Jonathan Eng about the music in Sayonara Wild Hearts

The initial influences for the Sayonara Wild Hearts music
were Ethiopian music, surf rock, and stoner rock. The demos
I made in the spring of 2015 were all based around the
electric guitar. I gave the demos aggressive or moody titles
like Clawmarks, Road Ripper, Mojave Slowfox and Black
Strobe. Mojave Slowfox was like a garage rock version of
Jonathan Richman’s Egyptian Reggae
and Clawmarks had a little
White Stripes
about it, with primitive messy drums and a steady and simple
guitar riff. On the Road Ripper demo I added police siren
effects. I envisioned how you were being chased, and that
the game would resemble
motorcycle sequence in Final Fantasy VII
.
Clawmarks demo
Night Road demo
Mojave Slowfox demo
Road Ripper demo
Black Strobe demo
Suddenly Simogo pointed out a new direction for the games
aesthetic. I left all the guitar-based demos behind, and in
October 2015 I started writing the first more pop-oriented
song. Working closely with Simon I tried to approach
heartbreak from different angles, and the guiding concept
was “cry-disco”. Musically, the songs were familiar
territory for me—indie pop tunes in the style of one of my
all-time favorites,
Andreas Mattsson. It was thrilling to hear my acoustic guitar songs
transformed to glittery electropop with a female voice with
the help of Daniel and Linnea.
All the songs were written specifically for the game, except A Place I Don’t Know. I wrote it in the fall of 2017, after an episode in which I had got a piece of rare steak stuck in my throat, then had failed surgery and had to stay sedated in the hospital for days. I remember sitting on my couch after coming home, giving myself blood thinner injections and writing that song as an attempt to quell anxiety about the future. I had a demo of it laying around for a couple of years, until we decided in 2019 to use it for Sayonara. The text was rewritten a bit for the game, and in the end became a little less of a country music pastiche, which made it better.
In August 2020 I was invited to do a
Sayonara Wild Hearts live set
for Summer Game Fest. It was a lot of fun, because I got to
revisit the acoustic originals, while also having to tweak
the songs slightly to sound more like the final ones in the
game. It was also nerve-racking to get a clean take of the
five minutes of Begin Again with no mistakes.