

From start to end, you will almost never get bored.įirst off you got the main menu intro song "Reign of the Septims", which lays the foundation of everything that is to come. With this, everything any other game composer has done will be crushed into thin air.

Even if Jeremy Soule had already recorded soundtracks to dozens of other games before this, he sure made his name with this. Ranging from choir-only songs, ambient piano or full blown orchestras, everything is written in the recipe, and the resulting stew tastes extremely good. The musical atmosphere Jeremy Soule manages to create in "The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion" is just amazing. And in the background, the most soothing of music plays softly. Looking over the lands while your computer barely renders the Imperial Tower far, far away. And then you stand highest in all of Cyrodiil. Review Summary: If not number one, it sure comes close to being one of the best soundtracks ever recorded.Įver just roamed the mountains outside Bruma, running past ogres, jumped straight up the hillside until you reached Dive Rock? I know I have.
