Final Fantasy XIII Piano Collections

cover pic
  • "Hamauzu vastly improves upon his OST with a more emotional and meaningful piano album."
Editor's review

Release info

  • Release date: 2010-07-21
  • Catalog number: SQEX-10196
  • Retail price: 2800 yen
  • Publisher: Square Enix
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Artist credits

One disc (45 minutes)

  1. Lightning's Theme ~ Blinded By Light [3:43]
  2. FINAL FANTASY XIII - The Promise ~ The Sunleth Waterscape [4:46] MP3 sample
  3. March of the Dreadnoughts [3:18] MP3 sample
  4. The Gapra Whitewood [4:36] MP3 sample
  5. Nautilus [6:12] MP3 sample
  6. Vanille's Theme ~ Memories of Happier Days ~ The Road Home [4:37]
  7. Nascent Requiem [4:03]
  8. Fang's Theme [3:53] MP3 sample
  9. Reminiscence - Sulyya Springs Motif [5:16] MP3 sample
  10. Prelude to FINAL FANTASY XIII Full Version [4:45]

Hamauzu vastly improves upon his OST with a more emotional and meaningful piano album.

Editor's review by Adam Corn (2013-02-06)

Shining out among a string of mediocre Final Fantasy piano albums is a bright spot in Masashi Hamauzu's Final Fantasy XIII Piano Collections. Arranging his own compositions from the original soundtrack, Hamauzu offers a piano collection with far more artistry and emotion than the pleasant but forgettable ones for FFVII and FFXI, and worlds beyond the lead-handed adaptations in the recent "Piano Operas". Some arrangements even far supersede Hamauzu's own original work, making this the only Final Fantasy to date where the Piano Collections is the best way to experience the soundtrack.

The switch from the diverse array of acoustic and electronic instrumentation in the OST to a single piano in Final Fantasy XIII Piano Collections actually works to the album's favor by remedying some previously questionable instrumental choices. Take for example the arrangement of "The Sunleth Waterscape". Both the shallow, syrupy lyrics and tediously simple pop beat of the original are gone; what remains are the pleasant main melody and an equally pleasant piano performance.

I wouldn't have expected the pseudo-vocals of "The Gapra Whitewood" to make fodder for a piano arrangement, but not only does Hamauzu relay them elegantly in piano form, he structures a gentler, more contemplative, almost entirely new piece around them. "Nautilus" he transforms in a similar manner - though the quiet, introspective passage midway through the track was also present in the orchestral original, it gains an indelible, Yoko Kanno-like grace in the piano version. And the spartan piano rendition of the intro and finale to "Prelude to Final Fantasy XIII" is brilliant, closing the piano collection as aptly as the original sci-fi synth rendition opened the OST.

The more robust orchestral pieces of the original soundtrack conversely don't fare so well here. The piano arrangements for "March of the Dreadnaughts", "Nascent Requiem" and "Fang's Theme" try to match the orchestra originals' energy in loudness and tempo but feel overbearing, while the quieter moments come off a bit flat. Certain moments, like the dramatic melodic rising and falling in "Fang's Theme", do work well in piano form, but for these three tracks the orchestral originals remain the definitive versions.

A couple themes that limped along in the OST continue to do so here. Though the respectable main verse in "Lightning's Theme ~ Blinded by Light" works quite well in the serious, solitary piano take at the beginning of the piece, the juvenile chorus is as impotent as it was in the original, and the simple sentimentality of "Vanille's Theme" is as evident as ever. Still the album is an infinitely more consistent and enjoyable listen in its entirety than the OST.

Occasionally in Final Fantasy piano collections you come to appreciate a gem of a theme that was forgettable in the OST but for some reason strikes a chord in its piano arrangement. In Final Fantasy VIII for example it was "Silence and Motion", and in Final Fantasy XIII it's "Reminiscence - Sulyya Springs Motif". I didn't even remember the Sulyya Springs theme from the OST (in hindsight probably because of the poorly conceived vocals), but the gentle four-note motif and tranquil arrangement in Piano Collections has had me enamored from the very first listen. A touch romantic and very relaxing, it's easily one of the highlights of the entire FFXIII music collection.

I'd be remiss not to mention one minor issue with the album's recording. Noticeable in the quieter tracks is a soft hiss that seems to accompany their occasional louder moments, particularly on chords. To me it sounds like a mastering issue, while others have suggested it to be the sound of the pedal or of cloth moving on the performer. It's a minor issue in any case and not one exclusive to this album; many listeners likely won't notice or won't care and it certainly hasn't prevented me from appreciating the lovely piano music present.

There aren't a whole lot of VGM piano albums I would wholeheartedly recommend, but Final Fantasy XIII Piano Collections is one of theme. It's a mostly relaxing affair and could be considered slow in places, but more often than not Hamauzu puts the piano to its best use, his arrangements feeling far more meaningful than their original versions on the OST. For those curious but skeptical of FFXIII's music, and even those oblivious to the game but simply wanting some nice piano music, it's well worth listening.

4 starsRecommended

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