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The single was released on December 2, 2009, by For Life Music. "Kimi ga Iru Kara" serves as the theme song for the Japanese release of Final Fantasy XIII, [1] while the B-side "Eternal Love", is also used in the game as an insert song. [2] The other B-side, "Christmas Again", samples a piece of Franz Liszt's work. [3]
The latest Final Fantasy tour is the worldwide Distant Worlds: Music from Final Fantasy tour, which began in Sweden in 2007 and still continues to date. [85] A recording of its first performance was released as an album. Nobuo Uematsu additionally plays with The Black Mages, a band which performs Final Fantasy music in a rock music style. They ...
The music for XIV was composed by Nobuo Uematsu, who was the lead composer for the first ten main Final Fantasy games and a contributor to the Final Fantasy XI and XII soundtracks. [1] Over the two years that XIV was active, several updates were made to the game, which included additional music composed by Masayoshi Soken , Naoshi Mizuta ...
His Final Fantasy music has been described as being able to convey the true emotion of a scene; an example is "Aerith's Theme" from Final Fantasy VII. [1] In an interview with the Nichi Bei Times , Uematsu said "I don't really self-consciously compose music for Japan or for the world, but I do think there is something in my more melancholy ...
Masayoshi Soken (pictured 2016) was the main composer for Final Fantasy XVI. [1] The musical score for the Final Fantasy XVI was primarily composed by Masayoshi Soken. [1] [2] Soken acted as music director and lead composer. Additional tracks were created by Takafumi Imamura, Daiki Ishikawa, Saya Yasaki, and Justin Frieden.
Destructoid ' s Dale North called the music "fantastic, and even more varied than the previous Final Fantasy XIII games". [22] Bradley Hale of Hardcore Gamer was also positive, saying that the music "does an effective job at blending old jams with new ones, with the arrangements of already known songs being interesting, and new tunes coming off ...
The first of these, W/F: Music from Final Fantasy XIII, was released on February 26, while the second, W/F: Music from Final Fantasy XIII Gentle Reveries, was released on June 30. W/F: Music from Final Fantasy XIII is the first vinyl record that Square Enix has ever released. Each album contains eight tracks, four per side.