My newfound friend @merigreenleaf recently tagged me to participate in the “OC Song Tag”! For anyone unaware, if you are tagged in this game, you are asked to choose a song that correlates to each of your OC’s. You can explain why, include relevant lyrics, whatever your heart so chooses.
I will be tagging some newfound followers of mine, so that I can learn more about your babes: @duggarsetal, @tamaravonb, and @fallaciousopuscule! Feel free to participate or ignore - this is simply an invitation!
Word of warning: most of these will come directly from their character playlists! You can listen to each of these playlists by clicking the characters’ names!
Royan Godewine: Broken Crown (Mumford and Sons)
The image alone should explain why this song is so fitting for Royan. Think of a crown broken in two halves: Royan and Sigrid, two royals vying for the Frozen Throne, or Royan and Medea, two Shepherds seeking to save the world.
This song really emphasizes the feel has towards his roles as prince and Shepherd. By that, I mean, he doesn’t want them. At all. He doesn’t want the crown. He cannot bear the weight of it, or so he thinks. He cannot believe that someone like him could ever be a “chosen one”. While Royan generally only shows his happy-go-luck side, this song portrays his inner turmoil throughout the series.
Oeden Halflife: Bird Set Free (Sia)
If you don’t understand the connection, read literally anything I’ve posted about Oeden. The first book features his desire to escape from assumed imprisonment within Aeonor - and he will risk anything to get out once and for all through the so-called “right” means. In Aeonor, Oeden has lost himself, lost his life (thus the surname). He believes that, once released, he will begin to come alive again and find himself, find his song. He does not care what the world thinks of him, or what he will one day sing. He does not care what the world makes of his prophecies - his “songs” to the world and to the Sealed God. He just wants to be free. Also, yes, his pet, Eon, played a part in choosing this.
Medea Brahim: I Am the Fire (Halestorm)
What could encapsulate Medea’s personality more than Halestorm? For those painfully unaware of the insane talent that is Lzzy Hale, Halestorm manages to capture all of the angst of punk/rock/metal and channel it through pure rage-fueled scream-singing. “I Am the Fire” is a song describing how Lzzy feels as though she is the very answer she has sought her entire life. Medea feels the same. She has sought a savior, as her people had. And then, all of a sudden, she discovers that she is a “Shepherd”, destined to lead the world. She does not need a god that abandoned them. She only needs herself. I had other songs that instilled this same sense of self-made justice, but the power of Lzzy’s voice - and the religion-inspired lyrics - really fit Medea and the themes of Kingdom Come.
Farukh (Slave #413): The Resistance (Skillet)
Really, any song about rebellion works for Farukh: Knights of Cydonia, Uprising, Reapers, Prayer of the Refugee, you name it, it probably works. Especially Muse. Similar to Halestorm, Skillet has this raw sense of fury in their voices. However, whereas Halestorm is just an untamed wildfire, Skillet is contained, focused. Thus, the difference between Farukh and Medea, at first. Farukh has a clear goal, a clear enemy, a clear plan...even if the methods are more chaotic. Having John Cooper as the voice only helped enforce the point.
As opposed to the other potential options, I really liked the militant focus of this song. It’s not just about Farukh as a soldier and slave, although that’s important. But Farukh is not solely about himself. Revolutions are about bodies of people, not just their leaders. The first line - “I am a nation, I am a million faces” - emphasizes this notion perfectly. Farukh is simply representative of the entire nation of slaves in revolt. It’s not only personal to his problems or opinions.
Kasumi of the Shadows: In the Shadows (The Rasmus)
While the “feel” of this song does not perfectly suit Kasumi, the lyrics most certainly do. Kasumi’s storyline focuses heavily on the tension between tradition and change. You have her royal parents and the civilized folk of her kingdom telling her to serve in the shadows. They want her to do the dirty work so that their kingdom can seem pristine. Meanwhile, Kasumi feels pulled towards the barbarian lifestyle that the royals reject so fervently. You can see this difference portrayed in the verses “they say I need to kill before I can feel safe”, referring to her role as an assassin, vs. “sometimes I feel like I should go and play with the thunder”. Kasumi feels like she has been “waiting in the shadows” her whole life for an answer. Which Shepherd is the true one? Which path in life is the right one? Which side should she take? And now, the time has come to decide.
There’s an additional aspect I want to touch on. The song has a surprisingly emotional interlude when the singer says “watching, waiting for someone; feel me, touch me, heal me”, etc. As Kasumi is not one for physical touch, this might seem strange at first. But Kasumi desperately desires to find a savior, both for herself and for the world. It’s why she accepts her mission to find the true Shepherd. Personally, she wants someone to see her behind her mask and to rescue her from this life. She wants someone to see more than just a shadow
Carmila Ramos: Brick by Boring Brick (Paramore)
Believe it or not, this is the song that formed the basis of Carmila’s concept. Carmila’s theme is “a fairytale life in a tragic reality”. Carmila’s storyline starts in the fantasy of regaining her nobility with her husband as her “(Merchant) Prince Charming” and getting to spend the rest of her life in luxury...only for everything to fall apart. That fairytale she worked so hard for? Destroyed. The reader can only hope that Carmila knows how to cope with it all. Spoiler alert: not always! This is the journey we see the character in Brick by Boring Brick take - a girl with an unrealistic dream whose castle comes crashing down and decides to destroy the fairytale in the end. There is no more perfect song for her story.
Solomon: Heretics and Killers (Protest the Hero)
By far, I had the hardest time picking songs for Solomon...thus why his playlist is, as of now, not yet complete. He’s a very complex character, one with themes and morals and ideals that are not exactly put to song often enough. This song, however, depicts him almost perfectly. Solomon sees himself as this Christ-like figure: uniting the world, sacrificing of himself for their sake, etc. But his efforts have only led to divide the world further. His attempts to save them have instead doomed them all. With all of the religious themes in Kingdom Come - especially in Solomon’s storyline - I felt that the imagery in this song suited the tension within Solomon between his state as an attempted Messiah and his innate unholiness.