» » Masato Kouda, Noriyasu Agematsu, Junpei Fujita, Hitoshi Fujima, Daisuke Kikuta, Michiko Naruke - Wild Arms XF Original Soundtrack

Masato Kouda, Noriyasu Agematsu, Junpei Fujita, Hitoshi Fujima, Daisuke Kikuta, Michiko Naruke - Wild Arms XF Original Soundtrack flac mp3 download

Masato Kouda, Noriyasu Agematsu, Junpei Fujita, Hitoshi Fujima, Daisuke Kikuta, Michiko Naruke - Wild Arms XF Original Soundtrack flac mp3 download
Title:
Wild Arms XF Original Soundtrack
Musician:
Masato Kouda
Released:
MP3 album size:
1392 mb
FLAC album size:
1686 mb
Other formats:
DTS VQF WAV AIFF MIDI ADX AA
Rating:
4.8 ✪

Tracklist

1-01 クロスファイア 1:22
1-02 傾城佳刀 4:30
1-03 殺気は頬を熱く叩く 3:10
1-04 真実を濁す澱み 2:50
1-05 町並みを君と 3:09
1-06 陽射しの中で 2:54
1-07 戦場を渡る鳥たち 4:35
1-08 勝ち得たモノと失くしたモノ 0:48
1-09 遠雷に震える 3:11
1-10 欠片でも、希望を胸に 2:59
1-11 CRISIS DIVER 3:10
1-12 デュエルサイン 4:14
1-13 素顔の笑顔 2:28
1-14 言葉より、交わした想い 3:13
1-15 できる女と評判の私 2:48
1-16 戦火が焦がす空の下 3:18
1-17 エレシウスの夜を急ぐ 4:31
1-18 覆う黒雲、悪意の影 2:57
1-19 不安から焦燥へ 3:25
1-20 PRINCESS ARMY 3:09
1-21 本気の嘘(prologue size) 2:05
2-01 幕間に吹く風 0:17
2-02 ファルガイア番外地 2:47
2-03 獣とケモノ、化物の爪 5:01
2-04 何もかもが胡乱 3:09
2-05 無法の奴ら 2:59
2-06 脅威奔流×事態急変 3:06
2-07 信じる心があるからこそ 4:44
2-08 賢人機関<元老院> 3:29
2-09 ジェノサイドバスター 5:05
2-10 溢れるは神秘の力 3:17
2-11 重甲を鎧う雷親父 4:18
2-12 嘘という名の厚化粧 3:07
2-13 描いた未来を画架に掛ける 3:19
2-14 風に望んで、光に誓う 2:28
2-15 鉄の味を噛みしめて 3:26
2-16 Mechanical Dancing Fight 5:16
2-17 受け継がれる意志 2:45
2-18 切り刻まれるほどに真実 4:30
2-19 抗う者たちの軌跡 4:05
2-20 本気の嘘(instrumental) 4:53
3-01 ヒトの胎より産まれた兵器 5:07
3-02 危地へと続く靴音 3:15
3-03 あたたかくて、やわらかくて 2:57
3-04 たしかなものは、きっとある 3:34
3-05 なおも剣風吹き荒ぶ 4:29
3-06 ブランクイーゼル 4:32
3-07 この夜が明けることを疑わない 3:23
3-08 デストラップ包囲網 4:38
3-09 果て無き道に振り返らず 3:14
3-10 美しきは、広がる恐怖 3:18
3-11 加速する惨劇 2:32
3-12 孤独の世界の只中で 4:00
3-13 in the soup 0:47
3-14 建国式典 3:23
3-15 遠い日の、遠いあの場所で 3:06
3-16 幸せを侵し、未来を略奪 5:08
3-17 恐慌領域の赤 3:13
3-18 グレーターディセント 2:28
3-19 嘘すらも濁す澱み 2:51
3-20 PHALANX the Heavy Metal 4:46
3-21 エレンシアに帰る 0:42
4-01 本気の嘘(Ver.true heart) 4:56
4-02 たゆたうは謀略の海に 2:49
4-03 王都に再び陽は昇る 3:27
4-04 螺旋のアンクシャス 3:12
4-05 熱砂纏いし職業凶賊 4:41
4-06 劇的なるもの 3:15
4-07 蟲毒の世界の只中で 3:32
4-08 黄昏の奸雄 4:39
4-09 炎、燃やし尽くして 3:04
4-10 偽りの終焉 3:14
4-11 黒く羽撃く災厄の翼 5:01
4-12 この終わりなき闘争に終止符を<1> 1:16
4-13 この終わりなき闘争に終止符を<2> 0:38
4-14 この終わりなき闘争に終止符を<3> 2:51
4-15 FINAL DISASTER<1> 4:44
4-16 FINAL DISASTER<2> 4:33
4-17 それでも君に明日は見えたか? 1:03
4-18 Perpetual motion 1:34
4-19 永久にこの手を繋げなくても<1> 2:11
4-20 永久にこの手を繋げなくても<2> 1:13
4-21 永久にこの手を繋げなくても<3> 1:11
4-22 永久にこの手を繋げなくても<4> 1:02
4-23 永久にこの手を繋げなくても<5> 1:05
4-24 永久にこの手を繋げなくても<6> 2:06
4-25 誰がために 6:21
4-26 豊穣の地を目指し 3:03
4-27 荒野の果てから 1:45

Credits

  • Composed By – Daisuke Kikuta (tracks: 1-03, 1-11, 2-03, 2-06, 2-07, 2-12, 2-16, 3-09, 4-06, 4-08, 4-10, 4-19~21), Hitoshi Fujima (tracks: 1-07, 1-14, 2-04, 2-09, 2-15, 3-04, 3-07, 3-13, 3-15, 4-02, 4-05, 4-09), Junpei Fujita (tracks: 1-02, 1-20, 2-08, 2-13, 2-14, 2-17, 3-03, 3-05, 3-10, 3-11, 3-16, 3-20, 4-22~24), Masato Kouda (tracks: 1-04~6, 1-09, 1-10, 1-13, 1-15~19, 2-02, 2-05, 2-10, 2-11, 2-18, 2-19, 3-01, 3-02, 3-08, 3-12, 3-14, 3-17~19, 4-03, 4-04, 4-07, 4-12, 4-17, 4-27), Michiko Naruke (tracks: 1-01, 1-08, 2-01), Noriyasu Agematsu (tracks: 1-12, 1-21, 2-20, 3-06, 3-21, 4-1, 4-11, 4-13~16, 4-18, 4-25, 4-26)

Notes

Four disc soundtrack for Wild Arms XF (Wild Arms: Crossfire) for the PlayStation Portable.

Tracklist translation: http://www.vgmdb.com/album/4548

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 4 988001 905493
Reviews:
  • Slowly writer
As a Wild Arms fan, to say I've found the series’ time on the Playstation 2 to be a success would be a lie. Regardless of the fact that each outing on the platform is far from horrible, the reality is that Media.Vision has failed to create a game since the original Wild Arms or its first sequel, Wild Arms 2nd Ignition that has captured my heart and imagination. Even as time goes by, images of Metal Demons plaguing the land and the looming threat of encroaching parallel universes remain frightfully clear in the back of my mind.It was also around this time that my auditory honeymoon with composer Michiko Naruke’s Western flavored scores began to dwindle; the advanced, overgrown sound of Wild Arms 3 scraping the underlying simplicity that brought previous scores alive, replacing it with a textured, almost abstract style that felt like a conscious effort to play complexity catch-up with other composers. While Wild Arms 3 seemed fit to close the lid on the sound that defined the PS1 games, a small reprieve was offered with 2004’s Alter code:F before Wild Arms 4 sealed the deal. Of course, with Naruke falling ill the door was barely shut before it was thrust back open, ushering in yet another chapter in the series’ musical history. Naruke’s exit was a shame, but for a listener whose taste refused to evolve alongside her style it’s a rather moot point. With the reigns in the hands of Masato Kouda and Noriyasu Agematsu the series continued onward, offering a mostly favorable experience but one that did not exactly re-ignite the coals that fueled the flame that is Wild Arms music.Taking such a pessimistic view into account, it’s not hard to imagine one taking such a passive attitude towards the release of the Wild Arms XF Original Soundtrack. As for expectations, there were none outside the presumption it would maintain the direction of its most recent predecessors and little else. Boy was I wrong. Wild Arms XF is not the Second Coming as far as the series’ music is concerned, but I’ll be damned if it isn’t the best soundtrack the series has seen in a good, long time. Perhaps the most surprising aspect was the shift in the genre the game presented, something this listener was completely unaware of until the soundtrack had already made its impression.From the outset, newcomers Junpei Fujita and Hitoshi Fujima waste no time in presenting their re-invigorating take on what makes a Wild Arms battle theme a Wild Arms battle theme. The mellow, laid back melody of Fujita’s “Siren’s Beautiful Sword” is simply enchanting, as is the synergy created by its contrast with the brisk pace of Fujima’s “Birds Soaring Over the Battlefield.” It’s hard to describe how a rather straight edged experience can gel with a more abstract, Sakuraba-like number (e.g., the organ usage) that can turn a corner at a moments notice yet as unlikely as it sounds this interaction is of great importance. Beyond this point, Fujima’s work with scenario and event pieces blends into the background as Fujita continues his stride with battle themes. Dripping with a flavor that is undeniably befitting of a strategy RPG, the subtext of “This Sword Style Rages Still” is reminds one of the perplexing choices to be made as they move their units around the battlefield.Another fresh face, Daisuke Kikuta takes over Agematsu’s job of creating annoying, yet strangely satisfying crisis tracks. “Dramatic Turn” is akin to WA5’s “Emergency Sign” and comes off as an overzealous dance track. You know you should dislike it and that it doesn’t deserve any kind of praise yet it accomplishes its purpose in spite of itself. When it comes to battle themes, Kikuta’s contributions connect in two major ways though they’re really one in the same. The guitar in “Slap the Cheek in a Mood to Kill,” “A Beast, Brute and Monster's Claws” and “Mechanical Dancing Fight” forms the obvious part of the connection, but it’s the idea that these would play when fighting a more formidable opponent as opposed to a run-of-the-mill enemy that makes them successful. The only real hitch is even though Kikuta makes the most use of the guitar, it is used to greater effect by the other composers in a more reserved manner.Being the mainstay composer for the series since Wild Arms 4, it’s sad to see that Masato Kouda has learned nothing new when it comes to town themes. It’s not as if tunes such as “Outrageous Folks” and “In the Sunlight” are bad by any stretch of the imagination, they’re just extremely stereotypical with their cardboard cutout Western feel and no-brainer instrument choice. The fact of the matter is it’s not hard to write such music; what is hard is to write a something that seems stereotypical yet is anything but. Ironically, Kouda succeeds in doing this elsewhere: the drive of “A Quick Night in Elecius” being very reminiscent of what one would expect to hear in a film portraying a tragic and unavoidable battle as the cries of the defeated fill a ominous sky. Taken at face value, the use of such a common motif that is also employed in “Intense Battle Below the Sky” and “The Trail of Those Who Fight” may seem uninspired yet Kouda seduces the listener with its vague sense of familiarity and makes it his own. “Snarling Men Clad in Heavy Armor” makes use of the militaristic clank-like percussion present in “The Trail of Those Who Fight” while cleverly avoiding the main hook while the somber “Slice the Way to the Truth” chooses to embrace it without seeming like a sorry excuse of reprise that’s there to solely inflate the tracklisting.Despite the enjoyment that can be found in the tracks above, whether they present a composer going out on a limb to create something unique is questionable. Experimental endeavors like Kouda’s “Death Trap Siege” and “The Beauty of Spreading Terror” by Fujita step in to answer the call and account for some of XF’s hidden allure. The muffled, almost hypnotic beat of “Death Trap Siege” has a semi-gothic flair to it though describing it in such a manner seems rather inaccurate. In “The Beauty in the Spreading Terror” the distorted synth and bubble-like effect creates a villainous chill that doesn’t break down any barriers but is nevertheless interesting in its implementation.Out of all XF’s contributing composers, it is ultimately Agematsu that becomes the victim of circumstance. It’s hard to give a solid battle theme like “Duel Sign” props and airtime after absorbing the aforementioned pieces by Fujita, Fujima and Kouda. A lot of Agematsu’s shortcomings may stem from the fact that while all the composers manage to take some influence from Naruke, Agematsu has the hardest time taking that resource and making it his own. The prime example of this is “Blank Easel” where Agematsu takes the excellent melody from his vocal theme “Honki no Uso” and can’t resist the urge of slapping the Wild Arms whistle in it, an unflattering cliché as is his revival of “To the End of the Wildness” in “Crossfire.” At times it feels as if Agematsu is a little too concerned with preserving where the series’ music/sound has been rather than taking it where it needs to go. The biggest question concerning Agemetsu’s contribution to the soundtrack is whether or not he was behind the theme that ties the FINAL DISASTER series and “Perpetual motion” together with Kouda’s “Weapons Born from Man's Womb.” Unfortunately, given the spread in the composing credits it’s doubtful we’ll ever know; my money is on Kouda since he is created with the most straightforward and engrossing version.There are numerous other tracks thoughout the Wild Arms XF Original Soundtrack that stand to exemplify how far (and how little) XF has progressed beyond its predecessors. With this in mind, it may seem appropriate to scrutinize some of the negatives more harshly and meet the experience halfway. Still, despite my love/hate relationship with some things Wild Arms, I am simply smitten with some of the material and the lows are no match for the highs. For the first time in ages this fan looks forward to the future of Wild Arms music with a renewed sense of cautious optimism; I hope others will as well.Note: This review was written prior to knowing that Wild Arms XF would be the last game in the franchise... so all the talk about the future of the series music in the last paragraph is moot. However, I thought it was important not to change the review from it's original form.