soundtracks,  video games

BioShock

Year: 2007
Type: Original Soundtrack (OST)
Composer(s): Garry Schyman
Number of tracks: 68


More than a little scare

Come in, come in! You've never seen anything like it! People with the most impossible acrobatic contortions and magicians with god-like abilities! Meet Big Daddy and Little Sister, stroll along the Shopping Miles, visit the countless bistros and stores! Face to face with the deep sea! Dive into a fantastic world many miles under the sea, where you can be whoever and whatever you want! Visit Rapture!

This is how the underwater world of the BioShock-series could be advertised if a few important details were omitted. Because Rapture, the main location of BioShock and BioShock 2 and a planned utopia for the rich and beautiful who want to escape government control such as taxes or regulations around 1940, is no longer an idyll for plantation owners and cocktail sippers. Instead, the inhabitants have been degenerated by the super drug ADAM into murderous plasmid junkies who wildly hurl fireballs at unwelcome guests.

After a plane crash over the sea, we are the only survivors to reach a lighthouse, complete with diving bell to the seabed colony. Our involuntary visit to the deep-sea terror is accompanied by an exciting story, wacky antagonists and challenging gunplay. In other words, a paradise for fans of cultivated horror shooters, for whom the game world and gameplay are more important than the next jump scare. Even today, the game is still worth a recommendation, especially as the story forms the basis for the sequel and even BioShock: Infinite to some extent. But is the music still worth listening to? Would you kindly follow me to the review section ...

The soundtrack was written by Garry Schyman, an American film and video game composer who had already been nominated for several awards before his work on Bioshock , including for the music to the Alien classic Destroy All Humans!. However, the thriller specialist really came into his own with his work on 2K's horror shooter. And rightly so, it should be noted, as Schyman's worldbuilding work lends the underwater world its oppressively eerie atmosphere. Main instrument: strings, especially violins - what worked for Hitchcock in the shower also works on the ocean floor.

The themes of the sunken utopia alternate wonderfully in the game, with nothing standing out as disturbing or out of place in the mix of fast-paced action in the battles and oppressively gloomy horror interludes. Particularly beautiful are the pieces that sound like regret turned into music: The Ocean on His Shoulders, Dancers on a String (Reprise), Empty Houses (Reprise), all emotive, all calling out to you: 'See your creation, see what could have been, and what it has fallen to.' Combined with the backstory of each character and the tragedy surrounding the duo of the little sisters and big daddys, it's an absolutely coherent impression.

The action pieces, on the other hand, are powerfully driven, the strings playing like an angry swarm of bees chasing us through the corridors. This is particularly noticeable in the theme of the first boss: Dr. Steinman, the crazed surgeon who sews up faces Frankenstein-style in his quest for optical perfection. First the violins shrill towards us in the style of a 60s horror movie, then, like in Jaws , the dam-dam-dam-dam is heared, like snapping at its prey. Panic is breathing down our necks, flight becomes fight. The piece develops into a Bioshock-typical battle track with brass and percussion, everything sounds powerful and overwhelming. The overall mix is excellent, the transitions seamless.

If we compare this with the music from other games of this type, such as the horror game Amnesia: The Dark Descent from 2010, the different levels of skill become clear. Although we can't defend ourselves against the horrors of the dark mansion there, Amnesia is also about conveying the horror acoustically. Here, too, the strings are heard, as well as piano and even organ, sometimes with operetta vocals. The whole thing works, the horror sets in. However, the soundtrack lacks identity; we could be listening to the music to any other horror game.

Bioshocks music, meanwhile, bursts with references to the sea without becoming stereotypical. Ambient effects resonate in many tracks: In The Docks (Prelude) we hear the creaking of wooden beams like on an old sailing ship, or the groaning of the glass construction under the pressure of the water masses. The Engine City sounds like the powerful ups and downs of an engine's pistons, and in the wonderfully brute All Spliced Up you can even hear the shrill ship's whistle that is used to call the crew on deck (or, in the case of the old Star Trek-series, always sounds when someone steps onto the bridge). In keeping with the Jaws-parallel, just listening to the soundtrack not only makes it clear that it's going to be scary, but also wet.

In addition to these tracks, the OST is joined by classical pieces such as Tchaikovsky's Nutcracker Suite or swinging feel-good songs from the 30s, 40s and 50s. Just Walking in the Rain by Jim Reeves or (How Much Is) That Doggie in the Window by Patti Page sound light-hearted and carefree, in the game they serve to contrast vision and reality, what was and what is. These zeitgeisty atmospherics are nice, but if you're not into record player acoustics and grandma's dance music, you'd better skip them.

What you should definitely not miss out on is Cohen’s Masterpiece, which serves as the theme for the mystically murderous entertainer Sander Cohen. It's a beautiful piece, which soars up and down the piano in the style of old grand masters such as Chopin and Liszt and on which many a brother of mine has broken his fingers while practicing. Full of grandeur, imposing, then quiet as a mouse, it is an ode to classical music and, along with the first sad, then sinister The Ocean on His Shoulders , the highlight of the soundtrack.

And before I finish, I have to point out that the score comes in an awful lot of different variations. Sometimes it's called BioShock: Orchestral Score, then Sounds of Rapture or I Am Rapture, Rapture Is Me - always with differently named tracks, of course. My version, a conglomerate of all the tracks and probably best understood as a gamerip, is no exception. But that shouldn't change the rating of the tracks, because anyone who has read this review up to this point will hopefully listen to it independently of my recommendations and make their own judgment.


Nostalgia warning

The rating of the individual tracks is purely subjective and clearly colored by my own experience with the game. You can find out more in the article About Nostalgia.

No.TitleArtist(s)Ratings
01Going Up, Going DownGarry Schyman22/5
02First Encounter / Wandering AroundGarry Schyman22/5
03Dancers on a StringGarry Schyman55/5
04You Have to Save My FamilyGarry Schyman55/5
05Steinman (Prelude)Garry Schyman55/5
06Mr Bubbles / Little SisterGarry Schyman33/5
07Diseased MedicalGarry Schyman33/5
08The DocksGarry Schyman33/5
09Spliced AphroditeGarry Schyman44/5
10Dr. SteinmanGarry Schyman55/5
11Through the DocksGarry Schyman33/5
12Fight for FamilyGarry Schyman44/5
13Busted SubGarry Schyman33/5
14Empty HousesGarry Schyman44/5
15Photographer Fights PeachesGarry Schyman33/5
16This Is Where They SleepGarry Schyman33/5
17Lost SoulGarry Schyman44/5
18Step Into My GardenGarry Schyman33/5
19Langford's Last MessageGarry Schyman44/5
20Step Into My Garden (Reprise)Garry Schyman22/5
21Cohen Is LurkingGarry Schyman22/5
22Collecting Samples / Saving the TreesGarry Schyman33/5
23Cohen's Masterpiece, Part 1Garry Schyman33/5
24Cohen's Masterpiece, Part 2Garry Schyman44/5
25Overheating the CoreGarry Schyman22/5
26All Spliced UpGarry Schyman55/5
27Haunted SlumsGarry Schyman22/5
28The Engine CityGarry Schyman44/5
29Bowels of the CityGarry Schyman44/5
30Ryan's Death / True FacesGarry Schyman33/5
31Get Out of My HeadGarry Schyman22/5
32192Garry Schyman33/5
33The DashGarry Schyman55/5
34Becoming One of ThemGarry Schyman44/5
35Big Daddy Is ComingGarry Schyman33/5
36Final Fight / Leaving RaptureGarry Schyman44/5
37The Good OneGarry Schyman33/5
38The Ocean on His ShouldersGarry Schyman55/5
39Welcome to RaptureGarry Schyman55/5
40Rise, Rapture, RiseGarry Schyman44/5
41Combat MedleyGarry Schyman44/5
42Rapture News DailyGarry Schyman44/5
43Gameplay CuesGarry Schyman22/5
44You're the TopCole Porter33/5
45Oh Danny BoyMario Lanza22/5
46Twentieth Century BluesAl Bowlly11/5
47Bei mir bist du schönThe Andrews Sisters33/5
48Beyond the SeaBobby Darin22/5
49Brother Can You Spare a DimeBing Crosby22/5
50God Bless the ChildBillie Holiday11/5
51(How Much Is) That Doggie in the WindowPatti Page33/5
52If I Didn't CareThe Ink Spots11/5
53It Had to Be YouDanny Thomas11/5
54It's Bad for MeRosemary Clooney22/5
55Jitterbug WaltzFats Waller11/5
56Just Walking in the RainJohnnie Ray44/5
57La Mer [Instrumental]Django Reinhardt33/5
58LizaDjango Reinhardt44/5
59Night and DayBillie Holiday11/5
60Nutcracker (Waltz of the Flowers)Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky33/5
61Papa Loves MamboPerry Como33/5
62Please Be KindFrank Sinatra22/5
63The Best Things in Life Are FreeThe Ink Spots22/5
64The Party's Over NowNoel Coward22/5
65World WearyNoel Coward22/5
66Wrap Your Troubles in DreamsBing Crosby11/5
67La MerDjango Reinhardt22/5
68Cohens Masterpiece (Prelude)Garry Schyman55/5

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