Super Smash Bros - Metroid Music
Music visualizer, deconstruction, analysis and original instruments of the different track that appear in the Super Smash Bros series.
Metroid music is all about breathing—and suspended chords— a direction taken since the very first installment by original composer Hirokazu ¨hip¨Tanaka, the most senior sound related person working for Nintendo at the time and then expanded on by other composers such as Kenji Yaamamoto. The science fiction, action packed, solitary interplanetary exploration series known as Metroid was meant to feel as if players were inside a living organism, the music and sound effects blending together to create the pulsating environment of an entire planet whose ecosystem bounty hunter Samus Aran is ought to become familiar with. The only two times a melodic theme is heard in the original game is when the main villain, Mother Brain, is defeated in order to give the victorious player catharsis and the ¨Overword¨ theme heard in this arrangement for the Super Smash Bros series, which is the closest the series gets to the heroic tone from The Legend of Zelda series, albeit with slightly darker chords provided by replacing strictly major chords with suspended and extended ones. During the rest of the game, the melodies are more minimalistic, because Tanaka wanted the soundtrack to be the opposite of the "hummable" pop tunes found in other games at that time, making it one of the earliest attempts at true sound design in a game akin to a movie, following the scores of films like Alien (1979) and the dark synth heavy score of the film Birdy (1984). Those pulsating sounds as codified on the very first track of the series, the always present ´Title Theme´ also work wonders to convey machinery and computers performing cycles or pulsating in emergency alert mode. Either the ´Title Theme´ or this track known as ´Brinstar´ could be considered the main theme of the series.
The breathing aspect of Metroid music is captured on this arrangement by the ethereal female choir pulsating with volume fades. the rest of the instrumentation brings to mind the science fiction nature of the series with various futuristic sounds playing short notes reminiscent of computers performing calculations.
The harmonic basis of the piece is the transition between the G major and Bb, a chromatic mediant that combines aspects of both the major scale of G and its parallel minor, a modal sound that is close to a major Phrygian profile. However the Bb is not fully major but instead modifies the notes to create different extended versions, opting to not use the shared note between the G and Bb chords (D) and using the more ambiguous and less heroic C note to create suspended harmony. G - Bbsus2.
It has one of the higher track counts in the score for the first Super Smash bros games, reflecting the various layers that were needed to convey the series´ tone
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This is a music theory analysis and piano cover visualization project recreated with the original instrument tracks from the Nintendo game. Extracted with a specialized audio software, we can now dig inside the score for the first time; offering us a glimpse for how each instrument contributes to the whole.
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