Music of Final Fantasy III
The music of the video game Final Fantasy III was composed by regular series composer Nobuo Uematsu. Final Fantasy III Original Sound Version, a compilation of almost all of the music in the game, was released by Square Co./NTT Publishing in 1991, and subsequently re-released by NTT Publishing in 1994 and 2004. The soundtrack to the remake of Final Fantasy III for the Nintendo DS, Final Fantasy III Original Soundtrack was released by NTT Publishing in 2006, with revamped versions of the tracks and additional tracks. A vocal arrangement album entitled Final Fantasy III Yūkyū no Kaze Densetsu, or literally Final Fantasy III Legend of the Eternal Wind, contained a selection of musical tracks from the game. The tracks were performed by Nobuo Uematsu and Dido, a duo composed of Michiaki Kato and Shizuru Ohtaka. The album was released by Data M in 1990 and by Polystar in 1994.
The music received positive reviews from critics, and is lauded as one of the best soundtracks of any NES game. Several pieces from the soundtrack remain popular today, and have been performed numerous times in Final Fantasy orchestral concert series such as the Tour de Japon: Music from Final Fantasy concert series and the Distant Worlds - Music from Final Fantasy series. Music from the game has also been published in arranged albums and compilations by Square as well as outside groups.
Final Fantasy III Original Sound Version
Final Fantasy III Original Sound Version | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Soundtrack album by Nobuo Uematsu | |
Released |
July 15, 1991 November 26, 1994 (re-release) October 1, 2004 (re-release) |
Genre | Chiptune, Classical, Electronic, Video game soundtrack |
Length | 54:24 |
Label |
Square Co./NTT Publishing NTT Publishing (re-release) |
Final Fantasy III Original Sound Version is a soundtrack album of video game music from Final Fantasy III. The album contains the musical tracks from the game, composed by Nobuo Uematsu. It spans 44 tracks and covers a duration of 54:24. It was released on July 15, 1991, by Square and NTT Publishing. Final Fantasy III has been described as the game in which Uematsu's musical style "began to take a more definite form". Many of the tracks in the soundtrack use "cascading rhythms" in both the foreground and background sounds, as well as a bass rhythm, pushing the limited sound hardware of the Nintendo Entertainment System further than in Final Fantasy II.[1][2]
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Final Fantasy III: Original Sound Version mix
![]() Short mix of "Jinn, the Fire", "Cute Little Tozas", "The Boundless Ocean", "Elia, the Maiden of Water" and "The Everlasting World" — 115 KB |
Problems playing this file? See media help. |
The tunes range in style, including "jazzy" and "new age", and in tempo from slow, somber pieces to more upbeat rhythms. Including the smaller pieces not included in the original soundtrack, Final Fantasy III contained twice as many pieces as the soundtrack to Final Fantasy II.[3] The original release bears the catalog number N23D-002. It was re-released on November 26, 1994 and again on October 1, 2004 by NTT Publishing under the catalog numbers PSCN-5013 and NTCP-5013, respectively.[1]
Final Fantasy III Original Sound Version was well received by critics. Ben Schweitzer of RPGFan felt that it was "one of the strongest soundtracks" of any NES game, a sentiment that Patrick Gann of RPGFan agreed with. Gann further declared the main theme "Eternal Wind" to "quite possibly be the best world map music" in a video game.[1] Jon Turner of Soundtrack Central felt that, although the sound limitations of the album detracted it in the eyes of many listeners, the album was still well worth the purchase.[4] Dave of Square Enix Music Online, however, disagreed, feeling that, although it was "charming", it was "one of the weaker Final Fantasy albums".[2]
Track listing | |||
---|---|---|---|
No. | Title | Japanese title | Length |
1. | "The Prelude" | プレリュード (Pureryūdo) | 0:48 |
2. | "Crystal Cave ("Cave Where the Crystal Is")" | クリスタルã®ã‚る洞窟 (Kurisutaru no aru DÅkutsu) | 1:40 |
3. | "Battle 1 ~ Fanfare" | ãƒãƒˆãƒ«1~ファンファーレ (Batoru 1 ~ FanfÄre) | 1:53 |
4. | "Crystal Room" | クリスタルルーム(Kurisutaru Rūmu) | 0:28 |
5. | "Opening Theme" | オープニングテーマ (Ōpuningu Tēma) | 1:26 |
6. | "My Home Town ("Hometown Ur")" | 故郷ã®è¡—ウル (KokyÅ no Machi Uru) | 1:43 |
7. | "Eternal Wind" | æ‚ ä¹…ã®é¢¨ (YÅ«kyÅ« no Kaze) | 2:06 |
8. | "Jinn, the Fire ("Djinn's Curse")" | ジンã®å‘ªã„ (Jin no Noroi) | 1:14 |
9. | "The Dungeon" | ダンジョン (Danjon) | 1:07 |
10. | "Return of the Warrior ("Return of the Hero")" | 勇者ã®å¸°é‚„ (YÅ«sha no Kikan) | 1:02 |
11. | "The Way to the Top" | å±±é ‚ã¸ã®é“ (SanchÅ e no Michi) | 0:41 |
12. | "Cute Little Tozas ("Village of Little People, Tozas")" | å°äººã®æ‘トーザス (ShÅnin no Mura TÅzasu) | 1:00 |
13. | "Shrine of Nept" | ãƒãƒ—ト神殿 (Neputo Shinden) | 0:57 |
14. | "Sailing Enterprise ("Enterprise Sails the Ocean")" | エンタープライズ海を行ã (EntÄpuraizu Umi o Yuku) | 1:01 |
15. | "Living Forest" | 生ãã¦ã„る森 (Ikiteiru Mori) | 0:43 |
16. | "Time Remains ("Village of the Ancients")" | å¤ä»£äººã®æ‘ (Kodaijin no Mura) | 1:45 |
17. | "Chocobos! ("Chocobo's Theme")" | ãƒãƒ§ã‚³ãƒœã®ãƒ†ãƒ¼ãƒž (Chokobo no TÄ“ma) | 0:38 |
18. | "Big Chocobo! ("Fat Chocobo Uncovered")" | ã§ã¶ãƒãƒ§ã‚³ãƒœã‚らã‚れる (Debu Chokobo Arawareru) | 0:28 |
19. | "Tower of Owen" | オーエンã®å¡” (ÅŒen no TÅ) | 1:04 |
20. | "Veggies of Geasal ("Gysahl Greens")" | ギザールã®é‡Žèœ (GizÄru no Yasai) | 0:44 |
21. | "Castle of Hain" | ãƒã‚¤ãƒ³ã®åŸŽ (Hain no Shiro) | 1:22 |
22. | "Battle 2" | ãƒãƒˆãƒ«2 (Batoru 2) | 1:39 |
23. | "The Requiem" | レクイエム(Rekuiemu) | 0:37 |
24. | "Go Above the Clouds! ("The Enterprise Flies Through the Sky")" | エンタープライズ空を飛㶠(EntÄpuraizu Sora o Tobu) | 0:44 |
25. | "The Boundless Ocean" | æžœã¦ã—ãªã大海原 (Hateshinaki ÅŒunabara) | 1:17 |
26. | "Elia, the Maiden of Water" | æ°´ã®å·«å¥³ã‚¨ãƒªã‚¢ (Mizu no Miko Eria) | 1:21 |
27. | "Town of Water ("Town of Amur")" | アムルã®è¡— (Amuru no Machi) | 1:06 |
28. | "Let's Play the Piano! ("Piano Practice 1")" | ピアノã®ãŠã‘ã„ã“1 (Piano no Okeiko 1) | 0:11 |
29. | "Let's Play the Piano Again! ("Piano Practice 2")" | ピアノã®ãŠã‘ã„ã“2 (Piano no Okeiko 2) | 0:06 |
30. | "Swift Twist" | スイフト・ツイスト (Suifuto Tsuisuto) | 0:38 |
31. | "Good Ol' Fellows ("Theme of the Four Old Guys")" | 4人組ã˜ã„ã•ã‚“ã®ãƒ†ãƒ¼ãƒž (Yonnin-kumi JÄ«-san no TÄ“ma) | 0:34 |
32. | "In the Covert Town ("Hidden Town of Falgabard")" | éš ã‚Œæ‘ファルガãƒãƒ¼ãƒ‰ (Kakure Mura FarugabÄdo) | 1:00 |
33. | "Salonia ("Giant Metropolis Salonia")" | 巨大都市サãƒãƒ‹ã‚¢ (Kyodai Toshi Saronia) | 1:40 |
34. | "Deep Under the Water ("The Submarine Nautilus")" | 潜水艦ノーãƒãƒ©ã‚¹ (Sensuikan NÅchirasu) | 1:53 |
35. | "Beneath the Horizon ("Undersea Shrine")" | 海底神殿 (Kaitei Shinden) | 1:25 |
36. | "Let Me Know the Truth ("Doga and Unne's Home")" | ドーガã¨ã‚¦ãƒã®é¤¨ (DÅga to Une no Tachi) | 0:55 |
37. | "Lute of Noah" | ノアã®ãƒªãƒ¥ãƒ¼ãƒˆ (Noa no RyÅ«to) | 0:20 |
38. | "Good Morning! ("Unne's Morning Exercise")" | ウãƒã®ä½“æ“ (Une TaisÅ) | 0:30 |
39. | "The Invincible ("Giant Battleship Invincible")" | 巨大戦艦インビンシブル (Kyodai Senkan Inbinshiburu) | 1:24 |
40. | "Forbidden Land ("Forbidden Land Eureka")" | ç¦æ–ã®åœ°ã‚¨ã‚¦ãƒ¬ã‚« (Kindan no Chi Eureka) | 0:49 |
41. | "The Crystal Tower" | クリスタルタワー (Kurisutaru TawÄ) | 1:14 |
42. | "The Dark Crystals" | é—‡ã®ã‚¯ãƒªã‚¹ã‚¿ãƒ« (Yami no Kurisutaru) | 1:43 |
43. | "This is the Last Battle ("Final Struggle to the Death")" | 最後ã®æ»é—˜ (Saigo no ShitÅ) | 2:21 |
44. | "The Everlasting World ("Ending Theme")" | エンディングテーマ (Endingu Tēma) | 6:44 |
Final Fantasy III Yūkyū no Kaze Densetsu
Final Fantasy III Yūkyū no Kaze Densetsu | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Soundtrack album by Nobuo Uematsu | |
Released |
May 25, 1990 March 25, 1994 (re-release) |
Length | 52:32 |
Label |
DataM Polystar (re-release) |
Final Fantasy III YÅ«kyÅ« no Kaze Densetsu (ファイナルファンタジーIII æ‚ ä¹…ã®é¢¨ä¼èª¬ Fainaru FantajÄ« SurÄ« YÅ«kyÅ« no Kaze Densetsu, lit. Final Fantasy III Legend of the Eternal Wind) is an arranged album containing a selection of vocal and arranged musical tracks from the game interspersed with English narration of a story similar to Final Fantasy III. The songs were performed by Nobuo Uematsu and sung by Dido, a duo composed of Michiaki Kato and Shizuru Ohtaka. The tunes have been described as being in the Romantic music style, with a slow feeling to them. The seven tracks of the album spans several genres, including orchestral tracks, tribal themes, and vocal tracks, and cover a duration of 52:32.[5][6] The album was first released on May 25, 1990 by Data M and subsequently re-released on March 25, 1994 by Polystar. The original release bears the catalog number PSCX-1005, and the re-release bears the catalog number PSCR-5252.[5]
Final Fantasy III Yuukyuu no Kaze Densetsu was received positively by critics, with Patrick Gann declaring that it was worth "searching long and hard" for the album.[5] Ben Martin, Jason Strohmaier, and Aaron Lau of Soundtrack Central all agreed, finding the songs to be varied and interesting, though each added that the narration seriously detracted from the album.[7] Dave of Square Enix Music Online also found the narration to be a flaw of the album, but termed it overall to be "a great effort from Nobuo Uematsu".[6]
Track listing | |||
---|---|---|---|
No. | Title | Japanese title | Length |
1. | "The Evil Power of the Underworld (Evil Quickening)" | 邪悪ã®èƒŽå‹• (JÄku no TaidÅ) | 6:39 |
2. | "Following the Wind (Apocalypse of Wind)" | 風ã®å•“示 (Kaze no Keiji) | 8:56 |
3. | "Montage (Wandering Journey)" | 彷徨ã®æ—…è·¯ (HÅkÅ no Tabiji) | 8:49 |
4. | "Their Spiritual Leader (Its Brilliant Radiance)" | ãã®å¤§ã„ãªã‚‹è¼ã (Sono ÅŒinaru Kagayaki) | 9:28 |
5. | "Ebb and Flow (The Balance of Yin and Yang)" | é™°ã¨é™½ã®æ”»é˜² (In to YÅ no KÅbÅ) | 5:14 |
6. | "The Dark Cloud (A Wicked Craving)" | 凶々ã—ã渇望 (KyÅgyÅshiki KatsubÅ) | 4:15 |
7. | "Rebirth (A New World)" | æ–°ãŸãªã‚‹ä¸–ç•Œ (Aratanaru Sekai) | 9:05 |
Final Fantasy III Original Soundtrack
Final Fantasy III Original Soundtrack | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Soundtrack album by Nobuo Uematsu | |
Released | September 20, 2006 |
Genre | Classical, Electronic,[8] Game |
Length |
70:56 (CD) 28:24 (DVD) |
Label | Square Enix |
Final Fantasy III Original Soundtrack is a soundtrack released for the remake of Final Fantasy III for the Nintendo DS. The album contains the original tracks from the game rearranged by Tsuyoshi Sekito and Keiji Kawamori for the DS system, as well as two remixes, one from The Black Mages and the other by Yasuhiro Yamanaka, the synth operator for the soundtrack. The album also included a DVD containing the opening full motion video sequence of the game, a promotional video, and an interview with the game's staff. It was released on September 20, 2006 by Square Enix and bears the catalog numbers SQEX-10076~7. The soundtrack disc contains 61 tracks and covers a duration of 70:56., while the DVD's three tracks have a length of 28:24.[9]
Final Fantasy III Original Soundtrack received mixed reviews from critics, with Patrick Gann declaring that "even if you own the original Famicom version's soundtrack, there is plenty of reason to own this soundtrack alongside it,"[9] while Richard of Square Enix Music Online found it to be a "passable" album, but "mostly forgettable".[3]
Track listing
CD | |||
---|---|---|---|
No. | Title | Japanese title | Length |
1. | "Memory of the Wind ~Legend of the Eternal Wind~" | 風ã®è¿½æ†¶ ï½žæ‚ ä¹…ã®é¢¨ä¼èª¬ï½ž (Kaze no Tsuioku ~YÅ«kyÅ« no Kaze Densetsu~) | 3:01 |
2. | "Prelude" | プレリュード (Pureryūdo) | 0:56 |
3. | "The Cave Where the Crystal Lies" | クリスタルã®ã‚る洞窟 (Kurisutaru no aru DÅkutsu) | 1:13 |
4. | "Battle 1" | ãƒãƒˆãƒ«1 (Batoru 1) | 1:32 |
5. | "Victory" | å‹åˆ© (ShÅri) | 0:32 |
6. | "Crystal Room" | クリスタルルーム(Kurisutaru Rūmu) | 0:32 |
7. | "Opening Theme" | オープニング・テーマ (Ōpuningu Tēma) | 1:52 |
8. | "Hometown of Ur" | 故郷ã®è¡—ウル (KokyÅ no Machi Uru) | 1:29 |
9. | "Eternal Wind" | æ‚ ä¹…ã®é¢¨ (YÅ«kyÅ« no Kaze) | 1:41 |
10. | "Jinn's Curse" | ジンã®å‘ªã„ (Jin no Noroi) | 1:10 |
11. | "Dungeon" | ダンジョン (Danjon) | 0:55 |
12. | "Return of the Hero" | 勇者ã®å¸°é‚„ (YÅ«sha no Kikan) | 0:53 |
13. | "Road to the Summit" | å±±é ‚ã¸ã®é“ (SanchÅ e no Michi) | 1:28 |
14. | "Tozas" | トーザス (TÅzasu) | 1:02 |
15. | "Nepto Shrine" | ãƒãƒ—ト神殿 (Neputo Shinden) | 0:51 |
16. | "Sailing the Enterprise" | エンタープライズ海を行ã (EntÄpuraizu Umi o Yuku) | 1:15 |
17. | "Living Forest" | 生ãã¦ã„る森 (Ikiteiru Mori) | 0:55 |
18. | "Village of the Ancients" | å¤ä»£äººã®æ‘ (Kodaijin no Mura) | 1:51 |
19. | "Chocobo Theme" | ãƒãƒ§ã‚³ãƒœã®ãƒ†ãƒ¼ãƒž (Chokobo no TÄ“ma) | 0:45 |
20. | "Fat Chocobo Appears" | ã§ã¶ãƒãƒ§ã‚³ãƒœã‚らã‚ã‚‹ (Debu Chokbo Arawaru) | 0:54 |
21. | "Tower of Owen" | オーエンã®å¡” (ÅŒen no TÅ) | 0:52 |
22. | "Gishal's Veggies" | ギサールã®é‡Žèœ (GisÄru no Yasai) | 0:37 |
23. | "Hyne's Castle" | ãƒã‚¤ãƒ³ã®åŸŽ (Hain no Shiro) | 1:14 |
24. | "Dangerous Short Music 1" | å±é™ºãªã‚·ãƒ§ãƒ¼ãƒˆãƒŸãƒ¥ãƒ¼ã‚¸ãƒƒã‚¯1 (Kiken na ShÅto MyÅ«jikku 1) | 0:35 |
25. | "Dangerous Short Music 2" | å±é™ºãªã‚·ãƒ§ãƒ¼ãƒˆãƒŸãƒ¥ãƒ¼ã‚¸ãƒƒã‚¯2 (Kiken na ShÅto MyÅ«jikku 2) | 0:33 |
26. | "Dangerous Short Music 3" | å±é™ºãªã‚·ãƒ§ãƒ¼ãƒˆãƒŸãƒ¥ãƒ¼ã‚¸ãƒƒã‚¯3 (Kiken na ShÅto MyÅ«jikku 3) | 0:23 |
27. | "Battle 2" | ãƒãƒˆãƒ«2 (Batoru 2) | 1:44 |
28. | "Requiem" | レクイエム(Rekuiemu) | 0:35 |
29. | "Flying the Enterprise" | エンタープライズ空を飛㶠(EntÄpuraizu Sora o Tobu) | 1:10 |
30. | "The Boundless Ocean" | æžœã¦ã—ãªã大海原 (Hateshinaki ÅŒunabara) | 1:22 |
31. | "Elia, the Maiden of Water" | æ°´ã®å·«å¥³ã‚¨ãƒªã‚¢ (Mizu no Miko Eria) | 2:05 |
32. | "Town of Amur" | アムルã®è¡— (Amuru no Machi) | 1:25 |
33. | "Piano Practice 1" | ピアノã®ãŠã‘ã„ã“1 (Piano no Okeiko 1) | 0:12 |
34. | "Piano Practice 2" | ピアノã®ãŠã‘ã„ã“2 (Piano no Okeiko 2) | 0:07 |
35. | "Swift Twist" | スイフト・ツイスト (Suifuto Tsuisuto) | 0:35 |
36. | "Rest at the Inn" | 宿屋ã§å¯ã‚‹ (Yadoya de Neru) | 0:10 |
37. | "A Comrade Joins" | ä»²é–“ã‚’åŠ ãˆã‚‹ (Nakama o Kuwaeru) | 0:09 |
38. | "A Comrade Leaves" | 仲間ã¨ã®åˆ¥ã‚Œ (Nakama to no Wakare) | 0:09 |
39. | "A Dancer's Dance" | 踊りåã®ãƒ€ãƒ³ã‚¹ (Odoriko no Dansu) | 0:16 |
40. | "Item Get" | アイテムゲット (Aitemu Getto) | 0:07 |
41. | "Garuda Defeated" | ã‚¬ãƒ«ãƒ¼ãƒ€æ’ƒç ´ (GarÅ«da Gekiha) | 0:10 |
42. | "Theme of the Four Old Men" | 4人組ã˜ã„ã•ã‚“ã®ãƒ†ãƒ¼ãƒž (Yonnin-kumi JÄ«-san no TÄ“ma) | 0:51 |
43. | "The Hidden Village of Fargabaad" | éš ã‚Œæ‘ファルガãƒãƒ¼ãƒ‰ (Kakure Mura FarugabÄdo) | 1:24 |
44. | "The Megalopolis of Salonia" | 巨大都市サãƒãƒ‹ã‚¢ (Kyodai Toshi Saronia) | 1:05 |
45. | "The Submarine Nautilus" | 潜水艦ノーãƒãƒ©ã‚¹ (Sensuikan NÅchirasu) | 1:18 |
46. | "Underwater Temple" | 海底神殿 (Kaitei Shinden) | 1:09 |
47. | "Dorga and Unne's Mansion" | ドーガã¨ã‚¦ãƒã®é¤¨ (DÅga to Une no Tachi) | 1:05 |
48. | "Noah's Lute" | ノアã®ãƒªãƒ¥ãƒ¼ãƒˆ (Noa no RyÅ«to) | 0:35 |
49. | "Unne's Exercises" | ウãƒã®ä½“æ“ (Une no TaisÅ) | 0:31 |
50. | "The Huge Battleship Invincible" | 巨大戦艦インビンシブル (Kyodai Senkan Inbinshiburu) | 0:55 |
51. | "The Forbidden Land Eureka" | ç¦æ–ã®åœ°ã‚¨ã‚¦ãƒ¬ã‚« (Kindan no Chi Eureka) | 1:15 |
52. | "Crystal Tower" | クリスタルタワー (Kurisutaru TawÄ) | 1:05 |
53. | "The Dark Crystals" | é—‡ã®ã‚¯ãƒªã‚¹ã‚¿ãƒ« (Yami no Kurisutaru) | 1:03 |
54. | "The Final Battle -1-" | 最後ã®æ»é—˜-1- (Saigo no ShitÅ -1-) | 0:37 |
55. | "The Final Battle -2-" | 最後ã®æ»é—˜-2- (Saigo no ShitÅ -2-) | 0:26 |
56. | "The Final Battle -3-" | 最後ã®æ»é—˜-3- (Saigo no ShitÅ -3-) | 1:22 |
57. | "Ending Theme -1-" | エンディング・テーマ-1- (Endingu Tēma -1-) | 1:24 |
58. | "Ending Theme -2-" | エンディング・テーマ-2- (Endingu Tēma -2-) | 2:50 |
59. | "Ending Theme -3-" | エンディング・テーマ-3- (Endingu Tēma -3-) | 3:44 |
60. | "Eternal Wind -.333 mix-" | æ‚ ä¹…ã®é¢¨ -.333 mix- (YÅ«kyÅ« no Kaze -.333 mix-) | 3:36 |
61. | "The Final Battle -THE BLACK MAGES Ver.-" | 最後ã®æ»é—˜ -THE BLACK MAGES Ver.- (Saigo no ShitÅ -THE BLACK MAGES ver.-) | 4:55 |
DVD | |||
---|---|---|---|
No. | Title | Japanese title | Length |
1. | "Opening Movie" | ÅŒpuningu MÅ«bi | |
2. | "On Sale Promotion Video" | Hatsubaiki PuromÅshon Bideo | |
3. | "Special Interview ~Final Fantasy III Anecdote~" | Supesharu Intabyū ~FINAL FANTASY III Anecdote~ |
Legacy
The Black Mages, a band led by Nobuo Uematsu that arranges music from Final Fantasy video games into a rock music style, have arranged two pieces from Final Fantasy III. These are "The Rocking Grounds" from the album The Skies Above, published in 2004, and "KURAYAMINOKUMO", a remix of "The Final Struggle", from Darkness and Starlight, published in 2008.[10][11] Lyrical versions of "The Boundless Ocean" and "Elia, the Maiden of Water", sung by Risa Ohki, appeared on Final Fantasy: Pray, a compilation album produced by Square.[12] Additionally, lyrical versions of "Eternal Wind" and "Cute Little Tozas", sung by Risa Ohki and Ikuko Noguchi, appeared on Final Fantasy: Love Will Grow.[13]
The music of Final Fantasy III has also appeared in various official concerts and live albums, such as 20020220 music from FINAL FANTASY, a live recording of an orchestra performing music from the series including several pieces from the game.[14] Additionally, "Elia, the Water Maiden" was performed as part of a medley by the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra for the Distant Worlds - Music from Final Fantasy concert tour,[15] while "Eternal Wind" and "Cute Little Tozas" were performed in a medley by the New Japan Philharmonic Orchestra in the Tour de Japon: Music from Final Fantasy concert series.[16] The Black Mages performed "The Final Battle" at the Extra: Hyper Game Music Event 2007 concert in Tokyo on July 7, 2007.[17] Independent but officially licensed releases of Final Fantasy III music have been composed by such groups as Project Majestic Mix, which focuses on arranging video game music.[18] Selections also appear on Japanese remix albums, called dojin music, and on English remixing websites.[19]
References
- 1 2 3 Gann, Patrick; Schweitzer, Ben (2006-06-17). "Final Fantasy III OSV". RPGFan. Archived from the original on 2013-01-16. Retrieved 2008-03-27.
- 1 2 Dave. "Final Fantasy III Original Sound Version". Square Enix Music Online. Archived from the original on 2012-02-08. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
- 1 2 Richard. "Final Fantasy III Original Soundtrack". Square Enix Music Online. Archived from the original on 2012-02-08. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
- ↑ Turner, Jon. "Final Fantasy III Original Sound Version". Soundtrack Central. Archived from the original on 2012-05-04. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
- 1 2 3 Gann, Patrick (2000-05-06). "Final Fantasy III Yūkyū no Kaze Densetsu". RPGFan. Archived from the original on 2013-01-16. Retrieved 2008-03-27.
- 1 2 Dave. "Final Fantasy III Legend of Eternal Wind". Square Enix Music Online. Archived from the original on 2012-02-08. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
- ↑ Lau, Aaron; Martin, Ben; Strohmaier, Jason. "Final Fantasy III Eternal legend of the Wind". Soundtrack Central. Archived from the original on 2012-02-19. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
- ↑ "Nobuo Uematsu / Tsuyoshi Sekito – Final Fantasy I & II: Original Soundtrack". Discogs. Retrieved 7 August 2012.
- 1 2 Gann, Patrick (2006-10-05). "Final Fantasy III OST". RPGFan. Archived from the original on 2013-01-16. Retrieved 2008-03-27.
- ↑ (December 22, 2004). The Black Mages II: The Skies Above. Universal Music. UPCH-1377
- ↑ (March 19, 2008). The Black Mages III: Darkness and Starlight. Sony Music Distribution. DERP-10002
- ↑ (June 25, 1994). Final Fantasy: Pray. NTT Publishing. PSCN-5006
- ↑ (November 25, 1995). Final Fantasy: Love Will Grow. NTT Publishing. PSCN-5041
- ↑ "20020220 - Music from FINAL FANTASY". RPGFan. Archived from the original on 2013-01-20. Retrieved 2007-04-01.
- ↑ "Distant Worlds - Music from Final Fantasy - Album Information". Square Enix Music Online. Archived from the original on 2012-04-09. Retrieved 2008-02-22.
- ↑ "Album Information - Tour de Japon: Music from Final Fantasy DVD". Square Enix Music Online. Archived from the original on 2013-01-20. Retrieved 2008-02-22.
- ↑ "Extra: Hyper Game Music Event 2007". Square Enix Music Online. Archived from the original on 2013-01-20. Retrieved 2010-03-25.
- ↑ Rzeminski, Lucy (2002-07-02). "Project Majestic Mix: A Tribute to Nobuo Uematsu - Gold Edition". RPGFan. Archived from the original on 2012-06-19. Retrieved 2008-08-13.
- ↑ "Game: Final Fantasy III (NES)". OverClocked ReMix. Archived from the original on 2012-11-05. Retrieved 2008-03-27.
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