I'd just like to add that the entire composition of the Gwyn, Lord of Cinder boss theme uses only the white keys. It's almost like the composition itself fears the Dark, just like Gwyn.
there's something so inherently and unmistakably _sad_ about Gwyn's theme that transcends game mechanics or technical explanation, there's so much in those piano notes that feels like slow crumbling stuff, frost and dust; asphyxiation and a vast grayness... perfect for Dark Souls
Yeah. It felt like you (8-Bit Music Theory) were self-censoring your earnest enthusiasm about the feelings and narrative they were able to convey musically. I would've loved to here you talk more about the narrative and was always mad at the snot-nosed kid for curtailing that. Infusing your video with some comedy was and is a good idea, but you don't need to self-criticize so much. Your opinions are valuable and we want to hear them!
All comedic elements other than 'booger kid" are great, probably due to their subtlety. Edit: Especially the Patreon plug, not as subtle- didn't need to be since its at the end of the video- but top notch.
Gotta agree, just like the subject you talk about your interest and observations hold us enough on their own, like you said in the video, repeating it just really breaks the rhythm and the flow. Other than that, could listen to this breakdown for hours.
Totally agree. Nice work beside that. I hope 8-bit Music Theory will do an episode about Shadow of The Comet : very short OST but excellent structure and delicious moogish 16bit textures.
@@tk_the_onion What?! People who like the story in a game that's known for telling its story through the world instead of cutscenes like the lore of the series?! I am shocked and appalled! Overbearing sarcasm aside, I think it's a brilliant story, and the fact thay he's so ignorant to the fact that anybody playing can enjoy it subconsciously without being forced into the generic canned animation cutscenes that were popular at the time is amazing.
Gwyns fight was without a doubt one of the most emotional final boss fights. You've fought grand monsters, stared down dragons and won the great flames through trial of combat. You've harshed a swamp of poisons and braved a fortress of one thousands traps. You've died over and over, on the verge of losing your humanity. You've traverses the abyss and entered a soft and gentle world within a painting and traversed the palace of the gods. You've killed a dragon . You've experienced such grandeur and you finally reach the kiln of the first flame. The aether surrounds you as you step in, the unresting souls of the knights who died walk aimlessly. You enter this ashen, barren place and a sense of dread over comes you. There's no enemies. Not for a short while, which is odd. You're used to ay least lesser hollows stuck in their insanity, lone and cowering. Then you see your first enemy. A knight of Gwyn. He charges you, alone. Defending his lord to his final death. If you choose to fight, he dies if not, he chases you down, not willing to let you win. You continue and see a second. He charges too, the balance you gold on the thick, fallen beams covered in ash. If you loom you find the remains of a dead knight, lying on the edge of precipice. It was at this moment the desolation really hit me. There's nothing. Everything was burned away to ash aside from five knights. Strong but nothing compared to their former self. The bleak and grey colour scheme is a fair cry from the greys, greens and neon oranges we've seen before. There's nothing. As you reach the kiln, you find the final three guards, the best of the five knights, wielding the great axe, a weapon requiring enormous strength. The halberd, a weapon of emmense dexterity and speed but still unwieldy for most. After finishing them off, collecting the various shards they drop. And you're faced with a wall of fog. Eager to finish this, to fulfil your duty or usurp the mantle of lord you pass through. Instead of some hulking spider beast, or a pair of golden clad giants. Instead of a God, you see a man. And with him you hear the score. It's so basic, so plain compared to the other musical notes but it's beautiful. Standing there, flamong sword in hand, he jumps, willing to do anything to keep the flame burning as he had before. But he isn't a God. He's a husk. The remains of a god gone mad with want and fear. He charges, seeing you as a threat. The music doesn't change. Theres no crescendo, no powerful swell to indicate immense power. His attack is weak compared to what it once was. This musical score was one of the most amazing I'd ever heard in a game. The song at the end of the game was a perfect representation of the struggle to survive and to keep the flame going, despite its inevitable snuffing
You know it's funny. By the time I got to the fight with Gwyn I felt that I was overleveled. He was far from the most challenging battle and I felt a little disappointed. Thinking back on it now though, it's honestly rather fitting. By the time I came to defeat him the battle had already been won, he just didn't want to accept it.
Oh, I was going to write a comment about the booger kid segments but turns out you have a super awesome fan base that has said everything I could possibly say way better than I could have said it. I was honestly interested in hearing your thematic ideas on the music, and the booger kid was legitimately annoying because he was censoring my favorite part of the video.
I have NO FREAKING IDEA what is going on in this video... but I still find it SO FASCINATING. I'm definetly waching more of your stuff and sending it to my more musically inclined friends.
also, please make more "how to develop small ideas into full song" type of videos. Stuff like arrangement and development. There seems to be a lack of good videos of this on youtube. Would love you long time.
A is lonliness B is false redemption(variation 2 is defeat) C is resignation thats how I initially receive it and that build up at C I think is meant to be last breath of will to fight 9:33 I feel like its the element of doubt 11:25 I think it can be called "realisation on what is to come"
"You can get away with writing 15 seconds of music and stretching it out however long it needs to be." *looks at Toby Fox *looks at Homestuck in general Yeah.
Would love to see some more videos on the Dark Souls OST. I'm not very buff on my music theory but there's a lot of motifs that get brought up, particularly with any of the chaos demon related fights (Quelaag, Centipede Demon etc). Exceptionally strong use of brass in those pieces and there's a 3 note descending pattern that's used in all of those fights that is kind of similar to Gwyn's motif. If anyone else has any cool DS soundtrack thoughts hmu I need that like I need hard drugs.
Well... DO you need hard drugs? Just trying to gauge how badly you need those videos? Like, it seems like you essentially just told all of us that you're into "hard" drugs. And if that is the case then all I have to say to you is "fuck yeah, man". 👌
Could I trouble you to dissect one Souls piece in particular? The Twin Princes from Dark Souls 3 [Yuka Kitamura - [Dark Souls III #21] Lorian, Elder Prince & Lothric, Younger Prince] is overpowering and forceful, but why?
The intro is very chaotic but unified like a fanfare over the tonic. Cluster chords and splashes of controlled dissonance increase the sense of density already established by the broad and large instrumentation, essentially filling holes between the steps of the consonant chords. As the violins carry the intro motifs, a harpsichord and eventually other strings begin a rhythmic acceleration, sending the behemoth sound flying faster without changing the tempo. Other moving lines in the texture surface such as in the cellos, creating a somewhat polyphonic motion. Eventually, the melody reduces to the first stand violins, evoking the twin princes themselves and taking on a somewhat lonesome or isolated tone within the frenzy that continues around them.. From here, a large homophonic progression ensues where the choir and brass take the center stage. Choirs often have a religious or regal atmosphere to them, especially in this arrangement and magnitude. The piece is no longer a frenzy but a controlled regality with imposing, slower rhythms than the intro and distinct harmonic progressions. For the most part, this section dances around the dominant without making it the dominant until the end of the section where it can resolve in a cadence. It keeps you on your toes but doesn't use dissonance or leading tones to do so until it wants to. Most of the overpowering nature comes from the sheer density of instrumentation.
oh btw, i think how the bass line repeats endlessly like a hollow, while the mighty theme of what gwyn once was plays over it trying to overshadow it, but never able to.
I think I've learned more from you about composing/songwriting than from any other youtube channel and I've just watched 3 of your videos so far... great work!
This video was very interesting to me, I have studied the psychology of gaming and books, and it is great to see the musical science to it also. Thank you. Subbed.
Good point! I didn't hear much in common with Gwyn's theme and the rest of the soundtrack, but I would love it if someone corrected me on that 'cause it's not like I transcribed the whole OST or anything
Maybe that can be emphasizing how separated from the world he is? He's trying desperately to keep off the time of darkness because of the chaos it would bring but ironically enough he's only making things worse by prolonging the age of light. You can even hear similar music in the lord of Cinder fight in the end of DS3"s main campaign so that same symbolism of prolonging the inevitable and making things worse by doing so is still there.
The themes in the soundtrack seem to be all very different. Except the demon bosses. Taurus Demon, Chaos Witch Queelag, Ceaseless Discharge all share a certain melody (in the choir).
i havent played through all of dark souls, ive barely played ds 3, demons souls, and bb. ive been into elden ring recently though, a lot, and im ensnared in the souls franchise before. this is the first time ive heard "Gwyn, Lord of Cinder" and im in tears. what a beautiful piece and a fantastic dissection of it.
I am absolutely no music nerd. I know basically 'nothing' about theory. Well I know a little but I'll sure try to learn more with your videos and try to understand what you mean with the theory I haven't learned yet. I'm 'learning' music theory because I like it by myself with no teacher by the help of the internet. I think I'm getting better and better with time while learning new things here and there. Hopefully one day I'll be able to learn enough to understand the what you say on the fly without pausing the vid and think too much about what you've just said. You sir have some super great content on your channel. I'm digging it even I don't have much knowledge to talk about theory too much. I'll get there one day with some determination. :)
MCDMars ahah I've been watching him wait before I have discovered 8-bit music theory. I like Adam Neely's video but he sometime gets into too deep stuff for me to the level of my understanding but I keep getting back to his vids MOAR than once to his videos. What I like of 8-bits is that he transcribe pieces and analyze it and it makes me thing about the things I know or believe I know till it proves me wrong. Another channel I really like to learn music theory it' "12tone"
Major theory fan and dark souls fan here. I loved music theory classes in high school, and I'm quite frankly amazed at how clear and concise you are with explaining your observations in this video. I feel bad for anyone that doesn't understand what you're talking about here, because this is really something special. I never put any thought into the final boss theme before, thank you.
watched most of your videos up to now. There's both clarity in explanations and analysis depth, please make a video about games that use layered tracks, such as Darkest Dungeon
I've been kinda obsessed with music theory videos for a few months now and this is easily one of my favourites. You're just changing my whole understanding of musical motifs.
As a senior in high school and a percussionist who took AP Music Theory and absolutely loved it, not to mention being a gamer from around the time the N64 came out, seeing two of my favorite things blended together in a channel like this is absolutely amazing. Thank you for your services.
Hearing this explanation of how the song is structured reminds me of how the mechanic of respawning works. The eight bar transition section calls to mind 'death', the song wants to end, but is forced to press on in spite of this desire to stop, just like the Chosen Undead and every respawning Hollow is forced to persist in their undead state. In many ways, Gwyn's theme echoes just how much he's fucked the world by prolonging his Age of Fire, there is no true resolution until it's stopped by an outside hand.
So... OnlyAfro took simple mechanics and turned them into the amazing epitome of min-maxing PvP builds, Giant Dad. Motoi Sakuraba took simple motifs and turned them into a beautiful soundtrack, essentially min-maxing. ... OnlyAfro is Motoi Sakuraba confirmed!
Thank you SO MUCH for taking on this subject! This a theme that I've been discussing with friends, and been surprised that not many people noticed, haven't seen any of your videos before this one I was expecting a more narrative thematic analysis from the player's perspective. If you pay attention (assuming you go through the game in a more or less intended route) you can notice the rise of intensity in the music until you talk to Gwynevere, where your discover you role, and from then on a descending theme right up until the battle with Gwyn. Althought this was WAY more technical than I expected, I enjoyed it lot and learned a lot about music theory. Again, thank you so much!
Actually amazing, I am going to be learning chord theory from a music major friend of mine due to your videos. I understand vaguely about tonics and chord movements, and due to your videos, my curiosity has been piqued enough for me to want to learn and memorize fully.
I don't understand anything about music, but I love games and their soundtracks, so listening to this and paralleling with Dark Soul's story motif was very enlightening, thank you.
mentioning the narrative of the game that the song comes from helps listeners understand the motive and purpose of the composer's choices. thank you for making it clear!
Dude, the work you make is unbelievably good. I mean, there isn't more niche oriented shit to me than having a very specific dark souls theme used to explain music composing in less than 15 minutes. This is the first video I see and I just love you so much for putting this out there. Thank you so much and please keep up this amazing work
I think... I'm going to marathon your videos. This one was really informative. Also, you don't have to downplay how the story and music are related. I think it really helped with the explanations.
Its nice to see every day there's more and more channels that go into the *art* part of videogames, making analysis and recognizing the hard work, talent and beauty that is behind a lot of really well made videogames. Its also nice to see that along all of these channels that analyse writing, structure, gameplay, music, lore... there's always a constant: Dark Souls. That game is definitely something else.
Absolutely loved everything about the analysis, but please, in the future, feel free to continue your thoughts on how the piece relates back to the themes of the game. Great video :)
this was the first video of yours that I had seen, and I would just like to say. it is utterly refreshing to listen to something about on Dark Souls I have no knowledge of. Brilliant work dood.
Okay, you are a saint for making this video. Sakuraba has honestly given me so much inspiration in my compositions and now I understand what he's doing it's lifesaving. Thanks :D
I love your music lectures. I've been playing piano for 20 years and still learning more and more about music theory. I've never studied in college. These kinds of videos are great for moving forward from your basic music theory
Wow, this video really helped me get some things about music structure to click in my head, and you've done a great job of explaining how different parts of the song fit together to build a powerful, unified piece. Your discussion of lore also provides good context for the piece as a whole and for particular sections of it. I particularly like the way you relate the notes trailing off toward the end to the flame burning out. Outstanding explanation, thank you!
Somehow I missed this video. I would kill to have you analyze Motoi Sakuraba's battle music. His work in Souls was a real eye opener that he could branch out and do amazing things. But you know what's super rad? The Valkyrie Profile battle tune and all the others like it from Tales and many other sources. When you hear it you *always* know it's Sakuraba and I'd love to know more about how a composer can craft that sort of signature sound... hell, even if it isn't Sakuraba. I hear it in a lot of them.
I would love to see a video discussing the music of kingdom hearts. I'm not really musically skilled, but something about KH's music keeps it stuck in my brain more than any other game I've played. Thank you for these amazing videos in general!
As a complete newcomer to this channel, I especially liked how you explained motiv variations and associated trickery in a way that seemed logical and clear. What I liked least was the snot guy.
Dammit I freaking love this channels so much. It takes both of my loves of music and video games and analyzes what makes our favorites so great. It’s so interesting and so well done, thank you SO much. I hope all the best for this channel.
I've remembered and learnt a lot of composition techniques with your videos, and more importantly so, how to put them into practice with memorable examples. Thanks a lot for your videos!
Just subbed today. I've only seen 2 videos so far but pleeeeeease keep going! It's been too long since I've even looked sideways at music theory and your videos are awesome and educational (and go way over my head sometimes but still interesting!). You actually spurred me to pull out my piano and play it again (haven't done that in a decade). Thank you!!!
Nice video, but don't be afraid to put the theory in 8-bit music theory. You don't need to restrain yourself from the lore of the game based on one subset of your subscribers, and you don't need booger-kid.
This is probably one of my favorite channels on yt, mostly because I know absolutely nothing about music. I know how to read play saxophone, but I had no idea music was so logical.
Very cool! I don't know much of anything about music composition, but this was really neat. Edit: I'd really love to see this dissection done with DS 3's Abyss Watchers theme.
When you said that the final boss theme of dark souls was a piano arrangement that made me instantly think of pure vessel from Hollow Knight, which is piano and a choir with a very non boss fight feeling theme.
I just found your channel and can't get enough of this.. I've watched all of your content in two days. I've been writing a lot lately and video game music has always been a huge inspiration for me. I think hearing ocarina of times soundtrack so much as a kid is what even got me into loving music in the first place. either way I absolutely love this stuff so keep going!
I'm in love with this channel and this is the only video I've seen. I hope to see more videos like this on your channel. I love music theory... I've been out of it for half a decade though...
I really liked this video. I haven't seen anyone pick apart Dark Souls music before, and I actually understood what was being said. Unfortunately, one of the first "Serious" videos on RU-vid that I liked.
The best final boss soundtrack imo. The clarity and brightness of the piano makes such an amazing contrast to the rest of the soundtrack. Also, really hearing that Erik Saties' Gymnopedies on that particular piece. Masterpiece.
This is an incredible video, I'm about to binge on all your videos. I'm actually learning music theory from this, and that's smashing! Thank you for the work put into this video!
For the short time I subbed, I noticed one thing. All your videos are gold! I'm super excited to see more, as each one of your videos can really make my day.
Oh. So. As a guitarist that is self-taught and has little musical theory knowledge, I understood something! I'm watching a video about Dark Souls and coinsidentially learning something i should know already! Thank you sir! :) I'll be sure to check the rest of the videos.
Hey, just found your channel, loving everything :) I've been playing guitar and writing since my early teens, now 26 and musically uneducated, but you're the first seemingly educated person I've listened to that I felt was giving _useful_ analysis -- most analysis I've found seems to be overly simplistic, be more of a reflection of the analyzer's mind rather than the piece itself, or worship the person who wrote it... but not so with you! Iow, it feels like you're objectively describing the most important elements of how a piece was actually composed which can be reapplied, rather than offering sophistry. Let's put it this way, you're making me strongly regret disregarding the academic perspective, haha. In many ways, you're putting labels on things I've already intuited from listening to music (e.g. effective/weird chord structures), and filling in gaps of knowledge I couldn't have accessed otherwise. I thought your FF7 and Mario videos were especially fantastic ;) Given my background (years of writing/playing/listening but no college music education), any advice on where to learn more effective composition, for games in particular? Or maybe that's what this channel is for... hmm. Keep up the great work!
Hey thanks man! I definitely know what you mean about a lot of musical analysis out there on the internet, and music academia comes with its own slew of problems. Musicians like yourself with a lot of playing experience but no formal education I think are actually in a really good spot to learn theory - learning rules of grammar is a lot easier if you already speak the language, y'know? I think the best way to learn how to compose is to analyze other pieces of music. Get deep into transcribing a lot of music, and try to find connections or similarities between pieces. Start analyzing scores from classical pieces that you like (imslp.org/ is a great resource for this). Look through a real book or find some charts for jazz tunes online and analyze their chord progressions. You'll find tons of ideas and patterns that show up all over the place, regardless of whatever genre or even century the songs were written in. Basically anything you can do to grow your vocabulary of compositional techniques is going to help, especially if you take the time to practice applying everything you find into compositions of your own. Hope that helps??? Thanks for checking out the channel!!
It does help, haha. I guess I keep hoping for a holy grail of "Here is the composition knowledge you need but never had," but I suppose it may be total red herring :/ The grammar-language analogy seems spot on (as a programmer I think about things in those terms all the time.) Thanks for the advice, I definitely need to recommit myself to analyzing more music (and probably more than just video game music) :)
That bit at the end with the Patreon dropping the money corpse in the cell cracked me up. So, a thought about the piece. It's in A Minor at 120bpm, yes? A minor, being the relative minor of C Major, uses only white keys on a piano (excluding the notes that stray out of the key). And 120bpm is a pretty standard beats per minute. I've yet to find a composing software where the default bpm isn't 120. I find it pretty interesting that the song uses two fairly standard components in its structure; being a key which uses only white keys on the piano, and also a pretty standard beats per minute. I wonder if Sakuraba took these two things into account when composing this piece.
I know nothing about music other than what I got from a beginners piano class. But I feel like I've used some of these methods while whistling or humming. Too many video games with awesome music and boredom while washing dishes. Never knew something could make sense of something nearly subconscious to me (especially in a field I am clueless in). People can pick up on some interesting stuff, yo. Thank you for this.