see a high school marching band do this but then I realized it probably won’t happen since it’s not a show for kids. A DCI drum corps or the GG would do an incredible job with it though!
@@starwarsmusicanalysis While it may not have initially started out as that in-universe, this song has a very explicit anti-fascist context. First of all, the imperials (=fascists) only allowed the people of Ferrix a funeral with 40 people. They came out playing this song, with a band and crowd of way more than 40 people, instantly turning the funeral, and by association this song, into an anti-fascist demonstration. Also, if we take an out of universe stance. This song was played on an explicitly anti-fascist show, at a pivotal moment that started a rebellion against a fascist recime. How can this song be anything less than anti-fascist? So yeah, this song being played by a military band would be weird (to put mildly).
Cassian Andor is the main character of his show, inspired by a spinoff movie, based on a single line in the opening crawl of A New Hope. Soooo... It's a spinoff show about a side character in a spinoff movie. And I can't believe I'm teary-eyed about his character. This director & his little army of writers are dang good at their jobs.
They absolutely are. That’s one of the great things about having a franchise develop for 40 years. The number of places that stories can find themselves is astounding.
Ferrix gives me the vibe of a yorkshire coal mining town. They have an incredibly strong community and proud traditions but are downtrodden by the government. They even have the silver band too.
If you’d approached me in 2013 and told me that the best piece of content that Disney would churn out was gonna be an off-key marching band for an old lady’s funeral, I would have assumed that that meant Disney mishandled the property. And like, yeah, Disney has done a pretty shit job. But Andor was nothing short of a masterpiece.
Tbh I think Andor was good DESPITE Disney. It had next to no advertisement before it started getting popular, was a backburner project while Boba Fett and Kenobi were the big expected moneymakers, which means Disney wasn't doing much of imposing strict heavy deadlines or micromanagement. So the art was allowed room to just breathe. Just my 2 cents at least. A guess from an outsider's perspective.
I think you’re right on. I also think the other shows were rushed and sloppy because of being slowed up from quarantines. Apparently Gilroy was adamant that they do things his way or he wouldn’t do it though.
How does this simple funeral March mean so much more to me than any other Star Wars music??? Duel of the fates, palpatine’s theme, the imperial March, even the force theme. This music is so indicative of what Star Wars’ identity should be.
It’s a completely different use of music than any of those other examples. It’s a direct part of the story and what we refer to as diegetic music. So, you experience it differently and relate to it in a more interactive way. Everything about Andor is about pacing as well. This works because of how well everything before it worked as well.
In some ways, yeah. But I don’t think Star Wars could survive just off of content like this. Andor couldn’t accomplish what it has without the content that came before it to open up these story lines.
It’s so fascinating. Simple marching band instruments cause more impact than the actual weapons the empire uses. It feels like they’re an army approaching, as well.
Apparently flute players make good human shields. But in seriousness, I’ve always been curious at the order of instruments for parades. There’s no set order and anywhere you go, you’ll see it change.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis haha I see how it could be taken that way but by "forward" I meant like "prominent in the arrangement" like it's not advancing drums or the modern Nolan/Mass Effect low BWOOAMP but flutes twirling high and and bright.
This show is excellent and the music is just as impactful as the original trilogy. I hope people look back on this series as a diamond in the rough and it gets the appreciation it deserves.
I love this song so much, it's a mournful one, fit for a funeral, but the defiance is evident in it as well. the empire will fall when the citizens of Ferrix and elsewhere start to play songs like these, when they start to unite under the banner of the people, of the workers, of the republic, the separatists, and may the force help them when those banners start to merge into one
In the book “Heir to the Jedi” there’s a section about musicians being imprisoned if they performed certain music or songs. I could see this being part of the reason why.
i was blown away at the choice to have this music play in real-time with the scenes up to the pop-off. That made it so visceral, so impactful. You were hearing everything the citizens were hearing, and in the same definition as the shot typically. Wonderful scene; just delightful to watch
this is not just a funeral march, no this piece of music gave them the power to fight. They made this piece to be a war song as much as a funeral song imo.
Maybe. It feels very traditional. That’s why Bix knew and could him the melody. Ferrix didn’t have a need for it before now. And the choreographed March/parade feels too scripted to be something they just came up with. I think this is something they do routinely. The difference was the intent and inner emotions that they had while doing it this time. They weren’t doing this with mourning; they were doing it with intent.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis Late finding this, but in my mind, the scene of Bix humming in that cell is meant to show the music is powerful enough to start her healing. It is literally lifting her up. She hears her cultural music, and it is the fact that it is the funeral march I think is important. Listen to what Marva said in her speech about the first time she was at a funeral. She wanted to be "lifted". The chant of "Stone and Sky". This is a people who celebrate who they are by celebrating those who have died by saying, "This person is special. They get to be remembered in the brick, the very thing that makes us who we are". The Empire tried to destroy Bix's mind, but her peoples' music cured her.
I think that’s definitely true but I still believe it’s coming from a sense of memory as well. This is similar to what occurs for Alzheimer’s patients. If they hear something from their childhood, it temporarily can restore portions of their brain. But they have to have the music in their memory first.
The raw emotion of this music, combined with the film sequence shows how much the show writers cared about the whole show. This scene turns into the bloodbath that follows gets to me all the time.
The music is great but what gets me choked up is the chant of “stone and sky”. It feels genuine and traditional and a chant that unites the whole community. Just amazing stuff
I think there was something in there that she inherently recognized and it helped begin to remember who she was. Maybe it’s a melody that is a cornerstone of their culture.
All this people critizising this show bcs it has no lightsabers are children, they do not understand that we dont need jedi's, we need adult shows like this one
You can hear/experience funeral dirges much like this in the streets of New Orleans around Carnival & Day of the Dead. There's a collective of musicians & artists in Krewe of Eres who write & play compositions much like this while parading thru the streets of the upper 9th ward down to the Industrial Canal/riverbank of the Mississippi river in the dark of night. Burning torches, dancing, grieving - a powerful, anarchist public ritual. You can't find a map, it is spontaneous & radical. When I saw this episode, I just howled - ERES! The spirit is there, and real
I know those bands well. I absolutely love NOLA and visit MS often. It’s a little different here. I compare more to funeral marches of Hispanic Catholic Churches which are typically just a bit more dirge-like but it’s not that much different. Thank you for watching!
I love the buildup to the final confrontation with the goons of the empire. I love the speech that followed after where Maarva beckons them to fight a losing battle, and THEY DO ! Masterful and poetic, this equals to or is even better the Bad Batch !
Between the story, the actio and the music, this episode was absolute perfection. Without a doubt the best thing thatvwas ever done in the Star Wars Universe!!!
The original thing of this show compared to other Star Wars product is how much effort is put into the common people. We aren't watching the elite military, or the senators, or the super powerful jedi 90% of the time. Just the common people living, and working. In this show we got not one, but two storyline of the commoner. And also a bit of taste of how the Empire treat it's own loyal citizens as well. Lying to higher ups to please them, changing records, and reports, and even a bit of fear. Sure a lot of other shows have this side in it, but it is usually in minutes before we skip to the big stuff.
I'm Japanese and I love this drama so much that I've already watched it three times. This drama is perfect. It deepens the world of STAR WARS. Plus, the music is great. Music entertains you. I'm really looking forward to season 2. I hope to see some great footage in season 2. And I'm also looking forward to hearing some great music. Thank you so much for making such wonderful music into a video. I'm rooting for you.❤
Thank you so much! I’m really excited for season 2 as well. It has such a high bar that season 1 set for it. But I’m super excited to see how they tie everything together. Should be epic!
I just had an email come across my desk and the colleague has, "Past President" in their email signature and I about started crying. And then I came here and did start crying. Because holy hell, the sheer volume of this scene with the truly excellent score just...intense. Intense without blasters or lightsabers is something truly special too, and so needed sometimes. Great video, living for the fortissimo at the end, just unreal how well the power of the people message resonates with the music direction. Stunning.
The writers did a perfect job a pacing this show and especially this episode. Nothing is rushed which lets us live in the details of the moment. Thank you for watching!
This is absolutely masterpieceful This theme and "Your father would be proud" are the most powerful and emotional pieces of whole SW music ever created.
Just watched the ending... again and this song makes the ending 500% better. I also love the felling of hearing the instrumets in disunity combining into one tune
I think the most important thing this show does is demonstrate that Star Wars can expand beyond its prototypical stories and character types and still be successful.
【Shades Finnish Pirates】So epic, i was like my wow my ears opened when this started playing and after knowing the fate of Andor in Rogue One it makes this all more dramatic song
Truly, master piece grabs everyone like Darth Vader grabs people with force choke and thank you for answering / uploading & happy christmas time & May the force bit with you & blessings@@starwarsmusicanalysis
It’s such a massive part of the last episode which is awesome on its own but everything fed off of the drama of the scene as a whole and the pacing was incredible. They really showed us how well Star Wars shows can be done.
I think score part 3 just dropped [edit added: Yeah, it did - and just looking at the track titles I'm not sure I'm emotionally ready to listen to all of these]
Ferrix is a backwater planet that exists almost entirely beneath the Empire’s notice, but it’s like Nemik said. The frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere.
Pro tip, have the notes play when they hit the left side on the screen, not as soon as they come in on the right, it's pretty useless to see the notes you've already played instead of the ones you are about to.
Thank you! I love putting the notation overtop the video for that reason. Easy enough for people to take from there and do with as they please. Thank you for watching!
In the prison arc, Keno mentions how there are more of them than guards, and they know it. At 4:13 we see this on a grander scale. Its not just the band. Its EVERYONE. The streets and roofs are lined with people. And the empire knows they cant stop all of them.
Just keep coming back to watch it over and over again. Andor gritty atmospheric great plot development , superb scripts great character development. Totally authentic. This is how Star Wars should have been from the get go. All produced and filmed in the UK
Beautiful track. Filled with musical symbolism for anyone who wants to look for it. The show was marvelous, this music track was perfect for the climax of that episode, and you've nailed it with the adaptation. You've earned a new follower.
Thank you! The entire soundtrack has incredible symbolism but this moment was just so pure and acoustically raw. I sort of felt bad making an electronic version. So, I’m relieved that you really liked it! Thank you for watching!
Marva, after losing her partner and her adopted son to them- after seeing her home turned upside down by them- after old age and illness took her- She fought and made a difference. So many people have given everything they have for justice, for freedom, for their communities only to leave it all behind in small ways and large, justifying new comforts as earned from past sacrifice. We see this moral rot EVERYWHERE in political and corporate life. Maybe even Marva would have done so in an earlier time; maybe she even did. But it doesn't really matter, does it? Empire is unnatural; it has to work constantly to sustain itself. At any time, anyone can make a choice to resist. And that resistance can become a conduit for all the will that people share.
I never caught on just listening until looking at the notation here how every four bar phrase in the main section is cut one beat short of what you'd typically expect. Honestly, kind of a brilliant minor detail to have in a funeral march.
Top d'avoir joint les partitions des différents instruments en temps réel calé sur la vidéo, du travail d'orfèvre ! Et un "cadeau Bonus" pour les musicos qui aimeraient s'y essayer❣ du 2 en 1 cousu main, bravo et grand merci 😉 Sans nul doute, ni mauvais jeu de mot, le "point d'orgue" de cette série très attrayante, l'émotion et le lyrisme intimement et habilement entrelacés pour un impact puissant et toutes les bonnes raisons déjà relevées dans les autres commentaires. La musique de film est un art majeur qui participe pleinement à son rayonnement et à sa communion avec son public, elle est aussi là, la magie du cinéma! ❤🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶😊
Nothing says “we mean business” like some good old compound meter. Haha. Andor was crazy good. No franchise can keep up that level of quality. But it will certainly continue to be a compass for where other creators imagine they can take a galaxy far far away.
2nd commentary : 1st listening in the episode : OMG, so freaking good! 2nd listening alone : F*ck...it's so damn good. My lips are shaking, can't figure why 3rd listening : why am i crying?
Something told me that when I watched this episode, that it would be my new favorite moment in all of Star wars. Even though at the time I had start to lose faith in it. It didn't take me long, but then survivor got me back into it and I revisited this episode
My absolute favorite part of the whole series. Just the looks of grief, determination and contempt for the Empire on their faces. This was their Do You Hear the People Sing: Do you hear the people sing? Singing a song of angry men? It is the music of a people Who will not be slaves again When the beating of your heart Echoes the beating of the drums There is a life about to start When tomorrow comes Will you join in our crusade? Who will be strong and stand with me? Beyond the barricade Is there a world you long to see? Then join in the fight That will give you the right to be free
It was a great homage to Les Mis while also being incredibly unique to itself. And with the way they brought all of the characters to one place, it really felt like a true and natural climatic finale.
I don’t think anyone is immune to emotion. And I could imagine this really touching someone like yourself who fully recognizes the burden of honoring those who have sacrificed. Andor was an incredible series as well and Gilroy and Britell did an incredible job of building us to this moment for 12 episodes.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis indeed, andor is such a magnificent Star wars series. The slow building, the mature Tone, pure perfection and even Universal. And i cant belive they composed a funeral march for a 45 Minute episode and Made These 45 minutes so intense
Not only that but that’s the first music written for the series so that everything could be paced and coordinated to the music instead of the music having to fit the scene.
@@priyapepsi I don't think you know both sides of that story. You should really read both stories before you criticize, because if the first couple of episodes of Andor made anything clear reality is complicated. Don't be mad at veterans, be mad at the generals or the politicians
It knew how to take its time in telling a story. Too many of these movies and shows are trying to rush and cram too many things into their screen time.
2:52 just gets me. Its just so much, the weight of seeing marva's gravestone really just hits this scene home for me. And it takes a whole new feel. And i definitely cried for a character we only knew for a few episodes. This is what all of this is for, this the culture of ferrix. This is their community, their values and history. And with a ll the uncertainty leading up to that scene, it really just nails the head on the imperial coffin. That no matter how much you try an opress, no mater how much you try to repress an entire culture, it will thrive. It will rebel, and the community will be stronger deslite them.
I find it interesting how the band has very similar uniforma to modern german student unions, whose leaders perform a ceremonial function at their members' funerals
This scene for me was obviously inspired by the funeral of General Lamarque in Les Misérables (I may be wrong, though ^^). If I'm right, what a cool inspiration for a Star Wars series.
When I heard it on the show, it reminded me so much of the funeral march we use in Finland for statesmen and military - March of Narva (Narvan marssi). That one I believe originates from Ireland and then made its way to Swedish soldiers few hundred years ago. The tempo was ever so slightly faster, but then later on was slowed down and given lyrics. This one is a wonderful piece too.
That makes sense then since that’s where it was inspired by. (Ireland) I think it’s a concept that nearly all Western cultures are able to identify in some way with which is why it worked so well.
Think of how much we know about Ferrix after just a few episodes of one season. They bury their dead in ceremonial bricks. They use drum patterns to signal each other when Corpos are near. They have a charitable social club for prominent women. They keep their work gear out in the open because they don’t fear theft. The gong that starts the work day has ritual significance. Their grandest building is a historic hotel leftover from colonial times. This feels like a real place. It’s lived in, it has a culture. So when it’s occupied by the empire, we have a real sense of what is lost, and what the people are fighting for.
Very true. The world building of this show was pristine.
Compare with the latest season of the Mandalorian, where Nevarro gets bombed and (presumably) a bunch of its inhabitants are killed. It's a moment of spectacle, but there's no real feeling attached because Nevarro, three seasons in, is still just a backdrop and its people are just extras in costume. It's hard to believe these two places can exist in the same fictional universe.
Excellently put.
Could very easily be my hometown, save for the funerary bricks.
i care more about ferrix after one season of television than i do about tatooine, despite decades of media taking place there
1st episode: great a lame cheeky droid they’re going to try to make me like
Last episode: FOR GOD’S SAKE SOMEONE COMFORT AND HOLD THE ROBOT!!!
Haha. I thought the same thing. I’m glad B didn’t travel with Cassian at all though because then it would have been too much.
The droid just wants Maarva
yeah I love how they treat the droid like a person in andor, it's just another member of this community, the only other one we've really seen like them is the one from solo and that narrative mocks it for trying to fight for it's rights
3PO and D-O also speak and have strong personalities. We were meant to feel bad for D-O as well. It was just too forced for an unfamiliar character. Here, we had enough to get to know the droid.
Yeah, it was when the Prefect guy kicked Bee that powder keg exploded and the riot really kicked off.
Star Wars always talked to our inner child. Then Andor has this bold idea of talking to the adult, and it succeeded.
The child has grown up and still has a Star Wars show to watch when their kids go to bed.
Gets to you, doesn't it? That's what a reckoning sounds like. You want it to stop, but it just keeps coming. It's when it stops. That's when you really want to start to fret.
I didn’t want it to stop. Haha
The essence of Maarva 🥰
It’s exactly what a reckoning sounds like
Yo! I don't see enough people drawing the parallel between Maarva's reckoning speech, and the reckoning that is her funeral. Nice shout!
“Why? What happens then?”
@@TheNorthie*leans back in chair like the badass she is*
It feels so much like a funeral march that is played by a community marching band. Nothing to fancy but very impactful
That’s my favorite part. Most creators and engineers would have just gone for the pristine studio sound which just always immediately feels disconnected.
It sounds like a funeral march by the Ferrix steelworkers union band, outsmarting the authorities by using the music as a cover for perfectly choreographed civil disobedience. It shows the hidden power of a cohesive community that authoritarianism just doesn't know how to deal with.
It makes you wonder how long they had been planning this parade march mutiny.
It turns into a battle march after that pause midway through.
I love the way that it communicates their anger and rebellion directly to the imperial troops in front of them. Then switches to a Major chord as they circle in towards each other.
in essence this is Cassian attending his own funeral too. Here he gives his life to the rebellion for real and fully commits to the cause. His old self truly dies here with marva. Also he never gets his stone.
That’s an incredible take. I never thought of it that way.
man i hope andor s2 shows that Brasso, Bix, Wilmon Paak are alive and will be there to mourn cassians passing
Andor really is the only part of Star Wars that doesn't feel like a soulless toy commercial. It is genuinely one of the greatest works of serialized science fiction ever made. I can't reason with Star Wars fans who dis like it for not having more clones and jedi and cameos.
I can’t either but I also haven’t met them. That sounds like SW Theory talk. lol.
I do think we should appreciate that the movies that came before though really made this show possible.
Opfer
Andor makes the rest of Disney's, er, occupation of Star Wars worth it. There can be another dozen flops for all I care, flops always happen anyways, but for the production crew and cast of Andor, it's a privilege to have made something as phenomenal as this show, and it's a privilege that one way or another an audience could see it firsthand, or learn about it from the accolades of others, and love it in spite of what expectations preceded it. A great work of art is in the moment, not what's to come or what has been.
People who dislike Andor are the same who dislike Dune, and it's sad because it shows how the average audience is conditioned to appreciate cheap and fast action, flashy visuals, and epic fights. Character development, world building, quality writing and storytelling and incredible dialogues are secondary if not tertiary concerns in mainstream media entertainment.
You can't reason with those people because to put it bluntly, they just lack the intellectual acuity to enjoy a series or a movie that is slow-paced and takes its time to tell a gripping, mature story. For me Andor is mind-blowingly awesome, on a level that i never expected to see in Star Wars, even before the Disney era. It is a brilliant show by all standards, not just by the ever-lowering Star Wars standards.
That show was made for adults, by people who understand that the kids who grew up with Star Wars are now grown ups.
@@Mecceldorf Besides the new trilogy, all Disney series + Rogue One has been at least watchable.
This series had no right being this good
I don't expect the quality to last but gosh I hope it does by some miracle.
I think it will for this series. Gilroy really knows what he’s doing and cares about the quality more than fan service. Go figure, it leads to an incredible result.
As for the rest of the content, it will certainly be a step back in quality but I wouldn’t be surprised if Star Wars creators are taking some hard notes right now.
Keep in mind that the majority of Mando season 3 and Ahsoka was finished though before Andor released so this will be a long term change.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis
I moderately like Mandalorian S1 but it does not come close to how much I loved Andor. I hope they keep that spark.
Mandalorian S2 was a letdown for me. Did not watch the third.
My worry stems more from studio execs than the creatives. Either cutting funds because "it is a hit anyway" or messing with it for mass appeal. Just look at what AMC did to Walking Dead.
That’s fair. Mando season 3 isn’t out yet. The execs have proven to be clueless in the past but perhaps more directors will allow themselves to ask for what they want going forward. Ultimately, at least we have this show.
@@willnash7907 I come from the future to tell you Mandalorian Season 3 is also, so far, a let down :(
I really can't wait for Andor to come back and fill our hearts with joy... at least one last time before Star Wars goes for good with its last breath.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis its fanservice is something different, its extremely faithful to the universe, and that was something i really enjoyed as to me, the universe is far more fascinating than any character in it
With this episode of Andor, Star Wars universe somehow reaches to the level of Godfather type cinematography.
It definitely had a bit of that feeling. Like anyone could be taken out at any moment. Everybody was ready to pull the trigger on someone in this episode.
The scene had the feel of the Troubles era of Northern Ireland.
Ferrix is a family and this music is just so perfect. It starts off as a mourning and then after the pause it turns into love and care and then into rebellion it’s so beautiful
Love and rememberance*
I can definitely hear and see that sense of family you describe.
The build up from ep1 to the season finale is truly masterful and one of the best I’ve ever seen. I love it. Andor is the best live action Star Wars material since the original trilogy. Best material along side rogue one Disney has produced by far!
Yeah. Gilroy’s entire approach is about direction and Britell aided that wonderfully.
Best thing since Empire!
Rogue One isn't the best at all.
It certainly has to be up there in the Disney era of content but what would you feel is the top choice?
Gonna be real. Andor blows the original trilogy out of the water. It resets the bar for what Star Wars can and should be.
A Rebellion Is Born. This Musical Score Is A Masterpiece.
Somber yet inspiring at the same time.
It was a bold move to not do something more cinematic. But that rejection of the norm is what made it so special and powerful.
But they already got so much money in Solo.
Well said.
a rebellion is born.. in the funeral of a republic.
I hope we see that there other instances like this all over the galaxy in season 2. Maybe not just like this, but little micro-insurrections that people/survivors flee from to build the rebellion.
This was my favorite music in the show. All of the music in Andor was absolutely phenomenal, but the funeral march gave me chills when it played with this scene. I was barely breathing, and the tension was so strong by the time everyone finally gathered in the town center. And then Maarva's posthumous speech. And then that Imp kicked over Bee. And the tension snapped, and there was chaos.
Gilroy was a master of timing and Britell’s music complements it well. Since this is where they began in planning the entire show, this music likely was an origin for many of the other pieces we hear throughout the series.
When I saw this scene… I just thought: This is no longer a Star Wars show. This is a story of war. A tale of loss…tears… cruelty… and defiant bravery. Nothing is sugar coated. These people have been through so much, but they all share a deep love for each other that not even a horrific system like the Empire can stamp out 🥹
Ferrix really took the whole “they can’t take us all at once!” Thing really seriously, making a massive band for the funeral 😂
Andor is the best Star Wars since probably the og trilogy. It feels so real, the characters are compelling, the actions of people feel like they matter. It’s not about the big powerful Jedi and warriors, it’s about everyday people and their struggle against the empire. And Luthen’s look during Maarva’s death speech is amazing. He’s realizing what’s happening: the world is standing up. These notes aren’t just a funeral march for Maarva, it’s a funeral march for the Empire. The march that shows the end of the empire’s free rein on the galaxy…
It was all about pacing. We bought into everything the characters did because the creators took the time to let us understand them. We were immersed in the funeral march because we understood Ferrix well enough to care.
I'm really looking forward to the day that this piece will be played live, by an actual marching band. Perhaps even the Grenadier Guards!
I was thinking how cool it would be to see a high school marching band do this but then I realized it probably won’t happen since it’s not a show for kids.
A DCI drum corps or the GG would do an incredible job with it though!
A tool of fascism playing an anti-fascist piece of music? What do you think Maarva means when she says "fight the empire"?
I don’t think the piece was intended to be anti-fascist. It’s likely a traditional Ferrix piece played at all funerals, regardless of allegiance.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis While it may not have initially started out as that in-universe, this song has a very explicit anti-fascist context.
First of all, the imperials (=fascists) only allowed the people of Ferrix a funeral with 40 people. They came out playing this song, with a band and crowd of way more than 40 people, instantly turning the funeral, and by association this song, into an anti-fascist demonstration.
Also, if we take an out of universe stance. This song was played on an explicitly anti-fascist show, at a pivotal moment that started a rebellion against a fascist recime. How can this song be anything less than anti-fascist?
So yeah, this song being played by a military band would be weird (to put mildly).
@@punkandprovocation if all militaries are tools of fascism, who defeated the Nazis in WW2?
Cassian Andor is the main character of his show, inspired by a spinoff movie, based on a single line in the opening crawl of A New Hope.
Soooo... It's a spinoff show about a side character in a spinoff movie. And I can't believe I'm teary-eyed about his character. This director & his little army of writers are dang good at their jobs.
They absolutely are. That’s one of the great things about having a franchise develop for 40 years. The number of places that stories can find themselves is astounding.
Ferrix gives me the vibe of a yorkshire coal mining town. They have an incredibly strong community and proud traditions but are downtrodden by the government. They even have the silver band too.
Apparently that was a large part of the inspiration for this scene and the setting.
The emperor is Margaret Thatcher?😂
If you’d approached me in 2013 and told me that the best piece of content that Disney would churn out was gonna be an off-key marching band for an old lady’s funeral, I would have assumed that that meant Disney mishandled the property. And like, yeah, Disney has done a pretty shit job. But Andor was nothing short of a masterpiece.
It really was. It was the perfect marriage of music and story telling like Star Wars was always meant to be.
Tbh I think Andor was good DESPITE Disney. It had next to no advertisement before it started getting popular, was a backburner project while Boba Fett and Kenobi were the big expected moneymakers, which means Disney wasn't doing much of imposing strict heavy deadlines or micromanagement. So the art was allowed room to just breathe.
Just my 2 cents at least. A guess from an outsider's perspective.
I think you’re right on. I also think the other shows were rushed and sloppy because of being slowed up from quarantines.
Apparently Gilroy was adamant that they do things his way or he wouldn’t do it though.
@SwashHustler "how did Disney allow this to be made in their name?!"
"You think they're listening? Nobody's listening!"
NOBODY’S LISTENING!
How does this simple funeral March mean so much more to me than any other Star Wars music??? Duel of the fates, palpatine’s theme, the imperial March, even the force theme. This music is so indicative of what Star Wars’ identity should be.
It’s a completely different use of music than any of those other examples. It’s a direct part of the story and what we refer to as diegetic music. So, you experience it differently and relate to it in a more interactive way. Everything about Andor is about pacing as well. This works because of how well everything before it worked as well.
The show we never wanted, but always needed. Beautiful
Yep. And now every other show will be held up to its standard for better and for worse.
Andor is arguably the best Star Wars has ever been
In some ways, yeah. But I don’t think Star Wars could survive just off of content like this. Andor couldn’t accomplish what it has without the content that came before it to open up these story lines.
No arguement. It is
By far, not even close...
It's also I'd say the single greatest thing SW has ever done...
It's the best product ever made in any media with star wars in the name, easily.
4:04 When the tempo increases, and they begin the final quick-march forward, I get chills, every time!
That’s when things get serious. Such a great track.
It was inspired by Ennio Morricone's tema di Ali
In the battle of algeirs movie
@@Wassim.H Wow, thanks! I did not know that! Went and checked it out, and, yeah, I hear it!
The moment a rebellion truly began
It’s so fascinating. Simple marching band instruments cause more impact than the actual weapons the empire uses. It feels like they’re an army approaching, as well.
I just finished Andor and was blown away. The funeral march was haunting.
It’s so well paced. That’s what I keep coming back to. It takes a long time to develop, but you get so much from the scene because of that.
It was so unexpected but some-how perfect that when the crowd starts advancing menacingly, it's the flutes that are so far forward.
Apparently flute players make good human shields.
But in seriousness, I’ve always been curious at the order of instruments for parades. There’s no set order and anywhere you go, you’ll see it change.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis haha I see how it could be taken that way but by "forward" I meant like "prominent in the arrangement" like it's not advancing drums or the modern Nolan/Mass Effect low BWOOAMP but flutes twirling high and and bright.
this scene is intense AF
Yeah. Just waiting for something to snap until it does.
This show is excellent and the music is just as impactful as the original trilogy. I hope people look back on this series as a diamond in the rough and it gets the appreciation it deserves.
I think it’s already gotten huge appreciation. Most everyone seems to agree that this was incredible storytelling and prime Star Wars.
I love this song so much, it's a mournful one, fit for a funeral, but the defiance is evident in it as well. the empire will fall when the citizens of Ferrix and elsewhere start to play songs like these, when they start to unite under the banner of the people, of the workers, of the republic, the separatists, and may the force help them when those banners start to merge into one
In the book “Heir to the Jedi” there’s a section about musicians being imprisoned if they performed certain music or songs. I could see this being part of the reason why.
i was blown away at the choice to have this music play in real-time with the scenes up to the pop-off. That made it so visceral, so impactful. You were hearing everything the citizens were hearing, and in the same definition as the shot typically. Wonderful scene; just delightful to watch
This can’t be said enough of this scene . It was incredibly real to watch, starting with the warming up of the performers.
This song is so powerful, the fact it is being play d by characters on screen makes it very personal for the people.
I agree. I love how real they made this feel.
such a powerful piece of music. It starts of so mournful but then becomes so defiant and determined.
It was so well thought out and choreographed as well. Then entire scene takes up a lot of the episode, which just adds to how impressive it is.
this is not just a funeral march, no this piece of music gave them the power to fight. They made this piece to be a war song as much as a funeral song imo.
Maybe. It feels very traditional. That’s why Bix knew and could him the melody. Ferrix didn’t have a need for it before now.
And the choreographed March/parade feels too scripted to be something they just came up with. I think this is something they do routinely.
The difference was the intent and inner emotions that they had while doing it this time. They weren’t doing this with mourning; they were doing it with intent.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis Late finding this, but in my mind, the scene of Bix humming in that cell is meant to show the music is powerful enough to start her healing. It is literally lifting her up. She hears her cultural music, and it is the fact that it is the funeral march I think is important. Listen to what Marva said in her speech about the first time she was at a funeral. She wanted to be "lifted". The chant of "Stone and Sky". This is a people who celebrate who they are by celebrating those who have died by saying, "This person is special. They get to be remembered in the brick, the very thing that makes us who we are". The Empire tried to destroy Bix's mind, but her peoples' music cured her.
I think that’s definitely true but I still believe it’s coming from a sense of memory as well. This is similar to what occurs for Alzheimer’s patients. If they hear something from their childhood, it temporarily can restore portions of their brain. But they have to have the music in their memory first.
@Star Wars Music Analysis I agree entirely. Music has a way of reaching memory for everyone. It doesn't surprise me that it helps Alzheimers patients.
The raw emotion of this music, combined with the film sequence shows how much the show writers cared about the whole show. This scene turns into the bloodbath that follows gets to me all the time.
Raw is the perfect word. It feels so natural and real to us. I’m so thankful that they created this show.
In a series with so many strong musical pieces, this remains my favourite - it's so utterly affecting, so utterly powerful and so utterly awry.
I think having it be so immersed in the story goes a long way as well. This is completely different from any other music in the entire series.
The music is great but what gets me choked up is the chant of “stone and sky”. It feels genuine and traditional and a chant that unites the whole community. Just amazing stuff
I think it was the combination. Everything about that scene was so genuine in feeling.
Hearing the children screams hurt Bix. Hearing the funeral march healed her 😭
I think there was something in there that she inherently recognized and it helped begin to remember who she was. Maybe it’s a melody that is a cornerstone of their culture.
All this people critizising this show bcs it has no lightsabers are children, they do not understand that we dont need jedi's, we need adult shows like this one
Are people really still upset about that? It was a great show. The universe has to feel larger than just Jedi to feel believable.
I could see the Danish National symphony doing this and absolutely killing it like they do with everything else.
That would be incredible. There definitely should be an orchestral suite made for Andor.
You can hear/experience funeral dirges much like this in the streets of New Orleans around Carnival & Day of the Dead. There's a collective of musicians & artists in Krewe of Eres who write & play compositions much like this while parading thru the streets of the upper 9th ward down to the Industrial Canal/riverbank of the Mississippi river in the dark of night. Burning torches, dancing, grieving - a powerful, anarchist public ritual. You can't find a map, it is spontaneous & radical. When I saw this episode, I just howled - ERES! The spirit is there, and real
I know those bands well. I absolutely love NOLA and visit MS often. It’s a little different here. I compare more to funeral marches of Hispanic Catholic Churches which are typically just a bit more dirge-like but it’s not that much different.
Thank you for watching!
I love the buildup to the final confrontation with the goons of the empire. I love the speech that followed after where Maarva beckons them to fight a losing battle, and THEY DO !
Masterful and poetic, this equals to or is even better the Bad Batch !
It’s hard to compare to the animated series but the pacing in this entire show was just so well paced.
Between the story, the actio and the music, this episode was absolute perfection. Without a doubt the best thing thatvwas ever done in the Star Wars Universe!!!
It all comes back to pacing. For this episode to work, the entire series had to be paced correctly.
RIP James Earl Jones 😞 "Goodbye old friend and may the Force be with you."
A perfect place to put this. RIP, James Earl Jones
Felt so powerful the first time I seen this scene when they stopped, paused and all beginning to march as one unit. I think it's beautiful.
Yeah. That was the “we shall not yield” moment.
The original thing of this show compared to other Star Wars product is how much effort is put into the common people. We aren't watching the elite military, or the senators, or the super powerful jedi 90% of the time. Just the common people living, and working. In this show we got not one, but two storyline of the commoner. And also a bit of taste of how the Empire treat it's own loyal citizens as well. Lying to higher ups to please them, changing records, and reports, and even a bit of fear. Sure a lot of other shows have this side in it, but it is usually in minutes before we skip to the big stuff.
Yeah. The pacing and world building was beautifully in this show. It told so much without rushing through stories.
Andor.
Star Wars for grown-ups. Pure art
Agreed. So masterfully done but I can’t imagine kids watching it.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis they’ll grow into it I’m sure. Xxx
I'm Japanese and I love this drama so much that I've already watched it three times.
This drama is perfect. It deepens the world of STAR WARS.
Plus, the music is great. Music entertains you.
I'm really looking forward to season 2. I hope to see some great footage in season 2. And I'm also looking forward to hearing some great music.
Thank you so much for making such wonderful music into a video. I'm rooting for you.❤
Thank you so much! I’m really excited for season 2 as well. It has such a high bar that season 1 set for it. But I’m super excited to see how they tie everything together. Should be epic!
The story this song tells is so powerful, the strength of unity, and the resilience through struggle
I love the way it slowly comes together at the beginning. From uncoordinated individuals to a massive coordinated ensemble.
This would adapt to the pipe organ really well.
Flutes and Brass. You’re so right!
@@starwarsmusicanalysis You can make a pipe organ sound like bagpipes, there's a reason it's called the queen of instruments!
I love how they're marching towards the Empire with this almost joyfull (at the end) music.
I see it as they’re ignoring that the empire is there. “You’re not going to stop our traditions”.
It is a really good funeral march. Props to the composers.
To Nicholas Britell as well as the performers that pulled it off.
New Orleans vibes
I just had an email come across my desk and the colleague has, "Past President" in their email signature and I about started crying.
And then I came here and did start crying.
Because holy hell, the sheer volume of this scene with the truly excellent score just...intense. Intense without blasters or lightsabers is something truly special too, and so needed sometimes. Great video, living for the fortissimo at the end, just unreal how well the power of the people message resonates with the music direction. Stunning.
The writers did a perfect job a pacing this show and especially this episode. Nothing is rushed which lets us live in the details of the moment.
Thank you for watching!
This is absolutely masterpieceful
This theme and "Your father would be proud" are the most powerful and emotional pieces of whole SW music ever created.
Britell used simple harmonies, emulating a folk-style music. It was truly effective.
Just watched the ending... again and this song makes the ending 500% better. I also love the felling of hearing the instrumets in disunity combining into one tune
Agreed. It’s reflects the greater level of time and care put into the entire show over these little details.
I've just finished this series for the 2nd time, and it's convinced me that this series is the best thing to happen to Star Wars in years.
I think the most important thing this show does is demonstrate that Star Wars can expand beyond its prototypical stories and character types and still be successful.
【Shades Finnish Pirates】So epic, i was like my wow my ears opened when this started playing and after knowing the fate of Andor in Rogue One it makes this all more dramatic song
Compared to everything else in the show being synths, this really grabbed everyone’s attention.
Truly, master piece grabs everyone like Darth Vader grabs people with force choke and thank you for answering / uploading & happy christmas time & May the force bit with you & blessings@@starwarsmusicanalysis
The same composer who created the comet's crashing into the Earth in Don't Look Up wrote this, and it shows. Beautiful.
I loved that movie and it definitely had an underrated score.
This scene is amazing!
It’s such a massive part of the last episode which is awesome on its own but everything fed off of the drama of the scene as a whole and the pacing was incredible. They really showed us how well Star Wars shows can be done.
I think score part 3 just dropped [edit added: Yeah, it did - and just looking at the track titles I'm not sure I'm emotionally ready to listen to all of these]
It dropped this morning. Haven’t had a chance to listen yet but I’m sure it’s incredible.
Maybe my favorite scene in all of Star Wars. Honor, courage, beauty, resilience, passion.
It’s a solid choice!
Ferrix is a backwater planet that exists almost entirely beneath the Empire’s notice, but it’s like Nemik said. The frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere.
It is. And the more the Empire forces its will, the more the rebellion will grow.
This music brought me to tears while watching Andor
I think the entire setup before the music had a strong impact as well.
Even now, at the 4 minute mark section, I tear up, every damn time.
I can’t wait to see if/how they reference this moment in the next season. Will this be a pivotal moment in the growth of the rebellion?
Pro tip, have the notes play when they hit the left side on the screen, not as soon as they come in on the right, it's pretty useless to see the notes you've already played instead of the ones you are about to.
Thank you. I wasn’t initially intending for people to play along with these, but it seems to have evolved into that.
This is fantastic, i could definitely see this being very usefull to some people.
Great video!
Thank you! I love putting the notation overtop the video for that reason. Easy enough for people to take from there and do with as they please. Thank you for watching!
Need this blasted at my funeral
Do it!
In the prison arc, Keno mentions how there are more of them than guards, and they know it. At 4:13 we see this on a grander scale. Its not just the band. Its EVERYONE. The streets and roofs are lined with people. And the empire knows they cant stop all of them.
Great connection. I hadn’t considered this at all! Both incredible musical scenes as well!
Just keep coming back to watch it over and over again.
Andor gritty atmospheric great plot development , superb scripts great character development. Totally authentic.
This is how Star Wars should have been from the get go.
All produced and filmed in the UK
It was an incredibly fine show. Of course, so much of that can be attributed to Tony Gilroy which makes it difficult to continue or replicate.
Beautiful track. Filled with musical symbolism for anyone who wants to look for it.
The show was marvelous, this music track was perfect for the climax of that episode, and you've nailed it with the adaptation.
You've earned a new follower.
Thank you! The entire soundtrack has incredible symbolism but this moment was just so pure and acoustically raw. I sort of felt bad making an electronic version. So, I’m relieved that you really liked it! Thank you for watching!
Marva, after losing her partner and her adopted son to them- after seeing her home turned upside down by them- after old age and illness took her-
She fought and made a difference.
So many people have given everything they have for justice, for freedom, for their communities only to leave it all behind in small ways and large, justifying new comforts as earned from past sacrifice. We see this moral rot EVERYWHERE in political and corporate life.
Maybe even Marva would have done so in an earlier time; maybe she even did. But it doesn't really matter, does it? Empire is unnatural; it has to work constantly to sustain itself. At any time, anyone can make a choice to resist. And that resistance can become a conduit for all the will that people share.
And sometimes we never even know or get to see the results of our actions, like Maarva.
I never caught on just listening until looking at the notation here how every four bar phrase in the main section is cut one beat short of what you'd typically expect.
Honestly, kind of a brilliant minor detail to have in a funeral march.
Yeah. I think Britell may have done that to make it feel unsteady to reflect the amateur musicians.
Top d'avoir joint les partitions des différents instruments en temps réel calé sur la vidéo, du travail d'orfèvre ! Et un "cadeau Bonus" pour les musicos qui aimeraient s'y essayer❣ du 2 en 1 cousu main, bravo et grand merci 😉 Sans nul doute, ni mauvais jeu de mot, le "point d'orgue" de cette série très attrayante, l'émotion et le lyrisme intimement et habilement entrelacés pour un impact puissant et toutes les bonnes raisons déjà relevées dans les autres commentaires. La musique de film est un art majeur qui participe pleinement à son rayonnement et à sa communion avec son public, elle est aussi là, la magie du cinéma! ❤🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶😊
Thank you! I’m so glad that you enjoyed the video and appreciated it for its full value!
Il y'a des notes dans ce vidéo qui ressemblent étrangement à la musique de Ali d'Ennio Morricone, sera pure coïncidence ?
The Marching Band Refused To Yield
New meaning to the term “military band”
Just watched it and it's one of my favourite star wars series 💞 love from India 🇮🇳✨
It deserves all the love it gets. Welcome to the club!
I really liked this show, im a big sucker for good worldbuilding and this did such a good job, this was a great climactic scene
More character development than world building.
this series gave me hope that theres sill someone who cares at disney
Or someone willing to stand up to them
Now I'm just waiting for some New Orleans born Star Wars mega-fan to have this at their funeral march before the jazzy "Second Line".
Haha. There’s a bunch of people typing up there final wishes right now.
I was waiting for this video! Thank you!
My pleasure. I’m glad I could get it out before Britell drops the OST as well. Thank you for watching!
Honnestly...i would like to have this at my funeral. Really
Ask for “The Ferrix Package” at the Funeral home.
I love small atentuon to deatails. The uniforms, the insteuments and that the orchestra steps match the drums.
This show was constant attention to detail. I continue to be in awe of it.
Best diagetic music in the Star Wars franchise. Sorry Cantina Band
If the modal nodes started an all out riot, they could be considered again though for sure.
4:05 is my favorite part. And damn Andor is so good.
Nothing says “we mean business” like some good old compound meter. Haha.
Andor was crazy good. No franchise can keep up that level of quality. But it will certainly continue to be a compass for where other creators imagine they can take a galaxy far far away.
Thank you, Nicholas Britell! It’s a beautiful!!!
He did a great job at a simple rule. “Keep it simple but interesting.”
2nd commentary :
1st listening in the episode : OMG, so freaking good!
2nd listening alone : F*ck...it's so damn good. My lips are shaking, can't figure why
3rd listening : why am i crying?
This made me openly laugh. Haha
Something told me that when I watched this episode, that it would be my new favorite moment in all of Star wars. Even though at the time I had start to lose faith in it. It didn't take me long, but then survivor got me back into it and I revisited this episode
I think Andor was something the fandom really needed to restore some faith.
This is a masterpiece for the shot!
It was perfect for the scene and the story in every way.
Les Mis in Space, loved it! The tension in the scene that is highlighted by the score. Not a word spoken.
It’s always great to see familiar and identifiable concepts brought into Sci-Fi.
I have this saved on spotify, it never fails to pump me up. Amazing piece of work!!
Yeah. Britell really ended the season well!
When it picks up this turns into a battle march. Love it.
Makes you wonder if every Ferrix funeral ends in a riot. Haha
My absolute favorite part of the whole series. Just the looks of grief, determination and contempt for the Empire on their faces. This was their Do You Hear the People Sing:
Do you hear the people sing?
Singing a song of angry men?
It is the music of a people
Who will not be slaves again
When the beating of your heart
Echoes the beating of the drums
There is a life about to start
When tomorrow comes
Will you join in our crusade?
Who will be strong and stand with me?
Beyond the barricade
Is there a world you long to see?
Then join in the fight
That will give you the right to be free
It was a great homage to Les Mis while also being incredibly unique to itself. And with the way they brought all of the characters to one place, it really felt like a true and natural climatic finale.
Andor is easily the best star wars we've gotten since Episode 3 and Rogue One. Absolute chills all around last episode
It gives me hope
This is really happening around us. THis music brings tears
The real performers really brought it to life.
I am an grown man With Military Background and i Sheet tears while i heard this in andor.
I don’t think anyone is immune to emotion. And I could imagine this really touching someone like yourself who fully recognizes the burden of honoring those who have sacrificed. Andor was an incredible series as well and Gilroy and Britell did an incredible job of building us to this moment for 12 episodes.
@@starwarsmusicanalysis indeed, andor is such a magnificent Star wars series. The slow building, the mature Tone, pure perfection and even Universal.
And i cant belive they composed a funeral march for a 45 Minute episode and Made These 45 minutes so intense
Not only that but that’s the first music written for the series so that everything could be paced and coordinated to the music instead of the music having to fit the scene.
@@priyapepsi I don't think you know both sides of that story. You should really read both stories before you criticize, because if the first couple of episodes of Andor made anything clear reality is complicated.
Don't be mad at veterans, be mad at the generals or the politicians
@@priyapepsi No, i was in the german military
this was by far the best thing star wars has done since the OT
really gets back to its roots of fighting fascism
It knew how to take its time in telling a story. Too many of these movies and shows are trying to rush and cram too many things into their screen time.
2:52 just gets me. Its just so much, the weight of seeing marva's gravestone really just hits this scene home for me. And it takes a whole new feel. And i definitely cried for a character we only knew for a few episodes. This is what all of this is for, this the culture of ferrix.
This is their community, their values and history. And with a ll the uncertainty leading up to that scene, it really just nails the head on the imperial coffin. That no matter how much you try an opress, no mater how much you try to repress an entire culture, it will thrive. It will rebel, and the community will be stronger deslite them.
That section felt like something ancient and personal. Like a folk song or hymn that every person from Ferrix would instantly know.
I find it interesting how the band has very similar uniforma to modern german student unions, whose leaders perform a ceremonial function at their members' funerals
That’s interesting. I wasn’t aware of that.
I hope someday I may accomplish something worthy enough to earn the right to have this theme played at my funeral.
Honorable life goals
Danke für die Noten zum mitlesen. 🎶👌😍
I actually just did it by ear.
This scene for me was obviously inspired by the funeral of General Lamarque in Les Misérables (I may be wrong, though ^^). If I'm right, what a cool inspiration for a Star Wars series.
I think that was part of it but the creators pulled from a lot of inspirations for this from what they’ve said.
Agreed, Cyril hunting Andor is literally Javert hunting Jean Valjean. A man of the law obsessed on hunting a criminal.
Really great job with this!!
Thank you so much!
If this music played at every funeral, I'd look forward to the funeral
That’s a lot of bricks.
When I heard it on the show, it reminded me so much of the funeral march we use in Finland for statesmen and military - March of Narva (Narvan marssi). That one I believe originates from Ireland and then made its way to Swedish soldiers few hundred years ago. The tempo was ever so slightly faster, but then later on was slowed down and given lyrics. This one is a wonderful piece too.
That makes sense then since that’s where it was inspired by. (Ireland) I think it’s a concept that nearly all Western cultures are able to identify in some way with which is why it worked so well.