Since 1986, 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:The Legend of Zelda has been a staple in any gamer's library. From the original The Legend of Zelda to The Oracle of Seasons to The Wind Waker to Twilight Princess to Breath of the Wild. The Legend of Zelda has always been accessible for any skill level, and there's always something new to discover no matter how many times you🗹've played throughꦐ.
Music is important in The Legend of Zelda as well, especially in Ocarina of Time. With your Ocarina, you can make the sun come up, reveal hidden passages, talk to your friend Saria, or call your horse to you. Ocarina of Time is one of those rare games that's pretty much perfect: well-rounded, just difficult enough to present a challenge, beautifully rendered, thought out, and put together. Ocarina of Time is a favorite among Zelda fans, so here are all twel🔜ve songs on the Ocariꦜna, ranked.
12 Sun's Song 🔜
Functionally, this song is useful, but musically it juꦛst doesn't cut it. Sure, you can change the time of day with it, but is it pretty? Does it leave you with a sense of tranquility or rev you up for battle? Not really. For a piece written by the Composer Brothers you'd think it would sound a little better. Not to be too harsh on the or anyone who likes the Sun's Song; but it's choppy, it doesn't flow, and it's got that weird trilling note at the end that's maybe supposed to imitate the sun coming up. Tactically, you can stun ReDeads with this song, and you can make the sun come up if you get stuck in Hyrule Castle after dark. But, it's not great to listen to strictly from a musical standpoint.
11 🃏 Nocturne Of Shadow
For what it's worth, the got it in the first half. It starts out in the minor key, as anything creepy should,🌌 and the repetition al൲most imitates something following you.
What doesn't quite track is that it ends in the major key, sounding hopeful a𒊎nd delightful. The Nocturne of Shadow transports you to the Kakariko Graveyard, of all places, it should not end in the major key. This is the song that takes you to the Shadow Temple, to Bongo Bongo, so it should be creepy and stay creepy.
10 Requiem Of Spirit 🐽
The is what the Nocturne of Sh꧑adow should've been; a slow dirge leading you to the temple. Again, it ends on a major note, which disrupts the dark vibe, but that's generally the theme with the Ocarina songs: end with a hopeful tone as you travel to the dark depths of the formidable temples. Thinking of them strictly as music and not a means of travel, both the Nocturne of Shadow and the Requiem of Spirit aim to make you feel helpless, maybe even a little terrified of what you're getting yourself into. While the Water Temple is probably the hardest to master, at least it's not a hopeless haunted house.
9 🀅 Prelude Of Light 🦋
This 𒉰song sounds like a cloud. It's (literally) light, soft, almost fluffy to listen to. When Sheik plays it on the harp it sounds like angels strumming. It's complex; there's a little part in the middle where it dips into minor key and sounds a little sinister.
Th꧟at's Sheik reminding us that things are not as they seem, that not all is bright and good like when we're young. But it doesn't stay like that forever; the ends beautifully on a major scale ꩵand a little harp strum that lets us know that the Temple of Time is a safe place.
8 Minuet Of F💝or💖est
Another song that ends on a major scale to give us hope. It's nice to discover that there are themes running throughout these songs to bring them all together. The sounds like taking a brisk stroll through the woods, stopping to gaze at the leaves or smell the wild flowers. And then, suddenly, the trees open up and you're approaching an overhang and all of Hyrule is laid out before you like the promo images for Breath of the Wild. The Minuet of Forest feels exactly like the promo images for Breath of the Wild.
7 Zelda's Lullaby ꦐ ཧ
is a lot like Zelda herself: gentle and regal, but surprisingly strong and sure. If you listen to the two-minute version of Zelda's Lullaby, you get an unexpected little ditty in the middle that portrays Zelda very well; Zelda is hersel𝄹f unpredictable (except for the fact that we know she's not going to be in the game until probably the very end).
In Ocarina we learn that Zelda was Sheik the whole time, which is usually a big surprise for first-time players. Zelda's Lullaby reflects her dual nature in Ocarina: the captured prin𒉰cess of Hyrule, and the mysterious magical music teacher.
6 🌟 Song Of Storms
This song is just fun, mostly because it has that staccato beat that imitates rain. This song just makes you want to skip through a rainstorm. Functionally, it can summon rain, reveal secret passages and grottoes, and can be used to water bean sprouts. It's reminiscent of a polka, which is also what makes it fun. Who doesn't love a good polka? The is interesting in gameplay because once you learn it from the guy in the windmill, you have to go back in time to play it for the same guy in the windmill to reveal the entrance to the Bottom of the Well. 𓃲What's also cool, is anytime Navi turns green, play the Song of Storms to summon a wingless fairy.
5 Bolero 𒉰Of Fire ༒
A bolero refers to a genre of slow-tempo ballroom music that originated in Spain in the eighteenth-century. The is a favorite because, even though the tempo is a little slow, it's good for getting youꦉ pumped up to face Volvagia in the Fire Temple.
It's great for, let's say, getting you fired up. It has a wonderful military cadence l🐻aid under the bolero that makes for a good puncℱhing song. You know, a song you just want to punch things to.
4 🗹 Song Of Time
The is just mysterious enough to be intriguing but not scary; listening to it instills a sense of adventure and fantasy that's a joy to experience. In-game, the Song of Time is probably the most important song you'll learn on the Ocarina; along with the three sacred stones, the Song of Time allows Link to open the Door of Time and enter the Sacred Realm to retrieve the Master Sword. So, pretty crucial. The song itself has 𝓰a beautiful lilting melody that lasts just long enough to give you an odd sense of nostalgia, like you're coming back home after being away for a long time.
3 ꦕ Saria's Song ꦺ
Like the Song of Storms, is another fun one. ꧙Also reminiscent of a polka, this song just makes you want to shimmy and shake. Used to talk to Saria (though she usually doesn't have anything particularly helpful to say), this song also plays as you make your way through the Lost Woods, where you encounter a few Skull Kids.
If you play Saria's Song to the onꦏe on the big log, you'll get a heart piece. The others will play a memory game with you for another heart piece. Tactically, Sa🌟ria's Song doesn't do much; musically, it does a good job of simply inspiring joy.