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Nier is an action role-playing video game developed by Cavia and published by Square Enix in 2010. The music of Nier was composed by Keiichi Okabe with members of his studio, Monaca, Kakeru Ishihama and Keigo Hoashi, and Takafumi Nishimura of Cavia. The soundtrack has inspired the release of four official albums by Square Enix—an official soundtrack album and three albums of arrangements—along with two mini-albums included as pre-order bonuses for the Japanese versions of the game and two licensed EPs of jazz arrangements.

The original soundtrack was highly praised; reviewers noted it as one of the best video game soundtracks of the year, praising the originality of the compositions and the beauty of Emi Evans' vocal work. The first arranged album, while also warmly received, was perceived by critics to be weaker than the original and not long enough to stand up to the expectations created by the success of the original. The first three albums sold well enough to be recorded on the Japanese Oricon music charts, reaching number 24 for the original soundtrack, 59 for the first arranged album, and position number 77 for the second.

The soundtrack for Nier's sequel, Nier: Automata, was released worldwide on March 29, 2017. Returning collaborators include Keiichi Okabe and the Monaca team on composing duties and Emi Evans on vocals, along with several other singers and lyricists. Nier: Automata Original Soundtrack was highly reviewed by critics, and the album peaked at number 2 on the Oricon charts.

Development

The soundtrack to Nier was composed by a collaboration of the studio Monaca, consisting of Keiichi Okabe, Kakeru Ishihama, and Keigo Hoashi, along with Takafumi Nishimura from Cavia, the game's developer. Okabe served as the lead composer and as the director for the project as a whole. Okabe was brought onto the project when the concept for the game was first being devised, and worked intermittently on the soundtrack for the next three years until its release. The music for the game was generally composed entirely separate from the development of the game. Often, elements of the game were modified to match the music, rather than the other way around. Some tracks were used in ways that the composers did not envision, such as "Grandma", which was expected to be used in the prologue of the game but was instead chosen as a boss battle theme. The music was designed for different motifs to appear in various arrangements throughout the soundtrack, and also to convey a sense of sadness even during the "thrilling" tracks. Okabe was allowed a great deal of freedom regarding what the music was to sound like; game director Taro Yoko's main request was that he use a lot of vocal works.[1]

The vocals and lyrics were provided by vocalist Emi Evans (Emiko Rebecca Evans), a singer from England living in Tokyo. She is the singer for the band freesscape, and had previously worked on video game projects such as the Etrian Odyssey arrange albums.[2] The Monaca team had met her when considering her for a prior project, and Okabe wanted to work with her on Nier.[1] She was approached a few months after the initial meeting in Autumn 2008 to be the vocalist for the soundtrack. In addition to singing, Evans was asked to write her own lyrics in futuristic languages. The composers gave her preliminary version of songs and the style they wished the language to be in, such as Scottish Gaelic or French, and she invented the words. Evans wrote songs in versions of Scottish Gaelic, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, French, English and Japanese, and wrote "Song of the Ancients" in an entirely fictional language. She wrote that song by listening to songs in as many languages as possible and jumbling them up together. For the other languages, she tried to imagine what they would sound like after 1000 years of drifting.[2]

Okabe did not want to use traditional lyrics, as he felt they would clash with the design of the world in the game, and wanted to use a variety of languages to represent the open nature of the game's world. He also did not want easily recognizable lyrics to be sung in the background while the characters were speaking, and for any noticeable words to instead evoke emotions in the player.[1] Evans only knew English, Japanese, and French when she began the project; she listened to the other languages on YouTube to learn the rhythms and sounds of the languages and then mixed and changed them.[3] Okabe largely allowed Evans to decide how to integrate the lyrics with the early forms of the songs, and as he usually did not know where the songs would be used in the game gave her only light direction as to the emotional tone for the songs. The composers often would modify the songs in later revisions to follow how Evans had sung for that song.[2]

Releases

NieR Gestalt & Replicant Original Soundtrack

NieR Gestalt & Replicant Original Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by
Keiichi Okabe
ReleasedApril 21, 2010
GenreVideo game music
Length2:30:09
LabelSquare Enix

The soundtrack to Nier is largely composed of melancholy acoustic pieces which heavily feature vocals by Emi Evans. Of the 43 tracks included in the released soundtrack album, only 9 do not have any vocal component to them; these are the four versions each of "Dispossession" and "Yonah", as well as "Dance of the Evanescent".[4] With the exception of "Ashes of Dreams", the lyrics are not intended to mean anything; for that song, Evans was given a list of Japanese words to use, which she then translated for the English, French, and Scottish Gaelic versions of the song. The song and its variants were the last to be recorded, and Evans convinced the composers that one song in the soundtrack should have recognizable lyrics rather than futuristic English as they originally planned. Evans found "Ashes" to be the most difficult song to write on the soundtrack, as she had difficulty writing lyrics that met the composers' criteria of despair and lack of hope.[2]

"Hills of Radiant Wind" is one of the few upbeat songs on the largely dark soundtrack; for that piece Evans sang in a version of Portuguese in a style meant to sound like a spirit floating on the wind. For "Grandma", she sang in a French style, trying to "put in as much anguish and melancholy" as possible; she created the song in a single recording, and it is "one of the most memorable songs" that she has sung. "The Wretched Automatons" is sung in a variant of English and was recorded prior to the addition of the mechanical sounds that run throughout the track, while "Kainé" is in a version of Gaelic.[2]

Square Enix released a soundtrack album of music from the game, titled NieR Gestalt & Replicant Original Soundtrack, on April 21, 2010. The two-disc, 2:30:09-long album has the catalog numbers of SQEX-10189/90.[4] As preorder bonuses for Nier Gestalt and Nier Replicant, the two versions of the game released in Japan, two mini-albums, Nier Gestalt Mini Album and Nier Replicant Mini Album, were included. Each one contains five tracks from the full soundtrack album; Gestalt corresponds with tracks 1 and 4 from disc 1, 8 and 13 from disc 2, and an electronic version of "Kainé" titled "Kainé / Rain of Light", while Replicant encompasses track 3 from disc 2, tracks 2 and 7 from disc 1, track 1 from disc 2, and a medley of several tracks.[5][6] Gestalt is 18:11 long, and Replicant 17:11.[5][6] A book of sheet music of piano arrangements of tracks from the game by Okabe was published by KMP on April 22, 2011. The book, NieR Gestalt & Replicant Official Score Book, contains 25 arrangements in 112 pages.[7] Guitar arrangements of "Song of the Ancients / Devola" and "Yonah / Strings Ver." by Yuji Sekiguchi were included in the Square Enix Official Best Collection guitar solo sheet music book, published by KMP in May 2011.[8]

The soundtrack album reached number 24 on the Japanese Oricon music charts, and remained on the charts for 11 weeks.[9] It was well received by critics; Patrick Gann of RPGFan called the album "an insanely good soundtrack" and noted it as his candidate for video game soundtrack of the year, as well as "one of the best game soundtracks ever". He applauded that the music was both "meticulously-crafted" and "accessible to the untrained ear".[4] Don Kotowski of Square Enix Music Online praised the "captivating vocal work" and "exquisite" composition. He also noted that each track retained a sense of individuality even when it reused themes from other tracks.[10] He was less complimentary towards the mini albums, which he regarded as good introductions to the soundtrack as a whole but not worth purchasing on their own.[5][6] Jayson Napolitano of Original Sound Version also praised the album, saying that it was "hands down one of the best soundtracks Square Enix has published over the years". Calling it "captivating" and "otherworldly", he applauded the album's originality and Evans' vocals.[11] Original Sound Version later named the soundtrack as the best video game soundtrack of 2010, and Square Enix Music Online awarded it the best Japanese video game soundtrack of the year.[12][13]

Track list

Disc 1
No.TitleJapanese titleLength
1."Snow in Summer"夏ノ雪4:59
2."Hills of Radiant Wind"光ノ風吹ク丘2:53
3."The Incomplete Stone"不完全ナ石4:42
4."Blu-bird"青イ鳥2:40
5."Cold Steel Coffin"心閉ザセシ鉄棺3:26
6."Grandma"オバアチャン3:40
7."Song of the Ancients / Devola"イニシエノウタ/デボル3:05
8."The Wretched Automatons"愚カシイ機械4:48
9."City of Commerce"売買ノ街2:18
10."Song of the Ancients / Popola"イニシエノウタ/ポポル3:04
11."The Prestigious Mask"仮面ノ誉2:26
12."Temple of Drifting Sands"流砂ノ神殿4:03
13."Gods Bound by Rules"掟ニ囚ワレシ神4:38
14."The Ultimate Weapon"最終兵器4:55
15."Deep Crimson Foe"深紅ノ敵2:21
16."Dispossession / Piano Ver."喪失/Ver.ピアノ2:40
17."Dispossession / Strings Ver."喪失/Ver.重奏2:14
18."Dispossession / Pluck Ver."喪失/Ver.弦2:57
19."Dispossession / Music Box Ver."喪失/Ver.オルゴール1:34
20."Yonah / Piano Ver."ヨナ/Ver.ピアノ2:53
21."Yonah / Strings Ver."ヨナ/Ver.重奏3:06
22."Yonah / Pluck Ver. 1"ヨナ/Ver.弦その12:39
23."Yonah / Pluck Ver. 2"ヨナ/Ver.弦その21:57
Disc 2
No.TitleJapanese titleLength
1."The Dark Colossus Destroys All"全テヲ破壊スル黒キ巨人3:03
2."Song of the Ancients / Hollow Dreams"イニシエノウタ/虚ロナ夢2:41
3."Kainé / Salvation"カイネ/救済3:03
4."Kainé / Escape"カイネ/逃避3:07
5."His Dream"彼ノ夢1:57
6."This Dream"此ノ夢1:56
7."Repose"休息2:40
8."The Lost Forest"失ワレタ森2:58
9."Song of the Ancients / Fate"イニシエノウタ/運命5:17
10."Shadowlord's Castle / Memory"魔王ノ城/記憶2:50
11."Dance of the Evanescent"儚キ者達ノ舞踏0:54
12."Shadowlord's Castle / Roar"魔王ノ城/咆吼4:14
13."Emil / Karma"エミール/業苦3:22
14."Emil / Sacrifice"エミール/犠牲3:27
15."Shadowlord"魔王5:25
16."Ashes of Dreams / New"Ashes of Dreams/English Version6:18
17."Ashes of Dreams / Nouveau"Ashes of Dreams/Nouveau-French Version5:47
18."Ashes of Dreams / Nuadhaich"Ashes of Dreams/Nuadhaich-Gaelic Version5:47
19."Ashes of Dreams / Aratanaru"Ashes of Dreams/Aratanaru-Japanese Version6:29
20."Shadowlord - White-note remix"魔王 - White-note remix4:56

NieR Gestalt & Replicant 15 Nightmares & Arrange Tracks

NieR Gestalt & Replicant 15 Nightmares & Arrange Tracks
Soundtrack album by
Keiichi Okabe
ReleasedDecember 8, 2010
GenreVideo game music
Length54:43
LabelSquare Enix

An album of arranged music was published by Square Enix on December 8, 2010. The album, NieR Gestalt & Replicant 15 Nightmares & Arrange Tracks, contains 11 tracks across a length of 54:43, and has a catalog number of SQEX-10212. The arrangements were done by composers Okabe, Ishihama, and Hoashi, as well as by "oriori", Ryuichi Takada, and Hidekazu Tanaka. The first five arrangements, in a techno style, were included in the Nier DLC, while the remaining tracks are piano, instrumental, chiptune, and a cappella versions of tracks from the game.[14] In the liner notes for the album, Okabe said that the DLC tracks were meant to be "more war-like" versions of the originals, while the second half of the album was intended to "maintain the image and worldview of the original music".[15]

The arranged album reached number 59 on the Oricon music charts, a position it held for a week.[16] It was warmly received by reviewers, if less so than the first album; Patrick Gann critiqued the album as not being as good as the original, though he noted that "you can still be awesome and rank second to that album". He concluded that the arrangements were all of good quality, but that listeners would not be "blown away by it".[14] Don Kotowski found it to be an "accomplished arrange album", but inferior to the original as he felt that it was shorter than it should have been and that the final two tracks were weaker than the rest of the arrangements.[17] Jayson Napolitano also felt that the album should have been longer; he thought that most listeners would skip the DLC tracks in favor of the acoustic arrangements, and that six tracks was not enough to carry the album given the expectations created by the quality of the original soundtrack.[18]

Track list
No.TitleJapanese titleLength
1."Song of the Ancients - Lost Androids Mixuxux"イニシエノウタ - Lost Androids Mixuxux5:35
2."Blu-bird - Hansel und Gretel"青イ鳥 - Hansel und Gretel5:05
3."Shadowlord's Castle - Iron Fist mix feat.DJ-BKO"魔王ノ城 - Iron Fist mix feat.DJ-BKO5:05
4."Emil - Ultimate Weapon No.7"エミール - Ultimate Weapon No.75:34
5."Shadowlord - Crying Yonah Version"魔王 - Crying Yonah Version5:39
6."Emil / Piano Ver."エミール/ピアノVer4:02
7."Kainé / Duet Ver."カイネ/重奏Ver4:17
8."The Wretched Automatons / A Cappella"愚カシイ機械/アカペラVer3:32
9."Song of the Ancients / Piano Ver."イニシエノウタ/ピアノVer5:00
10."Shadowlord / Music Box Ver."魔王/オルゴールVer2:15
11."The Legend of Nier: 8-bit Heroes"ニーアの伝説~8ビットの勇者たち~8:39

NieR tribute album -echo-

NieR tribute album -echo-
Soundtrack album by
Keiichi Okabe
ReleasedSeptember 14, 2011
GenreVideo game music
Length1:00:46
LabelSquare Enix

On September 14, 2011 Square Enix published a third Nier album, titled NieR Tribute Album -echo-. Each of the 12 tracks on the album is a remix of a Nier piece, each by a different artist. The resulting eclectic mix of styles is primarily electronic, but also includes a multiple-piano arrangement of "Grandma" and a klezmer rendition of "Shadowlord's Castle". The album has a duration of 1:00:46, and has the catalog number SQEX-10247.[19]

The album reached number 77 on the Oricon music charts, a position it held for a week.[20] It was positively reviewed by Jayson Napolitano of Original Sound Version, who described himself as "impressed" with it. He preferred this album to the arranged album, though he felt that a few of the tracks had difficulty distinguishing themselves above the high quality of the original pieces.[19]

Track list
No.TitleJapanese titleLength
1."-echo-: NieR Repose "SEXY-SYNTHESIZER""-echo-: NieR 休息 "SEXY-SYNTHESIZER"6:28
2."-echo-: NieR Kainé / Salvation ~ Kainé / Escape "matryoshka""-echo-: NieR カイネ/救済 〜 カイネ/逃避 "matryoshka"3:24
3."-echo-: NieR Temple of Drifting Sands "millstones""-echo-: NieR 流砂ノ神殿 "millstones"5:03
4."-echo-: NieR Emil / Sacrifice "Ametsub""-echo-: NieR エミール/犠牲 "Ametsub"4:44
5."-echo-: NieR Suite Of Nier (Restructuring-Snow in Summer, The Ultimate Weapon, Ashes of Dreams) "Go-qualia""-echo-: NieR Suite Of Nier (Restructuring-夏ノ雪, 最終兵器, Ashes of Dreams) "Go-qualia"5:58
6."-echo-: NieR Shadowlord's Castle / Roar "RÄFVEN""-echo-: NieR 魔王ノ城/咆吼 "RÄFVEN"2:46
7."-echo-: NieR The Incomplete Stone "Nobu44""-echo-: NieR 不完全ナ石 "Nobu44"5:10
8."-echo-: NieR Song of the Ancients / Devola ~ Song of the Ancients / Popola "sasakure.UK""-echo-: NieR イニシエノウタ/デボル 〜 イニシエノウタ/ポポル "sasakure.UK"5:18
9."-echo-: NieR The Wretched Automatons "KanouKaoru""-echo-: NieR 愚カシイ機械 "KanouKaoru"3:52
10."-echo-: NieR Grandma "Schroeder-Headz""-echo-: NieR オバアチャン "Schroeder-Headz"4:22
11."-echo-: NieR The Lost Forest "NO‐NO₂""-echo-: NieR 失ワレタ森 "NO‐NO₂"5:10
12."-echo-: NieR Snow in Summer ~ The Dark Colossus Destroys All "world's end girlfriend""-echo-: NieR 夏ノ雪〜 全テヲ破壊スル黒キ巨人 "world's end girlfriend"8:31

Piano Collections Nier Gestalt & Replicant

Piano Collections Nier Gestalt & Replicant
Soundtrack album by
Keiichi Okabe
ReleasedMarch 21, 2012
GenreVideo game music
Length45:42
LabelSquare Enix

On March 21, 2012 Square Enix published a fourth Nier album, titled Piano Collections Nier Gestalt & Replicant. Each of the 11 tracks on the album is a piano arrangement of a Nier piece. The tracks were arranged and played by several different artists, namely Keigo Hoashi, Kumi Tanioka, Masato Kouda, Ryuichi Takada, and Yuri Misumi. Each arranger performed their own pieces, with the exception of Kouda, whose arrangement was played by Tanioka. The album has a duration of 45:42, and has the catalog number SQEX-10303.[21]

The album was positively reviewed by Jayson Napolitano of Original Sound Version, who said that while "nothing on this album came as particularly surprising", that he enjoyed the arrangements and performances. He preferred the tracks on this album to the piano arrangements on the 15 Nightmares album.[21]

Track list
No.TitleJapanese titleLength
1."-echo-: Song of the Ancients"イニシエノウタ4:08
2."Kainé"カイネ4:29
3."Hills of Radiant Wind"光ノ風吹ク丘3:40
4."Snow in Summer"夏ノ雪3:48
5."Emil"エミール3:24
6."Grandma"オバアチャン4:21
7."Repose"休息2:56
8."Gods Bound By Rules"掟ニ囚ワレシ神4:15
9."Shadowlord"魔王4:03
10."The Wretched Automatons"愚カシイ機械5:36
11."Ashes of Dreams"Ashes of Dreams5:02

NieR Gestalt & Replicant: Jazz Arrange version

NieR Gestalt & Replicant: Jazz Arrange version
Soundtrack album by
Sean Schafianski
ReleasedAugust 8, 2013
GenreVideo game music
Length26:48
LabelJoypad Records

Music from Nier has been arranged into two jazz EPs. The albums, titled NieR Gestalt & Replicant: Jazz Arrange Version and Jazz Arrange Version Vol. 2, contain six tracks each from the soundtrack licensed by Joypad Records. The tracks are arranged and performed by Sean Schafianski, and were released digitally on August 8, 2013, and May 16, 2014. The EPs have durations of 26:48 and 25:33.[22][23] The music is split between instrumental and vocal pieces, and covers multiple different styles of jazz music.[24]

The first EP was positively reviewed by Brad Hayes-Raugh of RPGFan, who "greatly enjoyed the direction this album takes", though he did note that some of the pieces did not quite meet his high expectations. He concluded that "the tracks give a fresh spin on some great pieces of video game music and keep the spirit of Nier alive and well."[24]

Track list

Jazz Arrange version
No.TitleOriginal titleLength
1."Sunshower""Snow in Summer"5:42
2."Pale Moonlight""Shadowlord's Castle/Roar"4:07
3."Nightengale""Kainé/Duet Ver."4:14
4."Memories""Song Of The Ancients/Devola"4:54
5."A Heart Not Forgotten""Emil/Karma"3:26
6."Steam Powered Trouble""The Wretched Automatons"4:25
Jazz Arrange version Vol 2.
No.TitleOriginal titleLength
1."Old Timer""Grandma"3:24
2."Flower""Yonah"4:09
3."Veil""The Prestigious Mask"2:34
4."Rule Breaker""Gods Bound by Rules"5:03
5."Heavy Heart""Emil-Piano Ver"4:07
6."Penumbra""Shadowlord"6:16

NieR: Automata Original Soundtrack

NieR: Automata Original Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by
MONACA
ReleasedMarch 29, 2017 (2017-03-29)
GenreVideo game music
Length3:33:43
LabelSquare Enix

A sequel to Nier, Nier: Automata, was released in February 2017. Its music was again composed by Keiichi Okabe and the Monaca team, with Emi Evans, J'Nique Nicole, and Nami Nakagawa on vocals, Takanori Goto on guitar, and additional contributions by several artists. A soundtrack album for the game was released worldwide by Square Enix on March 29, 2017. The three-disc, 3:33:43-long album contains all of the music from the game, as well as, like the original game's album, variations on the main theme in multiple languages. Unlike the original Nier, where all of the versions were written and sung by Emi Evans and had the same lyrical meanings, the versions in Automata were written and sung by multiple people: the English version by J'Nique Nicole, one in an invented French-derived language by Evans, and the Japanese written by Yoko Taro and sung by Marina Kawano.[25]

NieR: Automata Original Soundtrack peaked at number 2 on the Oricon charts,[26] with over 28,000 copies sold in its first week in Japan.[27] It was well received by critics; Patrick Gann of RPGFan said the album was as good or better than the original as well as "perfectly, wonderfully great".[25]

Disc 1
No.TitleJapanese titleLength
1."Significance - Nothing"意味/無2:39
2."City Ruins - Rays of Light"遺サレタ場所/斜光6:22
3."Peaceful Sleep"穏ヤカナ眠リ6:50
4."Memories of Dust"砂塵ノ記憶5:29
5."Birth of a Wish"生マレ出ヅル意思4:40
6."The Color of Depression"沈痛ノ色3:17
7."Amusement Park"遊園施設6:19
8."A Beautiful Song"美シキ歌4:06
9."Voice of no Return - Guitar"還ラナイ声/ギター3:51
10."Grandma - Destruction"オバアチャン/破壊5:31
11."Faltering Prayer - Dawn Breeze"澱ンダ祈リ/暁風3:12
12."Emil's Shop"エミール/ショップ5:28
13."Treasured Times"大切ナ時間3:46
14."Vague Hope - Cold Rain"曖昧ナ希望/氷雨3:36
15."Weight of the World English Version"Weight of the World/English Version5:44
Disc 2
No.TitleJapanese titleLength
1."Significance"意味2:39
2."City Ruins - Shade"遺サレタ場所/遮光6:01
3."End of the Unknown"異形ノ末路4:31
4."Voice of no Return - Normal"還ラナイ声/通常2:53
5."Pascal"パスカル4:47
6."Forest Kingdom"森ノ王国5:52
7."Dark Colossus - Kaiju"全テヲ破壊スル黒キ巨人/怪獣6:06
8."Copied City"複製サレタ街3:59
9."Wretched Weaponry: Medium/Dynamic"愚カシイ兵器:乙:甲7:04
10."Possessed by Disease"取リ憑イタ業病5:02
11."Broken Heart"割レタ心3:30
12."Wretched Weaponry: Quiet"愚カシイ兵器:丙3:07
13."Mourning"追悼4:51
14."Dependent Weakling"依存スル弱者5:06
15."Weight of the World Song of a Broken World"Weight of the World/壊レタ世界ノ歌5:44
Disc 3
No.TitleJapanese titleLength
1."Rebirth & Hope"再生ト希望0:37
2."War & War"戦争ト戦争4:32
3."Crumbling Lies - Front"崩壊ノ虚妄3:26
4."Widespread Illness"茫洋タル病3:18
5."Fortress of Lies"偽リノ城塞2:49
6."Vague Hope - Spring Rain"曖昧ナ希望/翠雨4:40
7."Song of the Ancients - Atonement"イニシエノウタ/贖罪5:09
8."Blissful Death"幸セナ死2:36
9."Emil - Despair"エミール/絶望4:46
10."Faltering Prayer - Starry Sky"澱ンダ祈リ/星空3:44
11."Alien Manifestation"顕現シタ異物6:27
12."The Tower"「塔」7:43
13."Bipolar Nightmare"双極ノ悪夢5:00
14."The Sound of the End"終ワリノ音5:26
15."Weight of the World Nouveau - FR Version"Weight of the World/Nouveau-FR Version5:47
16."Weight of the World the End of YoRHa"Weight of the World/the End of YoRHa5:39

Orchestral albums

NieR: Gestalt & NieR: Replicant Orchestral Arrangement Album
NieR: Automata Orchestral Arrangement Album
Soundtrack album by
MONACA, Kanagawa Philharmonic Orchestra
ReleasedSeptember 12, 2018 (2018-09-12)
GenreVideo game music
Length50:48 (Nier)
49:37 (Automata)
LabelSquare Enix

On September 12, 2018, Square Enix released a pair of orchestral albums, NieR: Gestalt & NieR: Replicant Orchestral Arrangement Album and NieR: Automata Orchestral Arrangement Album. Each contains performances by the Kanagawa Philharmonic Orchestra of arrangements of music from each game, and were available individually or as a box set.[28]

Music videos

On July 15, 2015, an officially licensed arrangement of "Song of the Ancients" from Nier, along with a music video, were released by OverClocked Records. It was made available to stream or purchase.[29] The song, a vocal performance with vibraphone and percussion, was the first officially licensed video game music single by the record label, an offshoot of the OverClocked ReMix video game music remix community. The single was sung by Jillian Aversa, who features in the accompanying music video, with percussion by Doug Perry. The song was performed by the duo prior to release at Video Games Live concerts, and was filmed at National Harbor, Maryland by the sculpture The Awakening in January 2015 during MAGFest, an annual game music convention.[30]

Public performances

A concert in Tokyo, called "Nier Music Concert & Talk Live", was held at the Ex Theater Roppongi on April 16, 2016, with performances of various musical pieces from Nier and Nier: Automata.[31] A blu-ray disc of this performance was released on December 14, 2016.[32] A second concert was held on May 5, 2017 and was livestreamed via Niconico.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Interview with Composer Keiichi Okabe". Square Enix. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved July 9, 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d e Napolitano, Jayson (May 4, 2010). "Deep into NieR: Interview With Vocalist and Lyricist Emi Evans". Original Sound Version. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved July 9, 2011.
  3. ^ Kaye, Darryl (May 2, 2011). "An Interview With Emi Evans: Part Two". Gaming Union. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved July 10, 2011.
  4. ^ a b c Gann, Patrick (April 27, 2010). "NieR Gestalt & Replicant OST". RPGFan. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved July 9, 2011.
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