I think the woodsman is by far the most tragic character in the show, imagine spending years (maybe decades), keeping the light of what you think is your loved one, walking alone looking desperately for one kind of tree to chop to keep them alive, only to know after so much that the lantern you have been keeping alive is actually the life of the person that took the person you loved away, and also knowing that you have been actually chopping down the souls of lost people and using it as oil, he passed through so much that it feels nice to know that he found peace in the end.
For those who don't know, Samuel Ramey (who voices the beast) is a VERY famous bass-baritone opera singer, who's recorded many many times before, including a Grammy Award-winning recording of Mozart's Marriage of Figaro on Decca, conducted by Sir Georg Solti. Edit: I also just discovered that he's the most recorded bass in history, so...yeah!
Ironically he almost always plays bad guys by his own admission, including Satan/other Satan-like figures. So this is just his nornal routine. Even crazier that he sung this when he was 72.
Come wayward Souls, That wander through the darkness, There is a light for the lost and the meek. Sorrow and fear, Are easily forgotten, When you submit to the soil of the earth. Grow, tiny seed, you are gone to the tree. Rise, 'til your leaves fill the sky, until your sighs fill the air in the night. Lift your mighty limbs, and give braise to the fire.
I feel like if I heard this while lost in the woods, I really would just give into whatever force was trying to take me. It’s like a siren song for the hopeless.
Not to sound edgy, but i must admit, this is my comfort song, just as The beast character himself is. Since i read someone associating him with "suicide", i feel kinda at peace listening to this. Especially when i'm a person scared of death, and i do sometimes have these "dark" thoughts. When i think of this song, it gaves me hope that there's someone who will greet me at the end, telling me that there's a light for the lost and the meek. All the time i just don't feel at peace with my own mind, even at home so... Thanks for coming to my ted talk 😭
@@shirouchi_mfs much of the show was about not giving into dark temptations solely because it would be easier than confronting the issue or accepting what is lost. Idk what ur story is or why u feel that way. But it not only makes sense that u would feel that way about the beast but also recognize it for what it is and represents.
The Beast is an allegory for suicide. Specifically a reference to The Forest of Suicides from Dantes Inferno - this being the poem that Over The Garden Wall is based off of. That's why he is a tree, because in the poem those who die by "abandoning all hope" have their souls tossed aside into the forest, and from their soul a tree grows.
@@SodaNaranja it is, he even uses the same phrases when talking to his brother and there's a version of potatoes and molasses sung to this same tune, but in latin Although you could interpret it as the fate of other lost children, as it does sound like a chorus
the first half of the song is the beast telling people to submit and give up hope. and the second part is the people who have submitted to the beast. i think the beast is supposed to represent the devil
@@SodaNaranja The children singing in this version are not Greg, but are former tree victims, the repeated part after Potatus et Molassus includes Greg in the crowd, this one does not.
Just having the fact that this song gives away tons of clues of what happens in the series for instance take this for example. "Sorrow and fear~ are easily forgotten~" *Meaning that the beast feeds off of those emotions.*
@@cosmopoiesecriandomundos7446 They said it in the storyline I believe, the beast feeds off of your sorrow or fear. (Haven't watched the show in a while)
@@dxrkerrxses he turns you into an edelwood tree for his lantern. when he says "sorrow and fear are easily forgotten" he's convincing you to lose hope and technically commit suicide
This song is so haunting and meaningful within the show. In it, The Beast is not some sniveling, venal creature, it sings along in a proud barotone. Death and darkness are not weak things sniveling in your ear, they are full and proud and confident and beckoning, almost inviting. Add in the children, which are probably The Beast's faces, or the edelwood trees, singing, and wow. This song really does feel like that if you heard it in the woods, you would just follow The Beast into the darkness.
That part was so dark This show was a masterpiece And so hauntingly dark Even the parts without the beast have this.....feeling of being just a bit off that makes it unsettleing Like the dream episode of adventure time Or the adventure time episode with the deer
I saw someone say that it would be interesting if Wirt and Greg didn't have memories of The Unknown when they crossed back over, but that Wirt would have an unexplainable fear of opera whenever he hears it afterwards.
A few years ago, before my sister went away to college and we were still able to spend Halloweens together, we compiled a Spotify playlist of songs to play around Halloween. Among the songs, she added "Come Wayward Souls." One evening when we were playing the playlist, this song came up. I had never seen OTGW before or heard this song, but I was taken aback by the eeriness and beauty of it and asked her what it was. This song is a big part of the reason I ended up discovering OTGW for myself. It will now be my second Halloween spent without my sister, but it's become a tradition for me to watch this series at least once every October.
My brain forgot that you said she went away to college at the start and by the end I was about to offer my condolences, until I realized I was just being dumb.
The part where the children start singing was personally the most powerful SECOND for me in the whole show. Hearing the beast's depressing tune as the woodsman descends into the woods, the lights slowly deeming until the background is black. We've heard the beast singing in the over the garden wall prior, but this time, like the role of the beast itself in the show, it's not in the background. It's the focus. And only then does it dawn how morbid this creature actually is, and how grim is the situation. And then, has the tone is in true darkness, the children start to sing. And we see Greg, who was a voice of hope from the beggining, even when things were ridiculously dangerous, and even when it felt like he is absolutely oblivious, give up. And he doesn't begin to give up, he's dying. Furthermore, just to make the image more painful, this is the one part of the song where the composition of the song and the scene make us remember what hope we had. The only light on screen is shining on Greg. And the voice of the children causes the melody to shift a couple octaves upwards, making the voice of the beast that much clearer. No matter how much years passed since I saw that final episode, I am still nearly at tears whenever this scene hits. And it's horrfiyingly beautiful.
Lyrics: Come wayward Souls, That wander through the darkness, There is a light for the lost and the meek. Sorrow and fear, Are easily forgotten, When you submit to the soil of the earth. Chorus: Grow, tiny seed, you are gone to the tree. Rise, 'til your leaves fill the sky, until your sighs fill the air in the night. Lift your mighty limbs, and give praise to the fire.
This sounds like something from Little Nightmares II, with a young child facing off against a pure cold-blooded monstrosity, backed by the souls of all that fell at the beasts hands. It's beautifully sad, fighting to the last soul.
As a subtle way to indicate the Beast is a Satanic archetype, they gave this song the same cadence as O Holy Night. What better way to say "this guy is the devil" than making his theme an evil version of a hymn?
@@ArcherBro - the whole show occupies this limbo between the familiar and the unfamiliar; the known and the unknown. Stories like the madman who falls in love with a portrait, or paintings like the Animal School. Even the brothers' fall into a river bank evokes images of an 'uncanny valley.' And it doesn't stop with the visuals - every track of the score is eerily familiar to something you've heard before, but slightly tainted. Like here, with O' Holy Night, or The Fight is Over with T-Rex's Ballroooms of Mars. Phenomenal show.
@@ArcherBro - I realise another aspect of the uncannyness every day. Even with it being set in The Woods - all the trees looking so familiar, yet you've never passed them before. I've never associated fear of the unknown (i.e. the uncanny) with the fear of being lost in the woods.
If anything I think he’s most likely a lich. The lantern is his phylactery, and he feeds on souls that are fed to it. But I agree it’s better when it is ambiguous on what he is. That is infinitely more interesting than any concrete answer
Samuel Ramey is so incredible, his voice suits villain characters so incredibly and his voice is so beautiful. Though not everyone likes or appreciates opera in general 🤷
Regret for me, as somone that's once thought of giving up and letting go via walking in front of a train; I deeply sympathize for those that are lost. Wish I could help them find their way back, back into better forests and meadows
Personnel: Written by Brandon Armstrong, Joshua Kaufman, Patrick McHale, and Justin Rubenstein Samuel Ramey: Bass Vocals Audio Clayton: Vocals, Backing Vocals Austin Hoke: String Quartet Joshua Kaufman: Piano
It’s Samuel Ramey, an opera singer known for his villainous roles. In other words, EXACTLY whom you’d want to play a villain who can bend people to his will by singing.
o holy night, the stars are brightly shining it is the time of our dear saviours birth long lay the world in sin and error pining 'til he appeared and the soul felt it's worth interesting adaptation of the melody, I love it
I watched the show just recently and I thought it was weird that this song sounds familair, then I learned that the songs tune (the vocals) match with o holy night which makes it way much more creepier… another creepier thing is that the child vocals sound a lot like greg’s voice (spoiler) which also symbolizes greg falling for the beast’s trick and almost becomes a Elwood tree ….
If I ever heard this lost in the woods I'd yell to the darkness: I hear you beast, let us see who soul is lost tonight. you hear me! Put me down , or give me reason to rise. XD
“I DIDNT KNOW THATS WHERE THE ADLEWOODS CAME FROM?!!!”
“Would that have mattered?”
"would you really let your daughters flame burn out?"
"She wouldn't want this!"
I think the woodsman is by far the most tragic character in the show, imagine spending years (maybe decades), keeping the light of what you think is your loved one, walking alone looking desperately for one kind of tree to chop to keep them alive, only to know after so much that the lantern you have been keeping alive is actually the life of the person that took the person you loved away, and also knowing that you have been actually chopping down the souls of lost people and using it as oil, he passed through so much that it feels nice to know that he found peace in the end.
peace huh? mfs never gonna sleep again
And the most frightening thing is that his daughter was actually alive, so the situation is even more tragic, but fortunately he met her in the end
@@Nidflea i mean, theres a chance that the guy died, and he is in an afterlife meeting his daughter
@@KopieOG the unknown is an afterlife, prugratory
@@eksprolek2924 thats just a theory
This has got to be thr best cartoon I've ever watched. That's a rock fact.
Greg, what cartoon are you talking about? I think you need some sleep, Greg.
@@hasanelrabih283 over the garden wall is the cartoon lol what are you talking about
@@hasanelrabih283 somebody's pressed
@@hasanelrabih283 Hehehehe. ^^
@SUBbetter Still better.
I like to hear the children’s chorus as the beast singing too, but with the voices of the children who’ve fed the lantern instead of his own.
That's unbelievably creepy and I love it
For those who don't know, Samuel Ramey (who voices the beast) is a VERY famous bass-baritone opera singer, who's recorded many many times before, including a Grammy Award-winning recording of Mozart's Marriage of Figaro on Decca, conducted by Sir Georg Solti.
Edit: I also just discovered that he's the most recorded bass in history, so...yeah!
i’m doing an opera with the legend in like 4 days🫡
@@ramonmosate2209 Cool! What opera?
@@RequiemAeternam01he probably isn't
Ironically he almost always plays bad guys by his own admission, including Satan/other Satan-like figures. So this is just his nornal routine.
Even crazier that he sung this when he was 72.
@@ismellmandude6401 Yeah he was famous for his depictions of Don Giovanni in Mozart's opera of the same name and other dark, overbearing characters
Come wayward Souls,
That wander through the darkness,
There is a light for the lost and the meek.
Sorrow and fear,
Are easily forgotten,
When you submit to the soil of the earth.
Grow, tiny seed,
you are gone to the tree.
Rise, 'til your leaves fill the sky,
until your sighs fill the air in the night.
Lift your mighty limbs,
and give braise
to the fire.
Thanks friend
it's braise to the fire
>Still has The Beast as a profile pic years after the cartoon aired
Extremely based
@@Howardtheone and it will stay that way
@@wormengine done
I feel like if I heard this while lost in the woods, I really would just give into whatever force was trying to take me. It’s like a siren song for the hopeless.
same here, that chorus would just drag me into the forest.
Not to sound edgy, but i must admit, this is my comfort song, just as The beast character himself is. Since i read someone associating him with "suicide", i feel kinda at peace listening to this. Especially when i'm a person scared of death, and i do sometimes have these "dark" thoughts. When i think of this song, it gaves me hope that there's someone who will greet me at the end, telling me that there's a light for the lost and the meek. All the time i just don't feel at peace with my own mind, even at home so... Thanks for coming to my ted talk 😭
@@shirouchi_mfs I was going to explain why you shouldn’t be afraid of death but I don’t really know how to explain it, I’m just not.
@@shirouchi_mfs i'm sorry that you felt like this, even so, i can really understand some of your feelings, i think that's why i love this song too.
@@shirouchi_mfs much of the show was about not giving into dark temptations solely because it would be easier than confronting the issue or accepting what is lost. Idk what ur story is or why u feel that way. But it not only makes sense that u would feel that way about the beast but also recognize it for what it is and represents.
The beast is a representation of those who died forgotten
The woodsman are those who cling to the past no matter what, even if it's futile
The Beast is an allegory for suicide. Specifically a reference to The Forest of Suicides from Dantes Inferno - this being the poem that Over The Garden Wall is based off of. That's why he is a tree, because in the poem those who die by "abandoning all hope" have their souls tossed aside into the forest, and from their soul a tree grows.
Are the children singing supposed to be the children who got turned into trees?
It's Greg singing in my opinion
@@SodaNaranja s a m e
@@SodaNaranja it is, he even uses the same phrases when talking to his brother and there's a version of potatoes and molasses sung to this same tune, but in latin
Although you could interpret it as the fate of other lost children, as it does sound like a chorus
the first half of the song is the beast telling people to submit and give up hope. and the second part is the people who have submitted to the beast. i think the beast is supposed to represent the devil
@@SodaNaranja The children singing in this version are not Greg, but are former tree victims, the repeated part after Potatus et Molassus includes Greg in the crowd, this one does not.
Just having the fact that this song gives away tons of clues of what happens in the series for instance take this for example.
"Sorrow and fear~ are easily forgotten~"
*Meaning that the beast feeds off of those emotions.*
Because you can't feel emotions when you ded
That's not necessarily true. It could just be that trees have no feelings
@@cosmopoiesecriandomundos7446 They said it in the storyline I believe, the beast feeds off of your sorrow or fear. (Haven't watched the show in a while)
@@dxrkerrxses he turns you into an edelwood tree for his lantern. when he says "sorrow and fear are easily forgotten" he's convincing you to lose hope and technically commit suicide
to turn into a tree, you either have to be soaked in deep hopelessness or get sick. it might be mentioning the former
This song is so haunting and meaningful within the show. In it, The Beast is not some sniveling, venal creature, it sings along in a proud barotone. Death and darkness are not weak things sniveling in your ear, they are full and proud and confident and beckoning, almost inviting. Add in the children, which are probably The Beast's faces, or the edelwood trees, singing, and wow. This song really does feel like that if you heard it in the woods, you would just follow The Beast into the darkness.
*”I didn’t know… I didn’t know this is where the Edelwood trees came from!” - Woodsman*
That part was so dark
This show was a masterpiece
And so hauntingly dark
Even the parts without the beast have this.....feeling of being just a bit off that makes it unsettleing
Like the dream episode of adventure time
Or the adventure time episode with the deer
Mr beast took planting 20, 000, 000 trees too far
hahahahhaha
very funny!
Oh f*ck
my guy that is genious
Just saw the same joke from 5 months ago, not funny didn't laugh.
I saw someone say that it would be interesting if Wirt and Greg didn't have memories of The Unknown when they crossed back over, but that Wirt would have an unexplainable fear of opera whenever he hears it afterwards.
A few years ago, before my sister went away to college and we were still able to spend Halloweens together, we compiled a Spotify playlist of songs to play around Halloween. Among the songs, she added "Come Wayward Souls." One evening when we were playing the playlist, this song came up. I had never seen OTGW before or heard this song, but I was taken aback by the eeriness and beauty of it and asked her what it was. This song is a big part of the reason I ended up discovering OTGW for myself. It will now be my second Halloween spent without my sister, but it's become a tradition for me to watch this series at least once every October.
noone asked
@@AnguishedMan F off
oh, she's in college, knowing youtube comments, i thought she was dead
@@TheScholarOfLemons Same dude, until i read it again.
My brain forgot that you said she went away to college at the start and by the end I was about to offer my condolences, until I realized I was just being dumb.
Blasting Company deserves a lot more fame for this soundtrack
The part where the children start singing was personally the most powerful SECOND for me in the whole show. Hearing the beast's depressing tune as the woodsman descends into the woods, the lights slowly deeming until the background is black. We've heard the beast singing in the over the garden wall prior, but this time, like the role of the beast itself in the show, it's not in the background. It's the focus. And only then does it dawn how morbid this creature actually is, and how grim is the situation. And then, has the tone is in true darkness, the children start to sing. And we see Greg, who was a voice of hope from the beggining, even when things were ridiculously dangerous, and even when it felt like he is absolutely oblivious, give up. And he doesn't begin to give up, he's dying. Furthermore, just to make the image more painful, this is the one part of the song where the composition of the song and the scene make us remember what hope we had. The only light on screen is shining on Greg. And the voice of the children causes the melody to shift a couple octaves upwards, making the voice of the beast that much clearer.
No matter how much years passed since I saw that final episode, I am still nearly at tears whenever this scene hits. And it's horrfiyingly beautiful.
Lyrics:
Come wayward Souls,
That wander through the darkness,
There is a light for the lost and the meek.
Sorrow and fear,
Are easily forgotten,
When you submit to the soil of the earth.
Chorus:
Grow, tiny seed,
you are gone to the tree.
Rise, 'til your leaves fill the sky,
until your sighs fill the air in the night.
Lift your mighty limbs,
and give praise
to the fire.
Amazing , this series is beyond of any cartoon i have watched , so mysterious , so pure ,and funny ...in few words wonderful .
This song is amazing, and such a scene setter
I saw this show on its debut, it was *awesome*
This is one of the heaviest songs I've heard in an animated series
A warped version of Noël.
Its that time of year to experience this series again
I just finished my yearly Over the Garden Wall rewatch. Every time I watch it, it gets better
This sounds like something from Little Nightmares II, with a young child facing off against a pure cold-blooded monstrosity, backed by the souls of all that fell at the beasts hands. It's beautifully sad, fighting to the last soul.
Totally agree with you, I also thought about that game while listening to this
Yes bro
I LOVE LITTLE NIGHTMARES!!!
O' Holy Night, almost identical
As a subtle way to indicate the Beast is a Satanic archetype, they gave this song the same cadence as O Holy Night. What better way to say "this guy is the devil" than making his theme an evil version of a hymn?
@@ArcherBro - the whole show occupies this limbo between the familiar and the unfamiliar; the known and the unknown. Stories like the madman who falls in love with a portrait, or paintings like the Animal School. Even the brothers' fall into a river bank evokes images of an 'uncanny valley.'
And it doesn't stop with the visuals - every track of the score is eerily familiar to something you've heard before, but slightly tainted. Like here, with O' Holy Night, or The Fight is Over with T-Rex's Ballroooms of Mars.
Phenomenal show.
@@nightowl8477 This show is the kind of masterpiece that comes along once in a generation.
@@ArcherBro - I realise another aspect of the uncannyness every day. Even with it being set in The Woods - all the trees looking so familiar, yet you've never passed them before. I've never associated fear of the unknown (i.e. the uncanny) with the fear of being lost in the woods.
Which, fun fact, the Beast's voice actor has also recorded: ruclips.net/video/QllpOh9SZ4Q/видео.html
Never heard a vibrato so spaced out.. cool
The beginning of this sounds (melodically) just like Verdi's Requiem mass. The second movement-Lacrymosa!
Yes it actually does, I can't tell if I noticed that before, which is fascinating, but yes, it has a very very similar melodic curve
@@LocutusBorgOf I appreciate that you know how I mean!
Honestly that piece just hits different, a true masterwork!
@@marillmusik I wonder if Samuel Ramey has sung the Verdi Requiem, he must have right?
@@LocutusBorgOf I wouldn't be surprised. But I know singing it was one of the best things I've ever done musically!!. 🥰
@@marillmusik I've yet to sing it, my brother has played it though, first Oboe
Fan theory: they asked him what the lowest possible note he could sing and they wrote the song around that.
😂love this
Melody is from verdis requiem
It is wholly unknown wheather this character is a Wendigo, a Devil, or something that was once human.
But this Beast is a great villain
Haha unknown get it
If anything I think he’s most likely a lich. The lantern is his phylactery, and he feeds on souls that are fed to it. But I agree it’s better when it is ambiguous on what he is. That is infinitely more interesting than any concrete answer
@@nudgemepapi I think I did that unintentionally.
A lich
If you knew anything about Wendigo you would know it is certainly not a Wendigo
Gotta be on my top 10 favorite Villain Songs~
You might like the nowhere kings then.
@@jeremytung1632 Agree
Hush now
Just saw the show for the first time last night.
I can't stop listening to the songs jfc
carry on my wayward souls
I thought about it too haha
Since this song is based on a church song i can disguise it as a church song
What church song is it based off?
@@pfeifenderleidender7320 its a Christmas carol you find on church every Christmas called "o holy night"
@@AustinKh oh? Sounds more like a sirens call to me
Noël.
Samuel Ramey is so incredible, his voice suits villain characters so incredibly and his voice is so beautiful. Though not everyone likes or appreciates opera in general 🤷
I all these years. I never noticed the hand on the left.
this song just hits different
imagina que vas en el bosque y te encuentras a alguien cantando de esta forma
Si te ofrece una lampara de aceite, no la aceptes
Eso quiere decir que estaremos muertos para ese momento...
I was crying when I saw Greg and hearing this song
i just love this show sm
This song fills me with such a sense of fear that it's kind of painful.
Regret for me, as somone that's once thought of giving up and letting go via walking in front of a train; I deeply sympathize for those that are lost. Wish I could help them find their way back, back into better forests and meadows
all cartoon charecters have similar traits to the devil you know. the beast, bill cypher, and the lich are all perfect example of this.
Fun fact, Patrick McHale, the guy responsible for over the garden wall. His main contribution to adventure time, was creating the Lich.
probably the greatest cartoon I've ever watched
This song chills my heart.
hauntingly beautiful
Personnel:
Written by Brandon Armstrong, Joshua Kaufman, Patrick McHale, and Justin Rubenstein
Samuel Ramey: Bass Vocals
Audio Clayton: Vocals, Backing Vocals
Austin Hoke: String Quartet
Joshua Kaufman: Piano
This is the perfect processional hymn for when you’re burying a tiny coffin out in the woods.
#teamtrees
XD
NAH
Quick: listen to the gospel song "O holy night", and pay attention to the melody. You'll not regret it.
yeah they are similar but i choose 'come wayward souls'
Holy Night is MUCH more optimistic than this song.
i regret it
Wow, I didn't realize this before
Bro! That's wild! I just listened to it.
The one dislike is the woodsman, change my mind
Nah, its from the beast, the woodsman was just sad and confused
@@josephfletcher823 *but how can the beast dislike his own song??????*
@@bellaren2274 he's embarrassed
@@bellaren2274 his voice just sounded different when it was recorded
And maybe Wirt
Il migliore cartone animato della storia.
He may be the bad guy but he has a beautiful voice
It’s Samuel Ramey, an opera singer known for his villainous roles. In other words, EXACTLY whom you’d want to play a villain who can bend people to his will by singing.
Such powerful music in this weird little cartoon.
yeah, both the show and the BS is awesome
Imagine being 8yo and singing this in choir for [as] and then finding out it was an uber depressing near death scene
Cartoon network*
*“…She was never in the lantern, was she Beast?”*
Bellísimo
Br?
o holy night, the stars are brightly shining
it is the time of our dear saviours birth
long lay the world in sin and error pining
'til he appeared and the soul felt it's worth
interesting adaptation of the melody, I love it
Música linda demais
sim, e bem macabra
I call this the Halloween version of Oh Holy Night
Me molesta, me molesta que Cartoon Network jamás podrá volver a transmitir una serie tan buena como esta
Why?
Samuel Ramey rocks!!
just finished watching the show for the first time two weeks ago, and of course now im obsessed with the soundtrack
This song stabbed my heart
Yes
The beast is part of team trees in a very unusual way
I watched the show just recently and I thought it was weird that this song sounds familair, then I learned that the songs tune (the vocals) match with o holy night which makes it way much more creepier… another creepier thing is that the child vocals sound a lot like greg’s voice (spoiler) which also symbolizes greg falling for the beast’s trick and almost becomes a Elwood tree ….
I listened to Verdis Lacrymosa and immediately thought of this song
If I ever heard this lost in the woods I'd yell to the darkness: I hear you beast, let us see who soul is lost tonight. you hear me! Put me down , or give me reason to rise. XD
Sixth waltz in the soundtrack!
Such a lovely voice range tho 😮
Okay I don't know how I got here, all I know is that I must now watch this cartoon.
yes you must, is the Cartoon Network's masterpiece
I came back for this song due to the dev of Ultrakill revealing a WIP for Layer 7 Violence Music. I'm so glad I look at hundreds of fandoms.
The beast is my favorite character in over the garden wall
Как только я слышу эту песню, у меня слезы текут невольно...
It sounds so triumphant, yet so hopeless
It's the time.
Chapter 10 Very very dark
Anyone else think this sounds like verdi’s lacrimosa
I definitely hear it, especially in the first part.
YES, which is great since Samuel Ramey probably sang Verdi's Requiem
is sad because the woodsman are all the souls from kids that lost yourself in the forest :(
0:53 give me back my lantern
The Beast is an excellent example of a cthonic villain. A creature with an innate bond to the soil, and the land itself.
O Holy Night
Wait...If this is all purgatory, How does Greg Jr still have the bell that glows when hes shaken?
wait he does?
@@malupresheint1 yes
The barriers between worlds grows thin as samhain approaches
kinda sounds like hugh jackman in le miserables-
I can’t tell if this is a critique or a complement
daniel has been here
Out of context it sounds like it’s about suicide
Now I wonder if that was a theme of the actual show and I just didn’t notice
How very evil of the beast to have greg sing such words, he would never wish such things😢 wirt knows this
This is mr beast’s team trees anthem
Uff
Poor Greg
Amphibia and epic Mickey ost come wayward souls
vIbRaToOoOoOoOoO
When you're a Sapling.
Darkest part of the entire series
This for me beats Gambal.
Name for this kind of singing?
Opera. If you aren't into the intense vibrato shown here, you probably wouldn't be into a majority of opera singing.
A warped version of Noël.
The dung eater do you like
I don't know of other versions, but the Romanian one is way creepier.