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・ Music of the African diaspora
・ Music of the American Civil War
・ Music of the Americas
・ Music of the Americas (concert series)
・ Music of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands
・ Music of the Aosta Valley
・ Music of the Austral Islands
・ Music of the Bahamas
・ Music of The Bahamas (docu-musical)
・ Music of the Balearic Islands
・ Music of the Baroque, Chicago
・ Music of the Canary Islands
・ Music of the Cayman Islands
・ Music of the Central African Republic
・ Music of the Channel Islands
Music of the Chocobo series
・ Music of The Chronicles of Narnia films
・ Music of the Command & Conquer series
・ Music of the Comoros
・ Music of the Cook Islands
・ Music of the Czech Lands
・ Music of the Democratic Republic of the Congo
・ Music of the Dominican Republic
・ Music of the Drakengard series
・ Music of the Fable series
・ Music of the Faroe Islands
・ Music of the Federated States of Micronesia
・ Music of the Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles series
・ Music of the Final Fantasy series
・ Music of the Final Fantasy Tactics series


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Music of the Chocobo series : ウィキペディア英語版
Music of the Chocobo series

The ''Chocobo'' video game series is a spin-off series composed of over a dozen games developed by Square Co. and later by Square Enix featuring a super deformed version of the Chocobo, a ''Final Fantasy'' series mascot and fictional bird, as the protagonist. Several of the titles have received separate album releases of music from the game. The music of the ''Chocobo'' series includes soundtrack albums for the ''Chocobo's Mysterious Dungeon'' sub-series—comprising ''Chocobo's Mysterious Dungeon'', ''Chocobo's Dungeon 2'', and ''Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo's Dungeon''—and soundtrack albums of music from ''Chocobo Racing'', ''Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo Tales'', and ''Chocobo and the Magic Picture Book: The Witch, The Maiden, and the Five Heroes'', as well as an album of arranged music from ''Chocobo's Mysterious Dungeon'' and a single entitled ''Chocobo no Fushigina Dungeon Toki Wasure No Meikyuu: Door Crawl'' for the theme song of ''Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo's Dungeon''.
The first album of the discography released was the soundtrack to ''Chocobo's Mysterious Dungeon'', ''Chocobo no Fushigina Dungeon Original Soundtrack''. It was released by DigiCube in 1997 and was reprinted by Square Enix in 2006. An arranged album of music from that game was released in under the title ''Chocobo no Fushigina Dungeon Coi Vanni Gialli'' by DigiCube in 1998, and soundtrack albums to ''Chocobo's Dungeon 2'' and ''Chocobo Racing'' were released the following year, also by DigiCube. There were no further album releases in the series until 2006, when Square Enix produced a download-only soundtrack to ''Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo Tales''. The latest releases in the series are the soundtrack to ''Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo's Dungeon'' and a combined soundtrack for ''Chocobo Tales'' and ''The Witch, The Maiden, and the Five Heroes'', both of which were released by Square Enix in 2008.
== Concept and creation ==

Masashi Hamauzu, the composer for ''Chocobo's Mysterious Dungeon'', was not expecting to be assigned the soundtrack to the game. In the liner notes for the original soundtrack album, he states that he was "still in high school when that lovable character first made his debut in Final Fantasy", but that the "Chocobo Theme" made a big impression on him, leading him to often think to himself that he would "love to try doing this kind of work".〔 The soundtrack was the first solo album that Hamauzu had produced.〔 When he wrote his own Chocobo themes for the ''Chocobo no Fushigina Dungeon Original Soundtrack'', he decided to arrange the opening and ending of the album for a fifty-piece orchestra, which lead to the creation of the orchestrated ''Chocobo no Fushigina Dungeon Coi Vanni Gialli'' album. In the liner notes for that album, he explains that his motivation for creating the orchestral works was because "Demand for classical music in Japan is still low compared with other countries" and he wanted "to spread the word on this style of music by any means necessary". He ends the note by exhorting his listeners to "take your time" with classical music such as the album, so that one day they will appreciate it.〔
Hamauzu has not been involved in the production of any other ''Chocobo'' soundtracks. ''Chocobo's Dungeon 2s soundtrack was composed by a group of five composers, and was the last ''Chocobo'' game soundtrack to not be mainly composed of remixes of previous ''Final Fantasy'' and ''Chocobo'' music.〔 Hamauzu was not involved in the creation of either the remixes or original tracks for these albums. His role was filled by Kumi Tanioka for ''Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo's Dungeon'', Kenji Ito for ''Chocobo Racing'', and Yuzo Takahashi for ''Chocobo and the Magic Picture Book: The Witch, The Maiden, and the Five Heroes''.〔〔〔
Unlike the soundtracks to the numbered ''Final Fantasy'' games, no tracks from the ''Chocobo'' soundtracks have appeared in any compilation albums produced by Square Enix. Pieces from the series have also not appeared in any of the official ''Final Fantasy'' music concerts, although a piece based on the "Chocobo theme", "Swing de Chocobo", has been played at the 2005 ''More Friends'' concert in Los Angeles, the 2006 ''Voices'' concert in Japan, and in the worldwide ''Distant Worlds'' concert tour from 2007 to date.〔〔〔 On February 6, 2011 the Australian Eminence Symphony Orchestra played a concert in Tokyo as part of the ''Game Music Laboratory'' concert series as a tribute to the music of Kenji Ito and Hiroki Kikuta. The concert included "Treasure Chest of the Heart" from ''Chocobo Racing'', sung by Jillian Aversa.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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