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“Is this good enough?”

We’ve all been there with our music, art, and work.  That pestering feeling that we haven’t added enough complexity to yield a high-quality result can accidentally turn a great musical idea into a muddled mess.  In this post, I’m going to point out 5 very simple pieces of video game music which have become instantly recognizable and well-loved.

“Prelude,” Final Fantasy series


This theme can be played on a piano with one hand.  Literally.  It’s the same finger pattern four times up the keyboard, and then that same pattern inverted four times on the way back down before you repeat the same thing on a different chord.  Some form of this theme has been in every Final Fantasy game since the original Final Fantasy for NES.

Nest theme, Tiny Wings


The music that plays when your Tiny Wings bird is napping in his nest is a wonderful, dreamy little tune.  It’s a simple keyboard tune that loops over and over, but the keyboard voice, chords, and melody are so damned pleasant it makes me want to sit on the menu screen for as long as possible.  If you have a decent ear and some basic keyboard chops, this tune is simple enough to pick up by ear.

“Dearly Beloved,” Kingdom Hearts series


This Kingdom Hearts theme plays during the title screen and returns as a major theme during key moments in the story.  Every Kingdom Hearts game has had an arrangement of this piece for the title screen, and several performance ensembles have played orchestrated versions for live performance.  The piece is simple enough for a beginner piano student to play, and only utilizes four different chords (IV, V, I, and vi).  A lilting melody and slow, legato chord arpeggios have made this piece a classic that pulls you right into the world of Kingdom Hearts.

“Home,” Clash of Clans


This is a great little piece with several short sections to keep it interesting as it loops, providing a pleasant backdrop to players as they build their war bases, upgrade cannons, and train new troops.  Clash of Clans has frequently sat at the top of iTunes’ Top Grossing games list, yet it only has 3-4 pieces of music in the entire game.  None of these tracks have use high-quality orchestra samples, yet the quality is very good and perfectly matched to the gameplay.

“Grasswalk,” from Plants Vs Zombies


Also known as the “daytime” music, this track is played while you’re defending your lawn from waves of zombies during the day lit levels of the game.  Another perfectly-appropriate piece of music that is extremely pleasant-sounding and matches perfectly with the sound effects for gameplay.  This is probably the most diverse/complex piece of music in this list, but this complexity is accomplished by an intelligent combination of smaller, simple sections and musical ideas – just like the previous example from Clash of Clans.

The Point?  Simple video game music can be AMAZING!

These pieces are all examples of composers nailing the fundamentals of music composition.  Effective melodies, basic chord progressions, simplistic instrumentation choices – it’s all there.  While I fought hard against completing simple composition exercises back in college with such objections as “This exercise is too boring!” or “Why can’t I write what I want to write?”, I ended up shooting myself in the foot because I was too afraid to struggle through the fundamentals.  If you can write a solid melody and know how to use chord theory effectively, those skills don’t go away and can be applied to your more complex compositions later on.

At the end of the day, nothing can beat simple-yet-intelligent choices.  Simple chord progressions are pleasing to the ears, and a well-conceived melody can be enough to make a great piece of music that elevates the gameplay.  If you find yourself toiling over a piece of music, make sure you have the basics in place and ask someone else to give it a listen – you might be overcomplicating it.  Everyone has trouble seeing the forrest through the trees sometimes, so take a minute to ask yourself – “Am I over-thinking my music?”

Know another piece of simple-yet-great video game music?  Share it in the comments below!


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