Gamer’s Kingdom - the Video Games Music Podcast

Emi Giaquinta

Gamer's Kingdom — deep dives into JRPG and video game music. How composers like Nobuo Uematsu craft emotion through harmony, orchestration, and sound design. Hosted by Emi Giaquinta — video game composer, author of A Book To Call Home: The Music of Final Fantasy IX, Berklee graduate, Summa Cum Laude. Started as an audio podcast in June 2024, now also a full video series on YouTube — with score analysis and audio comparisons. 🎮 youtube.com/@emigiaquinta | emigiaquinta.com

  1. Garnet’s Theme: The Heart of Final Fantasy IX (Final Fantasy IX Analysis)

    May 17

    Garnet’s Theme: The Heart of Final Fantasy IX (Final Fantasy IX Analysis)

    This episode is best experienced on YouTube where you can follow the score analysis and audio examples — youtube.com/@emigiaquinta How do you compose the musical heart of a story about a Princess's journey to becoming a devoted Queen?  In this episode of our Final Fantasy IX music analysis series, we open up the score for the emotional and melodic cornerstone of the entire game: Garnet's Theme. We explore how Nobuo Uematsu used beautiful, lush orchestration to score a character defined by the Japanese keyword Kenshin (Devotion). We break down how the gentle, human woodwinds represent her thoughtful personality , while the magical celeste, triangle, and harp reflect her powerful Eidolons and royal magic. We also dive into the brilliant compositional trick where simple, persistent flute arpeggios naturally generate complex add9 and maj7 chords against the moving bassline!  Finally, we uncover the genius PlayStation 1 audio engineering trick the sound team used to fit her actual acapella singing into the game's memory. Let me know in the comments: Did you watch Ark’s animation fully every time… or you went to grab some food in the meantime? 📌 CHAPTERS: 0:00 - The Musical Heart of FFIX 1:25 - Kenshin: The Meaning of Devotion 2:52 - Introduction Analysis and the "Fake" meter perception. 6:40 - Section A: The "Iconic" Melody 11:05 - Section B: The pre-chorus of "Melodies of Life" 15:17 - The PS1 Audio Engineering Secret 16:20 - Conclusion: The Voice of the Queen 🎮 FOR GAME DEVELOPERS & PRODUCERS: Are you an indie dev or studio looking for a dedicated composer? I am currently available for freelance work and would love to collaborate! Coming from a rock band background as a frontman/guitarist, I blend the raw energy of rock with the immersive scale of orchestral scoring. Whether your project needs an epic JRPG battle theme, a moody cinematic score, or a delicate, emotional character theme like this one, I craft music to hit the exact emotional beats your story requires. 📩 Let's connect: • Instagram: @emigiaquinta • Website: emigiaquinta.com/contact 🎧 SUBSCRIBE for more Original Game Music, Covers, and OST Breakdowns! #FinalFantasyIX #NobuoUematsu #GameAudio #VideoGameMusic #MusicTheory #PrincessGarnet #FFIX #JRPG #VGM #Composer #GameDev

    19 min
  2. Why Zidane's Theme Sounds NOTHING Like a Thief | FFIX Music Theory

    May 3

    Why Zidane's Theme Sounds NOTHING Like a Thief | FFIX Music Theory

    This episode is best experienced on YouTube where you can follow the score analysis and audio examples — youtube.com/@emigiaquinta How do you compose music for a Thief who is hiding a heart of pure gold? In this episode of our Final Fantasy IX music analysis series, we dive into the upbeat, adventurous anthem of our protagonist, Zidane Tribal! We explore how Nobuo Uematsu used an ABAC musical structure to score a character defined by the Japanese keyword Shintei (Virtue).From the military snare drum swagger of his public persona, to the darker, complex chords hinting at his hidden origins, we break down every layer of this track. We even uncover a legendary classical music secret hidden inside the beautiful flute solo—Pachelbel's Canon!If you love video game music theory and OST deep dives, let me know in the comments: Do you consider this track to be Zidane's true theme, or does "A Place to Call Home" fit him better?📌 CHAPTERS: 0:00 - How do you score a Thief? 1:30 - Shintei: The Meaning of Virtue 2:44 - Song Structure & Intro5:20 - Section A: The Adventurous Swagger 6:50 - Section B: Dark Chords & Inner Turmoil 11:00 - Section C: The Classical Flute Solo 14:25 - The Hidden Pachelbel's Canon 19:50 - Wrap up 🎮 FOR GAME DEVELOPERS & PRODUCERS: Are you an indie dev or studio looking for a dedicated composer? I am currently available for freelance work and would love to collaborate! Coming from a rock band background as a frontman/guitarist, I blend the raw energy of rock with the immersive scale of orchestral scoring. Whether your project needs an epic JRPG battle theme, a moody cinematic score, or an adventurous character anthem like this one, I craft music to hit the exact emotional beats your story requires. 📩 Let's connect: • Instagram: @emigiaquinta • Website: emigiaquinta.com/contact 🎧 SUBSCRIBE for more Original Game Music, Covers, and OST Breakdowns!#FinalFantasyIX #NobuoUematsu #GameAudio #VideoGameMusic #MusicTheory #ZidaneTribal #FFIX #JRPG #VGM #Composer #GameDev

    20 min
  3. Eiko's theme isn't as happy as it sounds (Final Fantasy IX Analysis)

    Mar 16

    Eiko's theme isn't as happy as it sounds (Final Fantasy IX Analysis)

    This episode is best experienced on YouTube where you can follow the score analysis and audio examples — youtube.com/@emigiaquinta How do you compose a theme for a 6-year-old Summoner who is the last of her kind? Usually, summoners in Final Fantasy are scored with ancient, mystical choirs or harps. But for Eiko Carol, Nobuo Uematsu wrote a bouncing, acoustic folk song. Why?In this episode, we open Dorico to analyze how Eiko's cheerful theme is actually a brilliant musical mask. We explore her character's Japanese keyword, Kodoku (Solitude)—meaning "Orphan" and "Alone"—and how the music represents a child filling the silence of a ghost town so she doesn't feel lonely.From starting on a tense Dominant chord ("away from home") to the sudden heartbreak of a borrowed C Minor chord, we break down the music theory of Eiko's Theme. We also explain what a "Plagal Cadence" (or Amen Cadence) is , and why the looping ending of her song represents an unanswered question: "Are you my family?"What you will find:The Summoner Archetype vs. The energetic reality of Eiko.The False Home: Why the track starts on D Major instead of the G chord.The Guitar Trio: Deconstructing the acoustic arrangement.Music Theory: The "Minor Turn" and the Plagal/Amen Cadence.The Unanswered Question: Why the in-game loop prevents the actual song resolution.Chapters:0:00 - Introduction: The Last Summoner01:16 - Background Context: The Meaning of "Kodoku", Solitude.2:16 - Intro: The False Home2:54 - Section A: The Guitar Trio4:37 - Minoru Akao and the challenge of implementing a guitar on PSX.5:45 - Song form & deceptive arrival to section B6:50 - Section B: The Minor Turn & Plagal Cadences10:16 - Section C: The Unanswered Question12:10 - Conclusion: A Spirit in the RuinsInterested on the book I wrote on FFIX?Check https://emigiaquinta.com/collection/allSoundtrack:Final Fantasy IX OST - "Eiko's Theme"Composed by Nobuo Uematsu#FinalFantasyIX #EikoCarol #GameAudio #MusicTheory #NobuoUematsu #FFIX

    13 min

About

Gamer's Kingdom — deep dives into JRPG and video game music. How composers like Nobuo Uematsu craft emotion through harmony, orchestration, and sound design. Hosted by Emi Giaquinta — video game composer, author of A Book To Call Home: The Music of Final Fantasy IX, Berklee graduate, Summa Cum Laude. Started as an audio podcast in June 2024, now also a full video series on YouTube — with score analysis and audio comparisons. 🎮 youtube.com/@emigiaquinta | emigiaquinta.com