Assassin’s Creed: Brotherhood

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Information
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Original Soundtrack
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Codex / Collector’s Edition
Year: 2010
Type: Original Soundtrack (OST) / Codex/Collector’s Edition
Composer(s): Jesper Kyd
Number of tracks: 20 / 22
Rating
Da Vinci Creed
This is the music review of
The Da Vinci Disappearance (2011).
This is because, as a pop-cultural medium, video games are subject to the laws of trending ideas just like films, fashion and art in general. In the field of games, for example, there was a phase in which every shooter protagonist suddenly ended up with a bow and arrow in hand. Or all games were just game-as-a-service and/or open-world. In the case of Assassin’s Creed it was the tower defense genre that surprisingly (and uniquely) made its entrance.
To my recollection, Brotherhood's only shortcoming was the map limitations within Rome, which turned the Renaissance metropolis into an artificially restricted playing field. From a technical point of view and in light of the game's narrative focus, this decision is understandable - after all, we are liberating the capital from the influence of the Borgias district by district. However, the later Assassin adventures Unity (Paris), Syndicate (London) and most recently Mirage (Baghdad) have shown that a single set piece can also work without artificial limitations. Enough of that. Let me stop criticizing a 15-year-old game, especially since it should still be fun today and, like many of the old parts, more than deserves a remake or remaster.
Instead, I'll move on to the soundtrack review. As with the two main games, Jesper Kyd was once again in charge of the music and picked up where he left off with Assassin’s Creed II - at least stylistically. We can expect an interesting mixture of strings, guitar and echoing percussion, which, in combination with the vocals, lend the score an urgency that only Kyd's compositions possess.
The Brotherhood-OST, featuring 20 tracks, is significantly less extensive than the 35-track score of the main game. Even the Codex / Collector’s Edition s of little help here. Although it has 22 tracks, only three of them are new (Rome Countryside, Legacy of the Borgia Family, End Fight [Bonus]). At the same time, it lacks Apple Chamber and Infiltrating the Borgia Castle is identical in content to Flags of Rome from the OST - you win some, you lose some.
You would think that more of Assassin’s Creed II, which I gave 4/5 stars at the time, would actually be a good thing, wouldn't you? Theoretically, yes, but Kyd doesn't deliver a seamless sequel, instead turning his creation more in the direction of a thriller. This may be due to the story about the family of adversaries who spread their dark influence over the city, and whose themes, such as Borgia Occupation or Borgia – The Rulers of Rome, are darkly ominous in their search to team up with Left 4 Dead . The only notable exception is City of Rome , whose lively musical bustle seems almost cheerful in comparison to the rest of the OST and most reflects the youthful spirit of the main game.
In general, the operatic female voices in Brotherhood are more like wailing spirits than animated angels, which is why tracks such as Cesare Borgia, Flags of Rome, Brotherhood of the Assassins or Countdown often resemble a lament rather than the almost carefree Renaissance feeling of the main game. This is contrasted by the male choir in Villa Under Attack and Battle in Spain, which sings the brute relentlessness of our arch-rival Cesare as the main component of the theme.
But Kyd only dips briefly into the horror-esque soundscape and otherwise moves in the direction of thriller style action from The Da Vinci Code (The Pantheon, Countdown, Desmond Miles) or game series such as Tomb Raider (Echoes of the Roman Ruins) and God of War (Master Assassin, The Pantheon, Roman Underworld). Meanwhile we can take a detour into the sci-fi world of the Animus with VR Room and Apple Chamber.
Meanwhile, my personal highlights remain the chaotic The Brotherhood Escapes, which, not unlike Chariot Chase from AC II brings the breakneck escape of our protagonist and his compatriots before our inner eye. The second is Countdown, whose relentlessly ticking clock and rhythmic drumming create a nasty feeling of being chased. Add to that those breathy voices, the break in the middle and the confusion - it just fits.
Of the three tracks on the Codex / Collector’s Edition I like the inconspicuous Rome Countryside which slowly loses its sadness in the form of an aria and conjures up Witcher-esque landscapes with soulful strings towards the end. The experimental End Fight [Bonus] is also worth a mention: here, electric guitars meet Ave Maria and synths in a way that only an Assassin’s Creed can.
Nostalgia warning
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Original Soundtrack
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Codex / Collector’s Edition
*Track contained in the Original Soundtrack
†Track als Flags of Rome im Original Soundtrack enthalten
The Da Vinci Disappearance

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Information
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Gamerip
The Da Vinci Disappearance is all about the disappearance of our friend Leonardo Da Vinci - who would have guessed! We already know him, apart from his biography in the real world, as a gadget supplier for Ezio from the main game, and now he's gone. Unfortunately, I can't remember any more, and it was less the story of the DLC that was important at the time than the actual existence of the expansion that caused a stir. After all, downloadable content was uncharted territory at the time and per se evil money-making.
Fortunately, we have now largely left this antiquated form of the payment model behind us and have entered the glorious age of the game-as-a-service model. Now we can finally be fed like fattened cattle with crap that we either don't want, don't need or need and don't want (e.g. pay-to-win). How much our lives have improved - I digress.
Of course, there wasn't a separate OST for this little addon, which is why I had to look around the Internet for a gamerip and found what I was looking for with a 36-piece album. However, the number is deceptive! Anyone hoping for a mountain of musical content will quickly be knocked out of the Venetian skies by the short average duration of the tracks and a total album length of 40 minutes.
Jesper Kyd was (unsurprisingly) at work here too, happily drawing on the music selection from the main game and the Brotherhood-expansion. Accordingly, we often have the feeling that we have heard the whole thing before, and in keeping with the nature of a gamerip, this is largely the case. Because the tracks only contain snippets of familiar motifs and pieces, I find it difficult to pinpoint exactly what we have heard before.
What I particularly like on this album are the eerily mystical Ezio the Seducer, the mysterious Stealth and the playful Mona Lisa. They all perfectly emphasize the crime/adventure focus of the expansion and suggest dark machinations and a sinister conspiracy. Conversely, I'm not sure whether they are simple adaptations of well-known songs. If so, please comment, mea culpa!
In addition to ultra-short stinger tracks (Success, The Invitation) and ambient tracks (Tavern Ambience, Rome Ambience), the fact that different songs are layered on top of each other in pieces like Approaching Target makes things even worse, turning them into a cacophony of horror. So unfortunately I can't give it a recommendation, even if it should be emphasized once again that this is a gamerip that was not intended for the public in this form. Now we know why, and thusly have solved at least one mystery.
Nostalgia warning
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Gamerip