For me the song that makes me feel happy is when Lee goes all badass in Savannah, Even though it is completely unrealistic in the walking dead universe it gives me satisfaction that he makes it to the Marsh House and ultimately Clementine,

My next favourite song is Bitter Revenge when we are on the dairy farm. To me it encapsulates that moment quite nicely, in that it truly feels like the St.John's dairy has fallen, figuratively and literally, and feels like it it is judging Lee in that moment.


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As for which songs really have me feeling sad, I need to think about that one some more, as there are quite a few songs that really get to you sometimes, and as I have only played both season 1 and 2 all the way through properly once each, I need to choose carefully hehe I will post later my favourite "sad" songs from season 1 and 2.

There are too many but I narrowed it down to three.

Clementine's Suite: This is one of the greatest pieces of music I have ever heard...Alive Inside is actually just an extended version of this. Many the songs in the game are variations of moments in this Suite.

Clementine's Suite

What a View: This plays when you reach the roof of the hospital in Episode 5 of Season 1. Took my breath away, something so simple and calming about it.

What a View

Devics - Salty Seas: Although not composed by Jared. This song is just incredible.

Devics - Salty Seas

Good thread btw

Does anyone have a link to the song that plays during the credits of Episode 1 in Season 2? Started a new playthrough last night and I realized what a great song it is, really sets a good tone to the game.

Fat Joseph stops by Negan's apartment to give him Lucille, which Negan left by the cargo truck. After laughing along with Negan's jokes on how he treated Lucille, he dismisses Joey harshly. Negan tells Carl that his eye is "rad as hell" and advises Carl to leave the bandage off so nobody will mess with him. He orders Carl to sing him a song. Carl's resistance is thwarted, and he starts to sing. Negan asks about Carl's mother. Carl explains that he shot her to prevent her from turning. Negan remarks that no wonder he is a future serial killer in the making. Negan and Carl leave the room, with Negan claiming that the iron is ready.

Rick and Aaron go out scavenging. Somebody named Leslie William Starton has written a warning sign outside of his camp. It lists off what weapons he has, how good he is with them (a "crack shot") and tells anyone reading it that he's warned them and will not feel bad about killing them, but if they've gotten this far into reading the sign and aren't dead then he probably is and they can "have at it, assholes."

This is the "A" plot of the episode, which makes sense since it's yet another episode that centers almost entirely on Negan. Negan bragging. Negan doing terrible things. Negan cracking jokes. Negan making Carl take his bandage off his eye and asking him if he can touch it---probably his creepiest moment so far. Negan showing Carl his harem of wives. Negan melting a guy's face off with an iron. Negan makes Carl sing a song for him while he swings Lucille around and talks about his bat like it's a sentient being.

The latest episode of The Walking Dead, "Silence the Whisperers", begins and ends with a song from Gordi playing in the background - but it's possible this particular song could be a clue to the Whisperers themselves. So far, The Walking Dead season 10 has been setting up a massive showdown between the united communities, called the Coalition, and the Whisperers, who've now taken even more land from Alexandria and Hilltop.

Even though The Walking Dead is set a decade into the zombie apocalypse and there hasn't been any form of new media to come out in the universe since 2010, the network and producers still tend to incorporate pop songs in various episodes every now and then. That trend seemed to have died off over the past few years, but it's back now in The Walking Dead season 10, episode 4, "Silence the Whisperers", in which Gordi's "Heaven I Know" plays at the beginning and end.

"Heaven I Know" plays over the episode's opening montage, which highlights the lives of several people in Alexandria and Hilltop, and then it returns again at the end. While its use in the cold open is standard for The Walking Dead, the fact that the episode ends with the camera panning over graffiti that reads "silence the whisperers" with the song's whispering "1, 2, 3" countdown playing in the background hints at the song being a clue to the Whisperer villains.

Gordi's 2017 song itself has very little - if anything - to do with The Walking Dead, but the fact that the show specifically focused on the "silence the whisperers" graffiti, which comes straight out of The Walking Dead's comics, while increasing the volume of the whispering "1, 2, 3" countdown at the same time is too obvious of a connection to look past. It was most likely chosen because of that whispering conclusion while potentially signifying the fact that there have now been three major zombie attacks on The Walking Dead in season 10.

Now, Michonne and Judith are heading to Oceanside to figure out what's really going on. Ultimately, though, there's only one conclusion to this: the Whisperer War. Eventually, the Coalition and the Whisperers will fight each other, but exactly how that happens remains to be seen. The Walking Dead's producers are no strangers to dropping subtle hints for bigger events down the line, and the use of Gordi's song in this episode just might be the latest one. If it isn't, then it's certainly a major coincidence.

The opening of the season's third episode started with a montage of the Saviors' Sanctuary to the tune of 1982's "Town Called Malice" by The Jam. Not much later, the Saviors attempted to break Daryl by making him listen over and over to a 2016 song called "Easy Street."

"Easy Street" writer Jim Bianco told The Independent he wasn't sure how the "Walking Dead" producers came across the song and wasn't clear why the zombie series wanted to use such an upbeat song on the show. When he saw it was being used as a torture device for Daryl, he thought it was genius.

This song - if you couldn't tell from its lyrics - is called "Easy Street" by a little-known band called The Collapsable Hearts Club which we found out thanks to a small bit of Shazaming. We tracked down its writer Jim Bianco to find out how it came to be featured in the AMC series.


Interestingly, the song only became available to stream on Spotify last Friday (4 November) meaning it technically wouldn't actually exist within the post-apocalyptic world of The Walking Dead which began in 2010.

The episode, titled 'The Cell,' was uncharacteristically high on music kickstarting with The Jam song "A Town Called Malice" as well as Roy Orbison's "Crying" which paved the way for the episode's most heartbreaking moment.

Watching the Walking Dead season 8 premiere, you might've thought you heard Queen's famous song "Another One Bites The Dust" playing in the background during Rick's visions of the future. After all, a song about people dropping dead on a show about the zombie apocalypse makes perfect sense, right? But it was actually Weird Al Yankovic's parody song, "Another One Rides The Bus".

Gimple went on to say that he picked the song precisely because it's strange to hear in such a serious show, and it was meant to throw viewers for a loop. The song's use confused someone else too: Weird Al himself:

The artist said at the time he had no idea why his song was being used in the episode, but that he was "honored" to have been included. And why shouldn't he be? The Walking Dead just showed that when the zombie apocalypse destroys most of humanity and civilization as we know it, we'll still have polka parody music.

The Walking Dead, over the years, has brought out the pipes of its cast members for some in-universe songs. Most memorably for many was Beth actress Emily Kinney singing outside of the prison, a scene which was used for the trailer of The Walking Dead's third season. In Sunday night's Episode 10x11, titled "Morning Star," it was Josh McDermitt's turn to sing on camera and for the millions of people watching at home. While talking to Stephanie over the radio, McDermitt's Dr. Eugene Porter started to sing Iron Maiden's "When The Wind Blows" song as a means to build the relationship.

It is rare for The Walking Dead to incorporate music with lyrics to the series, moreover for the characters to be singing it themselves. Other songs used on the show include The Collapsable Hearts Club's "Easy Street" from the show's seventh season and Lucero's "Last Pale Light in the West" to showcase flashbacks of the Governor as Woodbury burnt down.

It's been a month since Jon Snow awakened on a highway outside of Atlanta and joined Rick Grimes and his fellow survivors. His memories of his death have returned and our alien world is beginning to make a bit of sense. Ever since the loss of the CDC, surviving in the apocalypse has been a daily struggle. The group is on thin ice. Supplies are dwindling. Hope is fading. The dead are walking. And their only chance for life may be a run-down farm, an old man and his daughters.

The Walking Dead Season 7 finale opened with a close-up of Sasha's face as she listened to a song, and that moment was repeated every time the show came back from commercial. Sasha would be shown listening to the song, then saying some key line that would lead into a flashback of a moment she shared with Abraham shortly before his death. The repeated scene definitely seemed to be significant, even if it wasn't totally clear why at first. But what song was Sasha listening to on The Walking Dead?

The song was Donny Hathaway's "Someday We'll All Be Free." The song was released in 1973, and it gained added significance years later when Spike Lee used it over the credits of the biopic Malcolm X. The lyrics are about staying strong and not letting the world get you down, which definitely had relevance to Sasha's story and her struggle to decide what to do while she was Negan's prisoner. She could either join forces with him or die, and the song captured her need for freedom. With lyrics like "never mind your fears / brighter days will soon be here / take it form me, someday we'll all be free," it was easy to see why the song might have given Sasha some comfort. e24fc04721

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