Xenogears was Yasunori Mitsuda's first major solo work, as his previous soundtracks were collaborations with other composers with the exception of the score to
Radical Dreamers: Nusumenai Hōseki, which never saw an album release. According to Mitsuda, the music of
Xenogears belongs to the
traditional music genre. Though he first described it as stemming from "a world of [his] own imagining" rather than any specific country, he has also claimed a strong
Irish or
Celtic music influence. His musical approach for the original soundtrack was to insert Celtic influences into "easy-to-listen-to"
pop tracks rather than making either "dense" Celtic music or simple
background music. For
Creid, he expanded on this theme to create an album of arranged
Xenogears music with a more prominent Celtic style. The album contains a mixture of vocal and instrumental tracks, and combines Japanese and Celtic music together in its pieces. The album's title refers to two ideas, with one being "a message to those who feel they have lost sight of their ambitions for the flood of information this era surrounds us with" and the other an affirmation to himself that Mitsuda had "rediscovered [his] own path". Mitsuda felt that with this album, he had "discovered the precise mode of musical expression [he] was seeking within" himself and "given form to the belief within [his] heart". In addition to Japanese musicians, several
Irish artists contributed to
Creid, including
uilleann piper Davy Spillane—formerly of
Moving Hearts and
Riverdance—and
Máire Breatnach, who had previously played fiddle on another Square album,
Final Fantasy IV Celtic Moon. Mitsuda also asked guitarist
Tomohiko Kira and singer
Yoko Ueno to appear to the album after an acquaintance introduced him to them. Hidenobu "KALTA" Ootsuki worked on the album as an arranger and felt his work was made easier by his familiarity with Mitsuda's music—
Creid was his second arrangement project with Mitsuda, after
Chrono Trigger Arranged Version: The Brink of Time, which he had worked on three years before. According to Ootsuki, Mitsuda and he were complementary in style, which resulted in an album leaving a lot of space and freedom for the listeners' imagination. He felt that, since
Chrono Trigger, Mitsuda's musical style had changed to use less "strong" notes and include more sophistication; upon hearing the
Xenogears tracks he "literally" "couldn't wait" to arrange them. Mitsuda has described their collaborative style as that he would first create the "basic backbone" of the song and form the idea of how he wanted the song "to turn out", then take the result to Ootsuki for them to arrange together. The result would then be changed in the process of recording, as "what sounds good on a synth module doesn't always sound good on live instruments", and occasionally the recording artists would "ad-lib" parts that would make it into the final product. Mitsuda generally also chose the specific percussion instruments to be used while recording, rather than beforehand; he feels that "as long as the final product turns out to be like what I want it to be, the process doesn't really matter too much". As working with the other artists gave him a sense of celebration, Mitsuda named the "imaginary band" of performers Millennial Fair and credited them as such in the album. composed and arranged the
Xenogears soundtrack and
Creid Creid was released by DigiCube on April 22, 1998, and re-released by Square Enix on June 29, 2005. The release date was only seven weeks after that of the
original soundtrack album and ten after the publication of the game itself. Its ten tracks cover a duration of 49:01. "Stars of Tears" and "Small Two of Pieces ~Screeching Shards~" from the original soundtrack appear on the album as "Two Wings" and "Möbius", respectively. "Stars of Tears", although included on the original album, did not appear in the game, as the scene it was to be played in, an opening
cutscene to the game, was eliminated during development. The album features five vocal tracks and five instrumental tracks.
Creid was the last album that Mitsuda worked on as an employee of Square; three months after its release, in July 1998, he resigned to work as a freelance artist and formed Procyon Studio to produce his work, though he continued to do work for Square such as the soundtrack to
Chrono Cross the following year. The main lyricist, Junko Kudo, wrote the lyrics to four of the five vocal tracks and had no previous experience with video game-related projects; she was surprised by the length of the game's script when she asked to look at it. She had never met Mitsuda before she was asked to write the lyrics. Mitsuda first heard her work in a song by
Mimori Yusa on Yusa's 1988 album
Hitomi Suishō, and describes himself as being very moved by the lyrics and becoming a big fan of Kudo's work. Although Mitsuda has said that he is generally not confident in his personal skills at writing lyrics, he wrote those of the title track, which were then translated from
Japanese to
Gaelic for the recording. Celtic singer
Joanne Hogg of the band
Iona, who was the singer from the original soundtrack, did not reprise her role in
Creid. Instead, Tetsuko Honma sang the four tracks written by Kudo, while
Eimear Quinn sang "Creid". == Reception and legacy ==