We really are reaching the rarefied heights of 2016's music scene now, aren't we? The Equestrian Trot 100 chart moves today into the top quarter. From here on in, these songs weren't just quite popular, they were really popular. Still, for the moment the usual inclusion criteria still apply:
Rule 1: Still available in the same or (1b) similar form direct from the/an original artist.
Rule 2: Available from a third party, with reason to believe the artist is fine with this.
Rule 3: So famous that it would be plain silly to leave it out.
Rule 4: Being unlisted is not, on its own, grounds for exclusion.
Today's list of songs (all five again!) follows.
25: Silva Hound ft. Eurobeat Brony – Come Alive
24: Magpiepony – I'll Keep Trying
23: Carbon Maestro ft. SweetPoffin & Wubcake – The Siren and the Seamare
22: Caleb Hyles – Lullaby for a Princess (cover)
21: Royal Canterlot Symphonic Metal Orchestra – Fall of an Empire
Rule 1: uploaded to YouTube 29 May 2015
This song did of course feature highly in "Sounds of 2015", booking in at no. 18 that year. You've almost certainly heard it, perhaps in connection with conventions, where it's a popular track indeed. But this collaboration between fandom heavyweights Silva Hound and Odyssey Eurobeat (or Eurobeat Brony; take your pick) is more than worth a second go round. But why did it get that second lease of life? Simple: one of the very last BronyDanceParty PMVs, which after various previews appeared in final form on Christmas Day 2016. If you like club music, well, at all then this should be in your collection. Available for $1.49 on Silva Hound's Bandcamp.
¹ Which has just broken a million views, by the way...
Quite a change of feel now, to something more epic, something that might feel more at home in an animated feature film. This is the very last video on Carbon Maestro's YouTube account, and it's not a bad way to go out. It's described as "a duet between the Siren Adagio and Seamare Turquesa in the human world", though the full story seems to be missing. Adagio is played by Wubcake, who probably needs no introduction. I don't know anything about SweetPoffin, but she matches Wubcake here in terms of vocal impact. On Bandcamp, you get a collection of the full version, a radio edit (lacking dialogue) and an instrumental for $1 on Carbon Maestro's Bandcamp.
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