Finish the Fight: Difference between revisions
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{{Music infobox | {{Music infobox | ||
| name = Finish the Fight | | name = Finish the Fight | ||
| video = {{#widget:YouTube|id= | | video = {{#widget:YouTube|id=QAeeYohFL1Y|width=300}} | ||
| album = ''[[Halo 3: Original Soundtrack]]'' | | album = ''[[Halo 3: Original Soundtrack]]'' | ||
| composer = [[Martin O'Donnell]] and [[Michael Salvatori]] | | composer = [[Martin O'Donnell]] and [[Michael Salvatori]] |
Revision as of 12:09, November 10, 2020
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Finish the Fight is the thirty-first track (Disc 2 Track 16) included in Halo 3: Original Soundtrack, and plays during the Halo 3 announcement trailer.
The piece begins with a piano chord of eighths. Choir joins in with a soft melody, then piano plays another, louder chord. Choir then "replies" with another louder variation of their melody. Piano plays again, then orchestra joins in, swelling louder and louder. Suddenly, it quiets again for a fanfare with a five-note E Dorian melody in piano.
Strings then repeat the motif, reverting to Halo Theme's triplet melody of strings, choir, and brass that is centered around the chord of E Minor. This section is more of a "multi-melody", where each instrument has their own melody. The result is an extremely complex binding of all the melodies together. At the end, brass and strings play the piano theme again while the choir joins the harmony. All of instruments then play the five-note E Dorian melody triumphantly before swelling to a climatic ending.
While Finish the Fight was reinterpreted into This is the Hour to match the in-game cutscene, the five-note E Dorian fanfare was adopted by various musical instruments in different instances of Halo 3, and made appearances in the following tracks:
Production notes
- The five-note E Dorian fanfare was inspired by the chord progression in the piece Respite from Halo 2: Original Soundtrack. When composing the track, Martin O'Donnell was worried if audience would find the five-note fanfare "over-the-top" or "too emotional".[1] According to O'Donnell, members of the Microsoft marketing team laughed when they first heard the fanfare.[2]
- Martin O'Donnell intentionally omitted the use of Gregorian chant in the track, and instead relied on E Dorian key as an indicator pf the trailer being related to Halo.[3]
- In Halo 3 ViDoc: Finish the Fight, Martin O'Donnell said he does not know whether the fanfare would making a reappearance after Halo 3. The five-note E Dorian piano melody then appeared in every mainline game in the series following Halo 3. The melody first briefly appeared in Old Friend (in Finale). The melody appeared in Say the Words (in The Package from Halo: Reach Original Soundtrack) as a reprise of Keep What You Steal. The piano melody then made brief reprises in the tracks Atonement (from Halo 4: Original Soundtrack) and Blue Team (from Halo 5: Guardians Original Soundtrack), followed by a full fanfare being featured prominently in the Halo Infinite announcement trailer.
Sources
- ^ YouTube - Chris Anderson, Bungie's Marty O'Donnell on the Halo 3 soundtrack (Retrieved on Aug 20, 2020)
- ^ YouTube - The Act Man, A LEGENDARY Interview With Marty O' Donnell (Composer From Bungie, Halo, Destiny) (Retrieved on Aug 20, 2020)
- ^ Halo 3 ViDoc: Finish the Fight
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