This greatly increases music variety in the Capital Wasteland, as the vanilla soundtrack has only 7 explore themes, 5 dungeon themes and 4 base themes and 5 public themes. This will also enable dynamic dungeon music for interior cells - which is very fun! All versions will need proper testing to ensure everything works like it should. Full theme songs for Fallout 3, Fallout New Vegas and Fallout 4 in one video.Fallout 3: 0:00Fallout New Vegas: 2:02Fallout 4: 4:05 The original Fallouts took more of a tribal/electronic theme. New Vegas is more like the kind of "western industrial" you might hear in Borderlands. 4 was sort of a generic, orchestral soundtrack, and maybe that's why it didn't stand out to me. You could transplant that into another game and it would still work. TES's soundtracks are composed by Jeremy Soule, Fallout 3 and New Vegas's (and 4) are composed by Inon Zur (with Mark Morgan's Fallout & Fallout 2 tracks). A bulk of the tracks are re-used from Fallout/Fallout 2 as well some from Fallout 3. And of course, some original tracks for the game. "Big Iron" is a song broadcast on Radio New Vegas, Mojave Music Radio and Black Mountain Radio in Fallout: New Vegas. It was written and performed by Marty Robbins and released as a single from the 1959 album Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs. In a 2019 interview with New York magazine, music supervisor Christopher S. Parker described picking the song out of many from the album. This song is The mysterious broadcast is a radio station in the Fallout: New Vegas add-on Old World Blues, inviting the Courier to Big MT. The broadcast enthusiastically invites listeners to a "Midnight Science Fiction Feature!" while playing a downbeat jazz theme that "makes your head hurt." Jazz tunes previously only heard in casino lobbies (including old ones from Radio New Vegas and Mojave Music Radio New Vegas has more radio stations, which breaks down the number of songs. In Fallout 3, basically all the songs were lumped into one station. Enclave Radio and Agatha's station were very short song lists. In New Vegas, you have Radio New Vegas, Mojave Music, Black Mountain, Mysterious Broadcast, and the main casinos had an internal soundtrack. "It's a Sin to Tell a Lie" is a song broadcast on Radio New Vegas, Mojave Music Radio, and Black Mountain Radio in Fallout: New Vegas. It was written by Billy Mayhew in 1936. Various incarnations of the Ink Spots have made multiple recordings of the song, but the version used in the game was released in 1979. Note: After the Ink Spots broke up, many impostor groups started recording under the CĂĄch Vay Tiền TrĂȘn Momo.

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