The People of the North, the best Final Fantasy X song you never heard

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Friday, July 20, 2012
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Layton Shumway

I'm still enjoying all the articles the Bitmob community contributed to our game-music prompt. Here, Steven briefly examines a standout track from Final Fantasy X -- one of the first not written by original series composer Nobuo Uematsu. Check it out.

Final Fantasy X

The horned people of the North, the Ronso, rule the mountains of Spira. The mighty tribe is proud and noble but full of sorrow, which fits the tone of Final Fantasy X and protagonist Tidus' doomed fate.

When you travel to the tribe's home, the base of the sacred mountain of Gagazet, the Ronso initially bar your way until convinced of your conviction. Only the worthy are allowed to climb the sacred mountain, because to journey to its heights is to undergo a spiritual journey of understanding.

Climbing Gagazet is the last barrier to Zanarkand, Tidus' ancient home. It is also the final veil before the game's greatest and most poignant reveal: You are not who you think you are.

Composer Masashi Hamauzu powerfully conveys this sense of spiritual longing mixed with dread and sadness in perhaps the most evocative track in FFX. While often in the shadow of the popular To Zanarkand, People of the North is by far the most haunting.

 

It's not necessarily an easy song to listen to, but you can't help but sit mesmerized by the raw power of Hamauzu's melancholy melody.

Reminiscent of Asian film soundtracks like Hero and House of Flying Daggers, the strings carry the haunting melody that fills the mountain sequence with a vague sense of loss and finality. Yet underscoring the chorus is a delicate bed of piano that brings a hopeful note to the piece.

The measured percussion and clashing symbols add a plodding rhythm, a feeling of moving forward, as you doggedly climb the snow cliff faces of the mountain.

The vibrato of the strings stirs deep emotion, as each step brings you closer to the truth you desperately seek...but dread to know.


This piece is expanded from Five Final Fantasy Song to make you Cry.

 
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Comments (5)
230340423
July 09, 2012

Man, it's been so long since I've played FFX that I forgot how many excellent tunes it had. Also, this was one of the first main-series Final Fantasy songs composed solely by Masashi Hamauzu rather than Nobuo Uematsu. It's definitely got some stylistic differences when compared to Uematsu's older, more straightforward work.

Nice pick, Steven!

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July 10, 2012

Thanks the Shums! Oh, thanks for the clarification. Can't be easy to work under the shadow of Uematsu but Hamauzu seems to do a great job.

230340423
July 10, 2012

Yeah, Hamauzu collaborated with Uematsu on much of FFX's soundtrack, only writing a few tracks by himself. Hamauzu flew solo on FF13, though (which I think has some amazing work).

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July 21, 2012

I totally agree with you Steven, that song was always one of my favorite songs in my favorite game of all time. I got chills when it was playing during the Kimahri one on one fight.

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July 23, 2012

Oh man, I know! The Kimahri fight was so epic, yet not because the battle music was loud and frenetic, but because it was almost solemn. Totally changed the tone of the fight.

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