List of Associated Production Music

A Building Panic


A Building Panic is composed by James Horner. It occurs when the RMS Titanic is about to sink, which is heard in James Cameroon's 1995 film Titanic.


 * "Ducanger of Denali" - Nat, Molly, Walter and Layla try to rescue Shyahtsoo, her granddaughter and Connie Williams with the beam from a collpsing building that is caught on fire by a firebombing campaign that the South Vietnam Air Force had done, but they failed, and Shyahtsoo told the Mabrays to leave promptly and run away from it (just before Weiss Schnee, Su Ji-Hoon, the Preschool Girls and the rest of his friends would arrive). This would be a reference to when Gen and Kimie try to save Shinji, Eiko and Daikichi from the engulfed collapsing building before they would either get burned, and/or get crushed by it, which was seen in Barefoot Gen.

For The Last Time


For The Last Time is a sad and romantic piece composed by Alexander Nakarada. Lots of harmonies and strings. Perfect for those sad scenes where you want your viewers to cry a couple of tears. This music will help you achieve that.


 * "How I Can Help Make the World Great" - After an ensuing battle against the Magna Men, the battle eventually stopped when a platoon of Grand Alliance tanks arrive together with Steven Gätjen telling them to yield their weapons. Later on, says that the battle is over, and promises that if the Soviet, Beleninsk Pact and New Central Powers soldiers surrendered to the Alliance, they could go home to their families the very same day. Also seen when an American soldier and a Nazi Union general meet for the first time as friends since they run out of ammo. At the end of this track (and towards the end of that chapter, and the episode), it shows a flash forward showing the two of these men as old people visiting a cemetery in Walkerville.

It Only Takes A Moment


It Only Takes A Moment occurs when Cornelius Hackl was trying to do his best to ensure that his date with Irene Molloy should be the shortest, probably lasting for approximately any negative power of seconds or so. It's heard in Hello, Dolly!, and it became even more popular in WALL-E.


 * "Aftermath" - This becomes Su Ji-Hoon's favorite song after the Last Day, along with "Put On Your Sunday Clothes." Both of them are the same songs that had performed in Hello, Dolly!.


 * "Taking A Moment" - Sung by the ghosts of Cornelius Hackl and Irene Molloy (first part), the surviving nuclear war victims (chorus), the ghost of Sadako Sasaki (second part), and finally (after Gen and Ryūta reconcile for thievery in Japanese), Gen Nakaoka and Ryūta Kondō (final part; sung in English). Its lyrics here is slightly modified. When the song ends, Hackl and Molloy talk to Su Ji-Hoon about life and hope in the endless nuclear wasteland, and even Earth's possible recovery (especially to the worlds affected in the Last Day).

Magna Men


Magna Men is played as a battle music when the kid agents (still all dresed in formal clothes) fight against the Magna Men during a gala that honors the newly-recruited Spy Kids from all over Earth, just after temporary putting the adults into their deep sleep with the poisoned champaignes after a toast. It was composed for Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams.


 * "How I Can Help Make the World Great" - Similar to that same scene from Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams, all the kid heroes fight against the Magna Men with all the secret agent gadgets that are formal-themed in the afterparty.

March of the Volunteers


The "March of the Volunteers" is the national anthem of the People's Republic of China, including its special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau. Unlike most previous Chinese state anthems, it is written entirely in the vernacular, rather than in Classical Chinese.

Its lyrics were composed as a dramatic poem by the poet and playwright, the Japan-educated Tian Han in 1934 and set to music by Nie Er from Yunnan Province the next year for the film Children of Troubled Times. It was adopted as the PRC's provisional anthem in 1949 in place of the "Three Principles of the People" of the Republic of China and the Communist "Internationale". When Tian Han was imprisoned during the Cultural Revolution in the 1960s, the march was briefly and unofficially replaced by "The East Is Red", then played without words, then played with altered words. Restored to its original version, the "March of the Volunteers" was raised to official status in 1982, adopted by Hong Kong and Macau upon their restorations to China in 1997 and 1999, respectively, and included in the Chinese Constitution's Article 136 in 2004 (Article 141 in 2018).


 * "Take Back Walkerville" - Played during a military parade for the Coalition of the Red Star, celebrating the Coalition's triumph on taking over Walkerville right after the Walkervillian Holocaust. It's only seen when the heroes and civilians in the shelter were seeing this news coverage involving a victory parade.

May Bukas Pa


May Bukas Pa (literally "There's another tomorrow") is a theme song of an ABS-CBN teleserye of the same name (May Bukas Pa). This song is so sad that it fits the show's theme.


 * "The Fall of a Little Blonde Boy" - Sung by Rusty Rivets and Ruby Ramirez during Liam McLoud's funeral (which was held in the Manila Memorial Park in Sucat, just after he was shot by a Virus during the Battle of Puerto Princesa.
 * "Escape From Nowhere" - Sung by a mother who is calming a wailing child while in an evacuation shelter during Typhoon Sanvu (Bagyong Lannie), a supertyphoon that landfell towards Manila and its nearby provinces (but it would later turn out to be used by a top-secret superweapon that was used by the Philippine Army, which is called the "Bagyonator 3000," which is created and owned by a Philippine general, and is hijacked by a USRAC secret agent from the KGB Order).
 * "Take Back Walkerville" - Sung by the same mother who is still calming a wailing child from the typhoon, but only this time, while in an underground fallout shelter that was hidden underneath Elder Kettle's house.

Military Anthem of the People's Liberation Army


The Military Anthem of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (Chinese: 中国人民解放军军歌; pinyin: Zhōngguó Rénmín Jiěfàngjūn Jūngē), also known as the March of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (simplified Chinese: 中国人民解放军进行曲; traditional Chinese: 中國人民解放軍進行曲; pinyin: Zhōngguó Rénmín Jiěfàngjūn Jìnxíngqǔ), is a patriotic song of the People's Republic of China. The song was written by Gong Mu (公木, real name Zhang Yongnian 张永年) and composed by Zheng Lücheng (郑律成, 정률성).

The song's former name was March of the Eighth Route Army (simplified Chinese: 八路军进行曲; traditional Chinese: zh; pinyin: Bālùjūn Jìnxíngqǔ), and was one of the six songs in the Chorus of Eighth Route Army (simplified Chinese: 八路军大合唱; traditional Chinese: 八路軍大合唱; pinyin: Bālùjūn Dàhéchàng), all of which had Gong Mu as song writer and Zheng Lücheng as the composer. The song became known as the "March of the Liberation Army" (simplified Chinese: 解放军进行曲; traditional Chinese: 解放軍進行曲; pinyin: Jiěfàngjūn Jìnxíngqǔ) during the second Chinese Civil War. The lyrics were re-edited by the General Political Department in 1951 and the song renamed to March of the Chinese PLA in 1965.

On July 25, 1988, the Central Military Commission decided to use the song as the official anthem of the People's Liberation Army.


 * "Bloodbath in Nanjing" - Played by Redcoat fifers and drummers while advancing to Nanjing with a few Redcoat, Nazi, Irken, Chinese, North Korean, North Japanese, Russian, North Vietnamese and other Coalition forces who were trying to save Nanjing from an ensuing massacre that had went underway by the New Empire of the Rising Sun.


 * "A New Resolution" - The Mormon Tabernacle Choir and the singing People's Liberation Army soldiers sing together in solidarity for China when it was at war against the New Empire of the Rising Sun during the Third Sino-Japanese War. It occured in a nationwide-broadcasted TV special event that brings condosolences and solidarities towards the Chinese people (and where celebrities from around the world are doing so for China), as produced by CCTV.

Nearer, My God, To Thee


"Nearer, My God, to Thee" is a 19th-century Christian hymn by Sarah Flower Adams, which retells the story of Jacob's dream. Genesis 28:11-12 can be translated as follows: "So he came to a certain place and stayed there all night, because the sun had set. And he took one of the stones of that place and put it at his head, and he lay down in that place to sleep. Then he dreamed, and behold, a ladder was set up on the earth, and its top reached to heaven; and there the angels of God were ascending and descending on it..."

The hymn is well known, among other uses, as the alleged last song the band on RMS Titanic played before the ship sank.


 * "War Never Changes" - Played by CNN while signing off towards the end of a Last Day coverage.
 * "Aftermath" - Played by a female United Nations peacekeeper who wears his hazmat suit, along with the three other UN peacekeepers in hazmat suits (who are all male) to calm the survivors down while evacuating from the black rain. At the same time, scenes of the post-nuclear blast devastation from around the world are seen, and Su Ji-Hoon's narration about the dangers of a nuclear fallout and this song accompany all of this together at the same time. At the end, she said, "Gentlemen, it's been a privilege of playing with you today." This could be a refernece of when Wallace Henry Heartley said this in the 1995 film Titanic.
 * "Prayer" -  Played by CNN while signing back on at the same time. It's followed by the surviving CNN anchors and newly-recruited CNN anchors praying for peace and for the departed souls who died in the Last Day.

Put On Your Sunday Clothes
Put On Your Sunday Clothes is sung by Cornelius Hackl and everyone else somewhere in New York City as they travel to Yonkers, and judging by the title, everyone is dressed in formal clothes for their travel to Yonkers to visit Dolly and anyone else from far away via train. It's also played in WALL-E.
 * "Aftermath" - This song becomes an upbeat, morale-boosting song for survivors and authority members alike after the Last Day was over.
 * "The Scavangers in Sunday Clothes" - Modified into a post-apocalyptic setting-fit lyrics, it's sung by Su Ji-Hoon and the Preschool Girls while traveling to Nagasaki, they make the feral ghouls feel attracted and friendly, just before meeting the scavangers in their best clothing.
 * "Taking A Moment" - A clip of "Put On Your Sunday Clothes" is played from Gen's smartphone while waking an unconscious Max Rockatansky up at the same time.

The Journey Home


The Journey Home is an original song for Ace Combat 5 that had been performed by Mary Elizabeth McGlynn, and is sung as a peace sung for Osea and Yuktobania, just because it's sung by its finest pilots throughout Operation Arcadia ("The Unsung War").


 * "As the Fireflies Fly Again" - While Diane Harrington was dying, she imagines that Ms. Frizzle's class are sleeping in formal clothing during a snowstorm.
 * "The Last Laugh" - Initally sung by the Rah-Rah-Robot crew members, then sung in unison by all Grand Alliance mecha pilots. Occurs towards the beginning of the invasion of Addis Ababa and just right before fighting Abasi Hakim.
 * "A Field Trip of Dreams" - Ms. Frizzle's class members sleep in Magic School Bus jumpsuits while resting in the Hôpital Européen Georges-Pompidou in Paris, France.

Unsung Heroes


Unsung Heroes is a OST from Ace Combat 5 that has been played once Razgriz ultimately destroyed the SOLG, which was descended to the coast just far from the Osean capital city of Oured, thus ending the Circum-Pacific War once and for all in its final mission ("The Unsung War").


 * "The Victory of a Thousand Fathers" - Survivors triumph the defense of Beleninsk once the Dimmadome Milk Zombies retreat.
 * "The Omega Clash" - The Battle of Megiddo is finally over.
 * "The Last Laugh" - In the chapter's final moments, the Rah-Rah-Robot crew take a pose together, saluting while standing on top of the rubble in the Ethiopian capital city of Addis Ababa after the invasion. At the same time, Ji-Hoon narrates a short story about the Rah-Rah-Robot's short history, as it started off only as a giant cheerleading robot, but after a period of slumber, it returned as a great war hero. Towards the end of this song, you can hear Jyoti saying "We won!," Tim saying "We did it!," Ms. Frizzle saying "Salute to the aces of the Star-Spangled Warthog!," the invading soldiers and rebelling civilian milita members changing the names of Arnold, Carlos, Wanda, Ralphie, D.A. and Keesha, and finally, Arnold saying "Can you hear these cheers!? Don't tell me you can't hear 'em!"