Kim K wrote:So, any opinions on Siren OST or Siren 2 OST?
Pretty much the same as with the soundtrack rips. I did get the CDs after all, I'm a real bitch for this kind of music, and I wanted to see what the extra tracks were (curiosity killed the cat, you might say). In general, both CDs have slightly better sound quality than the rips (which is to be expected from an official release), but most tracks are considerably shorter. Although this isn't as much of a problem as I first imagined, it doesn't feel like the tracks are too short. Siren 1 OST has some extra short incidental music that's missing on the rip, and Siren 2 OST has a whole slew of new tracks, although no real stand-outs among them.
Musically, both albums are old-school, hardcore dark ambient, with none of those wussy rhythms or melodies from the New Translation/Blood Curse OST. Siren 2 OST is, frankly, kinda mediocre, the score is hurt by the fact (which I mentioned earlier in this thread) that almost every track sounds the same. Not only that, there are way too many tracks, this is definitely one soundtrack that overstays it's welcome, by the end of the second disc I'm just thinking "enough already!". There's not too many VGM-albums in this style, so I guess its a welcome addition, but nothing mindblowing. Some stand-out tracks include "Unease", "Nothingness", "Decisive Battle", and "Sinking in the Red Sea" (mainly because they sound different and better than the others).
Siren 1 OST, on the other hand, is great. Definitely the best of the three Siren soundtracks, and the OST CD is a good representation of it. I don't really know what to say about it, other than that I consider it among the absolutely best dark ambient scores in VGMdom, its in the good company of Akira Yamaoka's Silent Hill 1 OST and Masaharu Iwata's Baroque OST (the original one from 1998). Listen to this soundtrack on a good sound system with the lights off... the mad chattering, distant voices, weird noises, and deep atmospheric drones will take you to another place.