Song of Storms (Ocarina of Time)
Koji Kondo
A music box melody begins in a lopsided waltz — three beats with an odd lurch on the turn — immediately unsettling in the most hypnotic way. The tempo is brisk but the harmonic language is storm-grey, minor-key and swirling, evoking rain hammering against stone and the pleasure of watching it from shelter. Accordion and organ tones layer in as the piece builds, giving it a slightly mechanical, carnival-at-midnight quality that is both eerie and irresistible. The mood refuses easy categorization: it is melancholy but danceable, strange but familiar, threatening and cozy at once. There is something genuinely ancient in its sound, like folk music from a culture that never existed but should have. The looping structure makes it meditative over time, the odd meter becoming internalized until the listener's own internal clock bends to match it. It suits rainy days, strange moods, late nights with tea and candlelight.
medium
1990s
eerie, mechanical, swirling
Japanese video game soundtrack, European folk and carnival influence
Folk, Classical. Carnival / Waltz / Video Game OST. melancholic, playful. Opens in hypnotic, lopsided unease and layers into something simultaneously threatening and cozy, never resolving its pleasurably strange tension.. energy 5. medium. danceability 6. valence 5. vocals: instrumental only. production: music box, accordion, organ, brisk waltz percussion. texture: eerie, mechanical, swirling. acousticness 6. era: 1990s. Japanese video game soundtrack, European folk and carnival influence. A rainy day indoors with tea and candlelight, leaning into a strange and meditative mood.