So. Jocelyn, Paul, and myself saw the Saturday showing of Dear Friends at the Detroit Orchestra Hall. A quick review:
This is, of course, the best party you can have in
Final Fantasy 6. (The discerning
Final Fantasy-er will note that the characters are even aligned in accordance to Row protection.) This formation assumes that Edgar has the chainsaw and Terra and Celes have their black and white magic libraries heavily supplemented, natch.
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Dear Friends is kind of like the aforementioned party formation in a wacky, nerd-gamer kind of way — which is say, erm, something fairly inexplicable, so I’ll just turn the whole thing around and say that the concert was
absolutely phenomenal. TRUTH.
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The original orchestral arrangements such as
Liberi Fatali and
One-Winged Angel were ever more spectacular with the 70-piece orchestra and 30-piece choir, and the more game-oriented themes were given terrific arrangements to draw them beyond the comparitively repetitive and bleepy-boop sound of the game originals.
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Jocelyn wrote about a similar impression of the concert, as well as supplying one of the tunes! Great find; the one problem with the concert series is that they haven’t released an album of the music. This is enough to make me want to kill a man. Hopefully Squeenix will announce something soon — and my bone saw will continue to be clean.
For the curious, the concert’s playlist:
- Liberi Fatali [with the Stoney Creek High School Chamber Singers, who were terrific]
- To Zanarkand
- Terra’s Theme
- Theme of Love
- Dear Friends
- Vamo’alla Flamenco
- Love Grows
- INTERMISSION! Consumed at the bar: one shot of Grey Goose vodka (to say that I did, naturally), and a Heineken
- Aeris’ Theme
- You’re Not Alone
- Ronfaure
- Final Fantasy I-III Medley [which includes the classic Chocobo theme! hooray!]
- Cloud Smiles [from Final Fantasy: Advent Children]
- Final Fantasy [aka the Prologue theme]
- First Encore: One-Winged Angel
- Second Encore: One-Winged Angel [yep]
While there was not a lackluster song in the bunch — Liberi Fatali had all the grandeur and sweep of the game’s original orchestra times about a billion for being live; Zanarkand still had the gorgeous piano plus 20 violins behind it; the melody of Terra’s Theme was very thankfully given to the woodwinds, but swept through all the sections; and the Prologue theme was as adventurous and soaring as I’ve ever heard it — the big winner in my mind for the night was You’re Not Alone, a relatively unheard-of song from the easily forgettable
Final Fantasy 9.
The original is not bad in the least, but the orchestral live arrangement took the simple but memorable melody and spread it among all the sections, bouncing it from violins to oboe to as a soaring trumpet solo. An amazing arrangement to a song that deserved it.
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Also surprising was the dual encore of One-Winged Angel. I mean, I knew
Final Fantasy 7 was popular, but enough to get One-Winged Angel out there twice with people cheering whenever Sephiroth showed his mug on the LCD screens above the stage? Nutty. Not that I’m complaining about the double-dosage of One-Winged Angel; in all honesty, it was the most epic and powerful piece of the show, and a hell of a way to end the night.
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So, in conclusion: if another boring Saturday night was, say, Ultros, and Dear Friends was the party of Celes — er, wait, is this the Opera House? — um, Edgar, Sabin, and er, whoever…Cyan, yes. Yes. Ultros would be DEAD, and on the first time you meet him, too. Game logic aside and all that.
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I’d also like to mention that this is a very poor time to go missing my
FF7 discs and for all the nearby stores to not have
Final Fantasy: Dawn of Souls in stock. Maybe I’m feeling sassy enough to play a little
FF8, though…
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