Fallout: New Vegas songs and concept art
The latest Bethesda podcast reveals some of the songs that will be featured on theFallout: New Vegas soundtrack, as well as two new pieces of New Vegas concept art.
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Fans looking to tune into more iconic music while roaming the next Fallout wasteland are in luck. Today we're announcing a number of the tracks featured in Fallout: New Vegas, and as you might imagine, it's packed with classic tracks from Vegas' long musical history. Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Nat King Kole, Bing Crosby and more will croon across two major radio stations. Check out the list below.
”- "Ain't That a Kick in the Head?", written by Sammy Cahn and James Van Heusen, performed by Dean Martin
- "It's a Sin to Tell a Lie", written by Billy Mayhew, performed by The Ink Spots
- "Blue Moon", written by Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, performed by Frank Sinatra
- "Jingle, Jangle, Jingle", written by Joseph Lilley and Frank Loesser, performed by Kay Kyser
- "Love Me as Though There Were No Tomorrow", written by Harold Adamson and Jimmy McHugh, performed by Nat King Cole
- "Why Don't You Do Right? (Get Me Some Money Too!)", written by Joe McCoy, performed by Peggy Lee
- "Mad About the Boy", written by Noel Coward, performed by Helen Forrest
- "Something's Gotta Give", written by Johnny Mercer, performed by Bing Crosby
- "Heartaches by the Numbers", written by Harlan Howard, performed by Guy Mitchell
- "It's a Sin", written by William Grishaw, performed by Eddy Arnold
- "Hangover Heart", written by Hank Thompson and Pat Hagen, performed by Hank Thompson
- "Johnny Guitar", written by Victor Young and Peggy Lee, performed by Peggy Lee
- "Big Iron", written and performed by Marty Robbins
- "Stars of the Midnight Range", written and Performed by Johnny Bond
Two new pieces of concept art have also been revealed:
Looking out from a high vantage point somewhere over Westside New Vegas, we see the Lucky 38 on the horizon dominating the valley skyline in this golden hour. As the sun drops behind the Spring Mountains, local residents hold refuge in small camps, constructed with salvaged materials. They live in the shadow of the strip, left to fend for themselves.
From high up on the hill or The Fort as it's known today, Caesar and his Legion have a commanding view of Hoover Dam. Waiting for the right moment, Caesar is busy preparing the newest batch of slaves to do his bidding. The approaching storm from the East signals the coming battle at the dam between the NCR and the Legion.