I haven't played all Ace Attorney games, but I have heard the original 2001 suspense theme is almost in every game and this one is, technically, the same, but remixed. Which I am glad because the theme has that "scary tension" on what is going to happen and this also affects the antagonist characters.
@@texanman7191 This is very similar to the 2001 theme, but I wouldn't call it a remix. The melody isn't 1:1 except for the very first repeating note. A remix would be Suspense 2013 from Dual Destinies.
@@marcosseverini5297 yeah, because we were at Naruhodou's centric at that time, so we wouldn't have no idea *that person* tampered the crime scene while Naruhodou was away. And it's for good
sorry to be so offtopic but does anyone know of a tool to get back into an Instagram account? I was stupid lost the account password. I love any tricks you can offer me!
@Nasir Roman thanks so much for your reply. I got to the site thru google and im in the hacking process atm. I see it takes a while so I will get back to you later with my results.
this theme, right in the middle of case 1, is when i knew for a fact this was going to be an incredible Ace Attorney. the writing, the directing, and this music, it reached peak AA immediately. Shu Takumi is a true genius
Chronicles is definitely the pinnacle of AA and shu takumi, what worries me is whether, if we get a new AA game, it will manage to top those two games.
Ryunosuke: My lord, I think the defence can answer to this riddle Judge: Hmmmm.... [Hits the table with the hammer] Judge: Very well then, but you will have only one opportunity Ryonosuke: [Lays his hands on the desk] One....Opportunity? Judge: This trial has been long enough. So, if none of the counsels present evidence, I will be forced to deliver my veredict right now. Van Zieks: .... Susato: Naruhodo-san, I know you can do it. I believe in you. Ryunosuke: Thank you Susato-san, I truly appreciate your words. Ryunosuke: [Slaps his face] (Alright Ryunosuke, I can't give up. All the evidence we have collected points to *that person*) Judge: Counsel for the defence, tell us, *who is the culprit of farting in this room?*
@@SA-vl9dr Well that's not canon, but I was thinking, if Phoenix's ancestor is a Naruhodo, but not Wright. If they localized the game, then I'd like to think that Ryunosuke had a son/daughter (most likely daughter), who traveled from Japan to America, and met and married someone, with the name Wright. And that's how Phoenix Wright! (I just made up, it's not offical let alone canon)
@@jesuschrist.official yes , Ryunosuke's son or grandson moves to america and takes up the surname Wright and it is cannon that Ryuunosuke is Phoenix's Great Great Grandfather or something
I actually did an analysis of this song, may as well post it! (Spoiler-free!) I went through & listened to all of the suspense themes in Ace Attorney, even for the games I've never played. I'd have to think about it & listen to the other ones a little more to say it definitively, but other than some of the ones from the Miles Edgeworth: Investigations games, this is the best one to date. - Every Suspense theme in Ace Attorney starts quiet, a useful staple. The learning of new information is almost never as heavy as the revelations it carries. The double bass/cello chords are beautifully consistent, and then those Japanese style drums come into the mix and the energy is through the roof. The violin follows shortly after. It's deep and heavy for an instrument that's often so light, and it straight up sounds like the lurch of anticipation you feel in your stomach when the stakes are high. Then somehow they bring a triangle into it for a little bit & it sounds amazing because it's so consistent and bright. Then the song arrives at its proverbial climax, with the introduction of the viola. Again the notes are consistent, but all over the place, rising & falling like a nervous lawyer's fluttery breaths, doing his best to defend his client. But song's magnificence is apparent in not only each layer of instrumentation, but the layering as a whole. - All throughout the song until it loops back to its beginning, the double bass/cello, drums, & violin are still playing ever so consistently, but grow more dynamic as the song does. The double bass starts to dip underneath everything else, the lamenting-sounds of the violin are elongated and almost sound forlorn. The cello/bass and violin actually alternate, which is a genius touch I didn't notice until recently. Even if the specific use of the instruments doesn't symbolize anything, the ways they use already existing instruments can make it feel just as unique and interesting. - But the drums never change. Typically a drum beat in a song like this would represent the tense heartbeat of the player, but the Japanese-style drums aren't quite like that, opting for five (and the occasional seven) beats as opposed to four. While this is irregular, it's also consistent. It's still a heartbeat. The ever-chugging train keeps the song and the story moving all throughout. - I also like the fact that the song is in a Japanese style, every character the player plays as is Japanese, and no matter where a murder takes place, what country, what city, what time, a Japanese person still thinks in the way they always do. The speed also plays a large part in it, obviously. To keep the energy of a song high, it has to be fast and keep you engaged. A slower song is better for slower revelations, and since this song already utilizes its layering perfectly, anything but a fast tempo would be an insult to the song, and to the message itself. - Ultimately the building of instruments one on top of another is what pulls the storytelling of this piece of music out of the forge. The simple fact that instruments are introduced and play atop one another represents the layering of the story, the rising action, and the many, MANY facets to the murder you're solving. The clues, the witnesses, the investigations, the prosecutor, the jurors, it's absolute chaos during the song, and that's what's so perfect about it. The forlorn violin, the fluttery viola, the foreboding bass/cello, the pounding but elegant drums, and even the fleeting triangle paint a brilliantly tense song that keeps the energy high.
As much as I like this theme, it sounds *way* better in 0.75x speed, in a manner that its a lot more suspenseful. At least one of the advantages of playing it on a laggy Citra
I like how they do that with other tracks with their moderato and allegro versions of the cross-examination theme. To hear the same track at an increased tempo and slight variation adds all this new urgency and amazing tension to the original slower track, heightening the drama of the current situation to great lengths :)
The final form of this classic. The original user to solely rely on its drum beats and that's totally gone for the Violin. With a whole melody backing and percussion tapping to boot, they already polished this track to the highest level.
Is it just me, or can you hear quiet bleeps at 1:01 to 1:04 that sound like a low health warning? Almost to drive home to players that 'you're really in it deep now'.
I’m SO close! I just need a few more hours…. And I can almost taste it. DO YOU REALLY THINK ILL JUST GIVE IT UP?!?!?!? Shamspeare really went hard when he truly lost his sh@t
*Playing violin agressively*
*Plays the viola slowly*
*Plays the Cello like my life depends on it*
@@thehotdogman9317 *Confront the pawnbroker*
@@dbclass4075 "Leave me, Mr. Naruhodou! Go, after them!"
@@abucketoftears tries to chase them without realising he his chasing 2 men with a gun
Best suspense theme, hands down. Gets me riled up every time.
Agreed, for me, I would put this on first place, Apollo's suspense on 2nd, and the regular one (including 2013 and 2016), 3rd place.
Crisis of Fate is better
@@tantris2876 that's a fate theme, while this one is called suspense
@@Zuulon2107 Same thing, same vibe. I don’t understand why you want to separate them.
@@tantris2876how its used in-game is different
This is what happens when Ace Attorney finally makes a new suspense team, it actually sounds really tense yet awesome listening to this
That moment in case 3 when naruhodo starts to question himself if mcgilded is really innocent or not
>>>>>
So basically the old suspense theme but done with a more orchestral mood.
I like it!
Herr forehead
Achtung, Baby! Today we play it my way!
I haven't played all Ace Attorney games, but I have heard the original 2001 suspense theme is almost in every game and this one is, technically, the same, but remixed.
Which I am glad because the theme has that "scary tension" on what is going to happen and this also affects the antagonist characters.
@@texanman7191 This is very similar to the 2001 theme, but I wouldn't call it a remix. The melody isn't 1:1 except for the very first repeating note. A remix would be Suspense 2013 from Dual Destinies.
The Great Ace Attorney
The Great Stray
The Great Verdict
The Great Court
The Great Patience The One Who Wrote The Tracks Titles Had
The Great Turnabout
A Deadly Class Trial
@@KJ7QLV Darn, you were faster
The Great Cross Examination
@@KJ7QLV the great buffoon
"Mr. SHOLMES!"
"Leave me, Mr. Naruhodou! Go, after them!"
At the time, no one knew of the consequences of such an action.
@@marcosseverini5297 yeah, because we were at Naruhodou's centric at that time, so we wouldn't have no idea *that person* tampered the crime scene while Naruhodou was away. And it's for good
@@abucketoftears Spoiler
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.
.
.
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That feeling when a machine to create cat flaps completely changes the details of the case.
@@xela4183 the HORROR
@@xela4183 The moment the cat flap maker showed up,I instantly remembered the little door,it had to have had something to do with it,lo and behold.
Listen to this in the background while you do literally anything else makes it like 10 times more intense
True!
a-
It's my "you have 10 minutes left in your shift" music
I'm writing a paper and I can't concentrate with this track, I just get in the zone and thing about how much of a b*tch Jezaille Brett is
0:26 THAT LITTLE RIFF IS SO GOOD
''As the judge put it, your opinion was nothing more than a formality.''
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
@@alifakbar4232 LAKUBALA
sorry to be so offtopic but does anyone know of a tool to get back into an Instagram account?
I was stupid lost the account password. I love any tricks you can offer me!
@Vihaan Ayaan Instablaster :)
@Nasir Roman thanks so much for your reply. I got to the site thru google and im in the hacking process atm.
I see it takes a while so I will get back to you later with my results.
this theme, right in the middle of case 1, is when i knew for a fact this was going to be an incredible Ace Attorney. the writing, the directing, and this music, it reached peak AA immediately. Shu Takumi is a true genius
Chronicles is definitely the pinnacle of AA and shu takumi, what worries me is whether, if we get a new AA game, it will manage to top those two games.
Ryunosuke: My lord, I think the defence can answer to this riddle
Judge: Hmmmm....
[Hits the table with the hammer]
Judge: Very well then, but you will have only one opportunity
Ryonosuke: [Lays his hands on the desk] One....Opportunity?
Judge: This trial has been long enough. So, if none of the counsels present evidence, I will be forced to deliver my veredict right now.
Van Zieks: ....
Susato: Naruhodo-san, I know you can do it. I believe in you.
Ryunosuke: Thank you Susato-san, I truly appreciate your words.
Ryunosuke: [Slaps his face] (Alright Ryunosuke, I can't give up. All the evidence we have collected points to *that person*)
Judge: Counsel for the defence, tell us, *who is the culprit of farting in this room?*
When a Payne has a desk-slam animation.
0:14 people cutting onions be like
I'm high and you made me zone out thinking this was onion chopping music for the entire 15 minutes of the damn video lol
😭
They added another layer onto the original suspense theme, and it works SO WELL
nice to hear some of suspense 2001 in this, can’t wait to finally get around to playing this
well uh... yeah just wait for july.
Sholmes: My violin is missing!
The violin band:
You can literally hear the violin calling vs. call-back in this version, just like the fighting in the court.
I'm only at case three and this is hands down my favourite song
Listened to this for a while as I hiked. It was nice!
The Great Bridge to the Turnabout.
@@NightmareMoon9964 fall into the great river, magicemperor
you know you want to save that spirit medium girl there
The Ancestor of the legendary Mr. Wright!
I was thinking.
In the japanese version phoenix Wright's lastname is naruhodou like ryunosuke so phoenix really is related to ryunosuke i guess
@@sedelonx5138 it is canon , Ryuunosuke Naruhodou is Phoenix's (Ryuichi Naruhodou) Ancestor
@@SA-vl9dr ooooooh
@@SA-vl9dr Well that's not canon, but I was thinking, if Phoenix's ancestor is a Naruhodo, but not Wright. If they localized the game, then I'd like to think that Ryunosuke had a son/daughter (most likely daughter), who traveled from Japan to America, and met and married someone, with the name Wright. And that's how Phoenix Wright! (I just made up, it's not offical let alone canon)
@@jesuschrist.official yes , Ryunosuke's son or grandson moves to america and takes up the surname Wright and it is cannon that Ryuunosuke is Phoenix's Great Great Grandfather or something
Gregson: HOLD IT-
van zieks: OBJECTION, you have no power here inspector
Susato-san: *_K A Z U M A - S A M A !_*
"So where were the accused and the victim?"
*Floor plan opens*
*Sweating intensifies*
I actually did an analysis of this song, may as well post it! (Spoiler-free!)
I went through & listened to all of the suspense themes in Ace Attorney, even for the games I've never played. I'd have to think about it & listen to the other ones a little more to say it definitively, but other than some of the ones from the Miles Edgeworth: Investigations games, this is the best one to date.
-
Every Suspense theme in Ace Attorney starts quiet, a useful staple. The learning of new information is almost never as heavy as the revelations it carries. The double bass/cello chords are beautifully consistent, and then those Japanese style drums come into the mix and the energy is through the roof. The violin follows shortly after. It's deep and heavy for an instrument that's often so light, and it straight up sounds like the lurch of anticipation you feel in your stomach when the stakes are high. Then somehow they bring a triangle into it for a little bit & it sounds amazing because it's so consistent and bright. Then the song arrives at its proverbial climax, with the introduction of the viola. Again the notes are consistent, but all over the place, rising & falling like a nervous lawyer's fluttery breaths, doing his best to defend his client. But song's magnificence is apparent in not only each layer of instrumentation, but the layering as a whole.
-
All throughout the song until it loops back to its beginning, the double bass/cello, drums, & violin are still playing ever so consistently, but grow more dynamic as the song does. The double bass starts to dip underneath everything else, the lamenting-sounds of the violin are elongated and almost sound forlorn. The cello/bass and violin actually alternate, which is a genius touch I didn't notice until recently. Even if the specific use of the instruments doesn't symbolize anything, the ways they use already existing instruments can make it feel just as unique and interesting.
-
But the drums never change. Typically a drum beat in a song like this would represent the tense heartbeat of the player, but the Japanese-style drums aren't quite like that, opting for five (and the occasional seven) beats as opposed to four. While this is irregular, it's also consistent. It's still a heartbeat. The ever-chugging train keeps the song and the story moving all throughout.
-
I also like the fact that the song is in a Japanese style, every character the player plays as is Japanese, and no matter where a murder takes place, what country, what city, what time, a Japanese person still thinks in the way they always do. The speed also plays a large part in it, obviously. To keep the energy of a song high, it has to be fast and keep you engaged. A slower song is better for slower revelations, and since this song already utilizes its layering perfectly, anything but a fast tempo would be an insult to the song, and to the message itself.
-
Ultimately the building of instruments one on top of another is what pulls the storytelling of this piece of music out of the forge. The simple fact that instruments are introduced and play atop one another represents the layering of the story, the rising action, and the many, MANY facets to the murder you're solving. The clues, the witnesses, the investigations, the prosecutor, the jurors, it's absolute chaos during the song, and that's what's so perfect about it. The forlorn violin, the fluttery viola, the foreboding bass/cello, the pounding but elegant drums, and even the fleeting triangle paint a brilliantly tense song that keeps the energy high.
What about Part One?
I absolutely love this analysis
_Suspenseful Violins Intensify_
And viola (assuming Wagahai haven't played with it yet).
The Great Soundtrack
As much as I like this theme, it sounds *way* better in 0.75x speed, in a manner that its a lot more suspenseful. At least one of the advantages of playing it on a laggy Citra
I like how they do that with other tracks with their moderato and allegro versions of the cross-examination theme. To hear the same track at an increased tempo and slight variation adds all this new urgency and amazing tension to the original slower track, heightening the drama of the current situation to great lengths :)
it sounds like continuously slicing guitar strings, hell no! I'll take 1x
dare i say i like this one better than the regular ace attorney one...
Def best suspense in the entire franchise
The final form of this classic.
The original user to solely rely on its drum beats and that's totally gone for the Violin.
With a whole melody backing and percussion tapping to boot, they already polished this track to the highest level.
I like this one more
*thinking intensifies*
I feel japanese vibe in this awesome ost
All I gotta say is this 1996-2021
Great Music
When things are about to get real:
Is it just me, or can you hear quiet bleeps at 1:01 to 1:04 that sound like a low health warning? Almost to drive home to players that 'you're really in it deep now'.
I’m SO close! I just need a few more hours…. And I can almost taste it. DO YOU REALLY THINK ILL JUST GIVE IT UP?!?!?!?
Shamspeare really went hard when he truly lost his sh@t
You're an order of magnitude out, madam. Five hundred pounds... A YEAR!
Great music
0:40
0:40-1:00
Almost sounds like could be music from another game
When a RUclipsr scandal goes massive... (Mr. Beast)
And what if this is my alarm sound
Objection!
I need to know, what is the wooden 'tlock' sound that happens? It's like a stick?
wooden sticks/blocks.
0:12 0:26