Dylan for Character Generation, because every Dylan protagonist kind of sounds like a PC from OD&D:
Which is true of Tom Waits too, by the way:
Jazz fusion, because you can just totally picture dungeoncrawling to this:
More jazz fusion, because you can just totally picture this being the BGM in a mad archmage's tower (and it's not quite as unlistenable as you might think until 50 seconds in, trust me):
Reggae and dancehall, because of the romanticized vision of rogueishness it routinely delivers:
Scott Walker for Call of Cthulhu, because, well, just listen to it:
Experimental ambient post-pop for SF goodness:
Lebanese jazz fusion for those Al-Qadim moments:
Traditional jazz for dungeoncrawling - tell me you can't picture a group of PCs creeping down tunnels, peering round corners, and searching for traps to these:
Big band, for when a Big Bad Evil Guy appears on the scene:
Russian orthodox choral music, for just about anything really:
Post your own recommendations in the comments!
Ha! I've actually used Walker's Tilt and The Drift for Unknown Armies background music before!
ReplyDeleteYeah, the only time I would probably actually listen to either of those albums is as BGM for horror game. Bit too bleak to listen to for pleasure...
DeleteGenius!
ReplyDeleteSound list ! - Rural Brit-folk was the soundtrack to our Pits & Perils game a few years back, and I used Reynardine as a monster:
ReplyDeletehttp://pitsperilous.blogspot.com/2016/03/the-visual-side-of-pits-perils.html
Never occurred to me before but that's where werefoxes come from, isn't it? Just with the sex reversed for a very male-heavy player base.
DeleteFor SF-horror, I use the Disintegration Loops: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mjnAE5go9dI
ReplyDeleteNice!
DeleteJust heard Dylan's Tangled up in Blue, and, yep - a PC if there ever was one...
ReplyDeleteRachmaninov's Isle of the Dead makes the best forebodings.
ReplyDeleteAges and ages ago I am sure I wrote a blog entry about that but blogger's search function is terrible and I can't now find it.
DeleteI've always associated Metamorphosis Alpha/generation ship stuff with experimental music library tracks:
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/obMWwz1M5NE
Boards of Canada gives me visions of eerie, post-apocalyptic landscapes, worlds overtaken by strange flora, etc.
https://youtu.be/wgbyID-Plqo
Yeah, Boards of Canada is a great shout.
DeleteI have a big stack of german folk that I use for town and "inside the kingdom" music. (I tried Jethro Tull once, but everyone just laughed, the philistines).
ReplyDeleteSonne Hagal - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TfF8kBKVizg
Jannerwein - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u73cnzbAfK4
In the wilderness, I often just throw on some nature sounds, rain, stuff like that to get the atmosphere without being too distracting.
I like all kinds of metal but the fast stuff usually doesn't work at the game table. Some memorable near-TPK dungeon fun has been had while listening to funeral doom though. Try these:
Catacombs - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BM-ohw4RuMs
Aldebaran - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qHMjwsu743k
etc. These days I mainly stick to film and video game soundtracks I suppose, but I'll give some of these a try.
The Revenant is a good soundtrack from recent years.
DeleteObviously, one could prattle for days, but here's one essential:
ReplyDeleteFor the terrible woods, dungeons, faerie and CoC: Cyclobe, The Woods Are Alive With The Smell Of His Coming
https://youtu.be/0WIFvarLFi4
Will have to listen to more of them - not heard of them before.
DeleteAbsolutely nobody ever has thought to pair folk or religious choir music with fantasy. Mr. Noisms how are you so original and brilliant?
ReplyDeletePls write more giant invertebrates
If this is supposed to be an attempt at sarcasm it's a pretty poor one. The title is "underrepresented", not "never paired together".
DeleteWell, I've never known anyone else to know about Yellowman. So shout out for that.
ReplyDelete