Tropedia

  • Before making a single edit, Tropedia EXPECTS our site policy and manual of style to be followed. Failure to do so may result in deletion of contributions and blocks of users who refuse to learn to do so. Our policies can be reviewed here.
  • All images MUST now have proper attribution, those who neglect to assign at least the "fair use" licensing to an image may have it deleted. All new pages should use the preloadable templates feature on the edit page to add the appropriate basic page markup. Pages that don't do this will be subject to deletion, with or without explanation.
  • All new trope pages will be made with the "Trope Workshop" found on the "Troper Tools" menu and worked on until they have at least three examples. The Trope workshop specific templates can then be removed and it will be regarded as a regular trope page after being moved to the Main namespace. THIS SHOULD BE WORKING NOW, REPORT ANY ISSUES TO Janna2000, SelfCloak or RRabbit42. DON'T MAKE PAGES MANUALLY UNLESS A TEMPLATE IS BROKEN, AND REPORT IT THAT IS THE CASE. PAGES WILL BE DELETED OTHERWISE IF THEY ARE MISSING BASIC MARKUP.

READ MORE

Tropedia
Advertisement
WikEd fancyquotesQuotesBug-silkHeadscratchersIcons-mini-icon extensionPlaying WithUseful NotesMagnifierAnalysisPhoto linkImage LinksHaiku-wide-iconHaikuLaconic

So you're listening to a nice, pleasant song about bunnies and rainbows and running in the rain with your best girl by your side. Then the final note of the song falls and, instead of a nice soft, resolution, it's a heavily played Sting note in a minor Scare Chord. Then the music fades into a series of dissonant arpeggios with a creepy mechanical voice muttering some nonsensical gibberish that sounds like Satan reciting an Edgar Allan Poe story. It's surely not the ending you expected this particular song to have — and if you happen to be really unlucky, it'll burrow into your mind playing itself over and over like some self-regenerating Nightmare Fuel. Musicians most likely put these kinds of stingers at the ends of their songs to make them memorable, (although they'll more than likely just scare people from listening to the song again, or cause them to listen with a finger hovering over the "change track" button during the song's final stretch.)

Last Note Nightmare can be very comparable to a Jump Scare, especially of the Screamer Prank variety. The opposite of a Last Note Nightmare is Last Note Hilarity.

(Music geeks might be interested to note that there is an opposite technique, the "Picardy third," or "Tierce de Picardie" in which when a song that has been in minor the whole time goes into major on the very last chord.)


Music[]

Pop[]

  • Madonna's "Act of Contrition." While the whole song is pretty ominous, the last four seconds will make you jump out of your seat.
  • Another: Michael Jackson's "Another Part of Me" begins with an Ominous Pipe Organ note, but becomes a normal MJ song after that.
    • The singles "Dirty Diana" and the much more well-known "Smooth Criminal" begin with similar noises. The video for the former ends with the same noise, which acts as a very effective soundtrack to the video's Downer Ending.
    • "Stranger In Moscow", a slow, moody ballad, ends with a man whispering menacingly in Russian over the end. Chills right up the spine. Allegedly this is a KGB agent interrogating us, but why is he whispering? Why???
  • The Carpenters' version of "Superstar" has a morose and unsettling resolution.
  • The last part of Lara Fabian's "Une Ave Maria" is particularly creepy. While it could be argued that the sound fits considering the theme is Lara teaching young children about violence in history, it still doesn't change the fact that the last part of the song is incredibly creepy. In fact, watching the video only adds to the dread the song makes you feel.
  • Scissor Shock's surprisingly accessible "Ex-Coroner's Laugh, Part 1."
  • Inverted with the extended mix of Simple Minds song "Jungleland". It starts out with heavy breathing, with starts getting louder, and louder, AND LOUDER! The rest of the song is just awesome though.
  • "Somehow" by Drake Bell is ostensibly about a battered wife who eventually decides she's had enough, weighs her husband down and throws him into the lake, and is now pondering how to cover it all up. This is creepy enough, but the slow, dark, acoustic guitar-y song ends with a snippet off cheerful piano music, which suggested that the woman snapped entirely and is now in a state of cheerful, giggling insanity.
  • The end of "Pleasant Valley Sunday" by The Monkees is pretty unnerving. At the end, the cheerful harmonies blur into a fuzzy, echoing, almost unrecognizable cacophony. Scary indeed, if you've never heard it before.
  • "Spinning Wheel" by Blood, Sweat and Tears is a fairly mellow jazz-rock fusion song, often used as an example of the genre. However, after the lyrics end comes a Last Note Nightmare that spans a quarter of the song. The music continues repetitively, but is interrupted - twice - by some frankly demented carnival music. On the third interruption, the carnival music mixes with the "normal" music and slowly overwhelms it before grinding to a halt (at which point the band members can be heard chuckling and admitting that "That wasn't too good.") Can also lead to Fridge Brilliance if one only then realizes that the 'spinning wheel' is a merry-go-round. Duh.
  • Dave "Not The One From Eurythmics" Stewart and Barbara Gaskin have two notable examples.
    • "Busy Doing Nothing" is a quirky, happy song, but immediately after the final lyric, when the song sound like it should end, it suddenly segues into a minor chord and a sound resembling a ticking clock, with a children's choir softly repeating the final line.
    • More noticeably, "Trash Planet" is a chaotic but upbeat song, with a bit of social commentary about pollution, but at the end the key abruptly changes, a high-pitched whistle occurs, and then the piece gradually collapses into a random cluster of noise and the sounds of people coughing/vomiting. After about half a minute of this, there is suddenly an explosion, and then in the silence a childlike voice says "Bye-bye!"
  • The radio edit of "Head Over Heels" by Tears for Fears differs from the album version in that it does not fade into the next song, "Broken (Live)". This makes Roland Orzabal's final wail of "TIIIIIIIME FLIIIIIIIIIIIES!!!", which already had little to do with the rest of the song, much more unsettling and out of nowhere.
  • The end of "Be With Me" by The Beach Boys is already an eerie song, but it ends with etherial low pitched wailing.

Rock[]

  • The Beatles were fond of this trope. "Strawberry Fields Forever" has a particularly disturbing last final seconds with quivering flutes and a slowed-down voice reciting either "cranberry sauce" or "I buried Paul," depending on where you stand on the "Paul Is Dead" debate.
    • Upon hearing it on take 7 of the song (from volume 2 of Anthology), John says "I'm very bored" twice.
    • The best (or worst?) example would have to be from their White Album song "Long Long Long." It really doesn't help that the song itself is played at a lethargic pace that makes it seem as though it's slightly disconnected from the real world in the first place...
    • There is also the laughter at the end of "Within You Without You." George Harrison insisted on its being there because he thought it would be a light touch after the heavy song. It isn't.
      • George Harrison in particular seemed to like this a lot. ("One more time...")
    • The final chord of "A Day in the Life" fades out so long you can almost (?) hear the air conditioner.
      • And then, seconds after the last vibrations of the chord have faded, there's the sudden discordant loop of distorted, randomly-spliced-together studio chatter. In the original British LP pressings, this was placed in the record's "run-out" groove so that listeners with manual turntables would hear it indefinitely until they lifted the needle. (If you're a dog, you'll experience your Last-Note Nightmare a few seconds before this, as Lennon added a 15 kHz tone, inaudible to most humans, specifically to annoy you.)
        • Actually, 15kHz is audible to nearly all children and most teens and younger 20-somethings. Humans with good hearing are born with the ability to hear up to 20kHz; they only begin to lose that upper range starting at age 8. The reason people who should know better (from having heard the album as a kid/teen) buy into this is because the note just sounds like high-pitched static, so it's easy to mistake for a simple pause in the recording.
        • It helps to know that this loop, played backwards, sounds remarkably like, "I'll fuck you like Superman! I'll fuck you like Superman! etc." Paul McCartney said in his autobiography Many Years from Now that he never knew this (they certainly didn't plan it) until someone played it backwards for him and he yelled, "Gaaaawwwwd!"
    • The end of "I Am the Walrus," complete with buried King Lear. This one helped fuel the "Paul Is Dead" rumors...
    • "I Want You (She's So Heavy)" is a dark and heavy song in itself, but its ominous ending with the bass chords and static is still a Last-Note Nightmare, even compared to that — especially since it cuts off in the middle of that last note.
    • Said last note appears at the beginning of "Her Majesty", which starts a full minute after "The End" and was unlisted on the original vinyl. This means that the first note of "Her Majesty" is a reverse example as well as being a Brick Joke.
      • "Being For The Benefit Of Mr Kite" (which was already rather eerie to begin with) suddenly cut into "I Want You (She's So Heavy)" on the LOVE album. The whole "song" became a Last-Note Nightmare.
        • AND it has the creepy organ from "Being For The Benefit Of Mr. Kite", AAAAND snippets of the vocals from "Helter Skelter". And creepy laughing, which seems to be a theme in love. PLUS after the infamous cutoff, there are weird swirly wind sounds. Then it cuts to "Help!" and scares the piss out of you.
      • The Beatles: Rock Band actually visualizes the nightmare by blacking out your TV just as the song ends.
    • A version of "Penny Lane" on the Anthology 2 album has a Strawberry Fields-like ending, which begins with a short trumpet fanfare, and segues into a strange guitar and piano coda, accompanied by someone breathing heavily into the mic. It's subverted at the end, with Paul cheerfully proclaiming "What a suitable ending, I think!".
    • And of course this is inverted with "A Hard Day's Night," which is the first song on the entire album and kicks off with an in-your-face, dissonant Dm7add11 chord on the guitar.
      • CHUNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNGGGG...
      • At the same time as a piano chord courtesy of George Martin.
    • "It's All Too Much" also starts with a loud, dissonant guitar chord, which is quite unwelcome if you aren't expecting it. Right before that, John is cut off while yelling something like "To your mother." It's pretty creepy.
      • He was saying "To Jorma," a tip of the hat to a member of Jefferson Airplane.
    • The Beatles used a Picardy third in "And I Love Her," which uses a D-MAJOR chord at the end of the song, which is in C# minor and D minor.
  • The Rolling Stones' "She's A Rainbow" has a good driving beat, Mick sings the praises of a girl who dresses up in colors, underlined with a cheerfully inane 'la la la' chorus, he alternates verses with a sprightly Baroque piano playing the tune...then it ends with strings in a shrill chittering discord with a low-end chord of doom under it bursting through everything else! Gives me chills to this day.
    • "Cool, Calm, and Collected" on their "Between the Buttons" album has a jolly, jaunty music-hall vibe to it - then after the last verse, the beat starts quickening, slowly at first, getting more and more reckless as the piano gets more and more frantic, until it all collapses into a big reverberating noise.
  • "Jeremy" by Pearl Jam takes a twist after the final chorus, with a series of slow, agonizing(and depressing) vocal phrases, made even scarier by the "spoke in, spoke in" background vocals, ending with an abrupt scream, after which the song winds down with a tired "uh huh" vocal section, finally fading to melancholy acoustic guitar. This is supposed to symbolize Jeremy's descent to insanity and death.
    • With Release, around the six-minute mark, the song segues into a reprise of the album's cacophonic intro.
  • The CD release of Patti Smith's Horses ends with a cover of "My Generation." It's loud, all right, but it appears to stop... only to end on a note a good twenty decibels louder than anything else on the album.
  • "Disturbance" by The Move switches from being a a fairly energetic pop-rock to a mix of ominous guitar and therimen playing, creepy background chanting, and the singer snarling, grunting, and screaming unintelligibly. It doesn't help that the song seems to be about the singer questioning his own sanity at various points in his life.
  • "I Ain't Got No Heart To Give Away", from Frank Zappa and the Mothers' Freak Out! is a Subversion. It cuts suddenly to a scream and a weird jumble of instruments, only to return with a triumphant horn blast.
  • "The Bewlay Brothers" by David Bowie, starting at 4:09.
    • The cacophonic ending of "Space Oddity".
  • For most of its length, Alice Cooper's "Wind Up Toy" is remarkably perky and upbeat for a song following up on the earlier album Welcome To My Nightmare and about the attempts of the deranged Steven to understand his incarceration in a mental institution and the turn his life has taken through a distorted, childish lens... then comes the ending, where everything cuts out except the broken music box, while a strange, distorted, childish voice goes into a deranged rant, followed by a distant, quiet female voice calling out "Steven!"
    • "They come here every night...I see them, don't you see them? Hm, that's odd, isn't it? You seem tired...winding down...YOU HAVE TO GO NOW IT'S BEDTIME"
    • Alice Cooper's "School's Out" uses a gimmick very similar to the one in "War Pigs." Where the end of the song fades out sounding exactly like an 8-track tape being chewed up. Imagine how scary that must have sounded to a fella who just bought the new 'Coop album back in the 70's.
  • Would you believe "Wonderwall" by Oasis? After the vocals are done, the song segues into a beautiful lush strings-and-piano piece and ends with a few acoustic guitar chords with birds chirping in the background. But between these two pleasant interludes, the piano fades, leaving the violin and bass viol to hold one last note. And then even the bass stops, leaving a single violin note which gets less and less melodic until it finally climaxes with a hideous, almost voice-like "BLLLLLEEEEEAAAAAGGHHHH" sound. If you're not expecting it, it's a real Penultimate Note Nightmare.
  • The nightmarish strings at the end of Supertramp's "If Everyone Was Listening", from Crime Of The Century.
  • "Metal Machine Music" by Lou Reed is 64 minutes of nothing but a Last-Note Nightmare.
    • The track "The Bed" from album Berlin is a dream-like song with a final moment of pure nightmare.
    • What about "The Kids", also from Berlin, another quiet song that in this case ends with the voices of children hollering for their mother, sounding for all the world like they have just been told she is not coming home ... ever.
  • The Who's "Tommy's Holiday Camp" is a fun, commercial-like jingle welcoming visitors to the cult of the Pinball Wizard himself, sung cheerfully by his sexual predator uncle, Ernie. At the end of the song, Ernie decides he'll exclaim "Welcome!", but, deviating from the happy tone of the rest of the song, does so in a scratchy and ominous voice.
  • Steve Harley and Cockney Rebel had a 1976 minor hit with "(I Believe) Love's A Prima Donna". The single release's B-side was a pleasant (if slightly queasy) instrumental titled "Sidetrack 1". This track eventually fades down, you think, "well, what a nice if bland little tune"...and THEN, you're suddenly hit with a discordant, teeth-grating, violin/synthesiser sting that sounds like an evil extra-terrestrial has taken control of your stereo. Nasty.
  • "A Season In Hell (Fire Suite)" by John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band, off the Eddie and the Cruisers soundtrack. It's a pretty generic Springsteen-ish tune in a minor key until after the last chorus. Then the guitar line ascends...and ascends...and ascends...and then CRASHES with a deafening low chord accompanied by chimes and bells that sound like glass shattering.
  • Not quite as blatant as many, but the Tom Waits song "Johnsburg, Illinois" from the Swordfishtrombones album. The first minute of the short song is a tender piano piece about a sweetheart, but towards the end of the song there is a missed note, and then a couple; the tune eventually grows into a series of dissonances that make for a somewhat creepy ending.
  • "Fire on High" by ELO is a FIRST note nightmare. It begins with a Scare Chord, segues into a backmask (intended to parody accusations of Satanic backmasking) that, when played forward, says "The music is reversible, but time is not...turn back, turn back, turn back!" and then builds into Psycho strings...before mellowing into a catchy, toe-tapping jam.
    • Bonus points if you listen to the backmask part knowing what's being said when, and realize the Scare Chord is played right when the voice says "time is not."
  • The Cherry Poppin' Daddies' album Ferociously Stoned features "The Lifeboat Mutiny", which is mostly mellow, if cynical - but near the end, the song starts breaking down, and a woman's voice starts repeating "please turn off the lights" in the background. It's terrifying.
  • Inverted by the Posies with Coming Right Along, where the tune of the song is a little unnerving, but ends with a major chord... However it's still a sort of Downer Ending because it seems so out of place in the context of the song
  • "Susan" by The Buckinghams. Basically an "I love you, and you don't care" song. It's nice to listen to... Up until about 1:30 when suddenly, you feel like you've been kicked out of the 60's and dropped into Hell... Then pulled back out again, greeted by the cheerful chants of "Love love love love..."
    • This actually touched off a "Louie, Louie"-esque moral panic that got it banned from radio play, until a cut version without the psychedelic interlude was released.
  • While The Doors' epic "Not To Touch The Earth" is already fairly creepy on its own with a low, driving bass and some unsettling imagery ("Dead president's corpse in the driver's car"), the end features the low hum of an organ as Jim Morrison utters, "I am the lizard king. I can do anything." The immediate stinger is a quick bang on the organ.
  • Queens of the Stone Age
    • "I Think I Lost My Headache" probably fits the bill. It starts with a slow, kinda creepy riff, gets a little bit more upbeat in the verse and chorus and right at the end, goes back to the creepy riff. And then, the creepy riff is repeated by wind instruments while the song fades. For 3min. And one of them, the high-pitched one, slowly starts to go offbeat, improvising (or to put it more correctly, sounding like a goddamn screech). A Last Note Nightmare that goes on and on and on and on.
    • "Make It Wit Chu" is a pretty mellow, upbeat song that ends with a series of strange and sinister keyboard notes, which are the main riff from "Era Vulgaris."
  • Motorpsycho's "The One Who Went Away" ends with muffled laughter and a deep voice which says; "and listen, we are here to help you". The way it's said makes it sound more like a threat than anything else.
  • The album version of Lordi's "Blood Red Sandman" ends with the sound of a knife being sharpened.
  • "Are You Experienced?" by Jimi Hendrix can easily classify as psychedelic horror by itself. But eventually the shiver-inducing backmasked guitar, bass, and drums fade into silence with Jimi's meandering solo on top...and then a sharp, blaring guitar chord surges at you and fades out just as suddenly. And it really doesn't help that said chord never sounds the same twice, even though it's the same recording.
    • Also, "Wild Thing" on Jimi Plays Monterey. The song ends with Hendrix setting his guitar on fire and smashing it to pieces - cue howl of feedback as the bits o' Strat burn merrily. Eventually it fades out and goes quiet for a few seconds... and then just when you start relaxing there's a last, impossibly loud shriek as (presumably) someone unplugs what's left of the guitar.
  • "Mystic Rhythms" by Rush. A final deep, long, eerie synthesizer note can be heard right at the very end of the song. Chilling.
  • "Child in Time" by Deep Purple ends with eerie groans that build up to screams, some of which sound like someone being murdered, after which the song ends on a dissonant Scare Chord.
  • Subverted by Lucifer by The Alan Parsons Project, which begins with a nightmarish sounding string ditty, followed by rapid morse code. Then the song fades I to a typical APP instrumental.
  • "Nights in White Satin" by the Moody Blues ends with a series of ominous string and brass chords, followed by a loud gong. The album version also includes keyboardist Mike Pinder reading a short, somewhat eerie poem by drummer Graeme Edge near the end of the song.
    • Makes sense in context, although the context is often lost these days. The song and poem was originally the final track on the Days of Future Passed album, and the ending serves as a coda to the entire album. Since only a couple of songs from the album receive any significant airplay now, most people don't know about this.
  • "White Hammer" by Van der Graaf Generator is a somewhat cheery-sounding song about The Power of Love, until the last two minutes where it suddenly turns into a nightmarish fight between a saxophone and a church organ. The fact that the song is really about the Spanish Inquisition may explain this.
    • Don't forget "Man-Erg"! Probably the example of a Vd GG song that exemplifies this trope more than any other - starts with a calm, soothing simple piano & organ progression, that suddenly descends into honking cacophonous Saxophone blasts, with Hammil shrieking "HOW CAN I BE FREE? HOW CAN I GET HELP? AM I REALLY ME, OR AM I SOMEONE ELSE??". It soon abruptly changes back to the simple piano, not before long doing pretty much the same thing again. "Lemmings" from the same album (Pawn Hearts) is similar, to a lesser degree. And "A Plague of Lighthouse Keepers"?, well...
    • From the same album, the track "After The Flood", after veering from pastoral reflection to skronky jazz-rock, climaxes with Peter Hammill screaming 'Total Annihilatiiiiiiioooooooooon!' through a Dalek voice filter. Beyond nightmarish.
  • The last minute and a half of Pink Floyd's "Bike" is made up entirely of discordant mechanical sounds and cartoonish laughter.
    • "Jugband Blues" finishes with a cacophony of a brass band each playing random notes and background distortions, but then at the very end, it fades out into Syd Barrett softly singing the last few lines in a ghostly voice. Even creepier considering that this essentially marked the tragic end of his unraveling involvement with Pink Floyd. The live version adds visuals that take it straight into horror territory.
    • "Speak to Me" closes with screams (which then segues into the opening of "Breathe").
    • Pink Floyd tends to really like this trope. There's the creepy bridge toward the end of the jolly folksy "The Gnome" ("look at the sky, look at the river, isn't it gooooooood?") and then the maniacal screaming at the end of the somewhat calm "Careful With That Axe, Eugine."
  • The old Cog song "Just Visiting" spools up into increasingly discordant machine noise at the end, culminating in a sound like the Hypnotoad squared. Thirty-odd seconds of silence later, the drummer screams FUCK! as if from the end of a long corridor. And then continues incoherently screaming curses of the "Fucking fuck! Who the fuck? What the fuck? Where the fuck?!" variety, sending the whole thing into possibly-intentional Narmsville. Good song though.
  • Inverted in Todd Rundgren's "Saving Grace", in a similar manner to the Gorillaz example: It's an optimistic slightly jazzy soft-rock song that incongruously starts off with a low bass note and a short burst of slowed down unintelligible Black Speech.
  • The Mars Volta's song "Asilos Magdalena" begins with a loud, high pitched guitar and keyboard combo, then segues into a quiet, mournful acoustic ballad. Then in the song's final two minutes, the last verse is sung over and over again while the vocals become increasingly and disturbingly distorted until they're nearly incomprehensible. The general creepiness of the lyrics themselves don't help much, either.
    • There are a number of Mars Volta songs which could fall into this category, especially the first three tracks off of Frances the Mute: "Cygnus...Vismund Cygnus," "The Widow," and "L'Via L'Viaquez." All of these tracks degenerate into creepy distortions at their end, degeneration which involves unnecessary slow-downs of the otherwise pleasant rhythms of the songs while throwing in a few distorted and incomprehensible voices (sometimes speaking in Spanish) for good measure. But the worst is at the end of "L'Via L'Viaquez" when there's nothing left but an electronic distortion where the strong rhythms once were and the demonically-distorted voice of the singer over top, repeating the chorus of the song. Granted, it's not like the Mars Volta normally sings about anything bright and happy or even that understandable.
    • TMV just loves this trope. "Goliath", "Illyena", "Ouroboros", and "Wax Simulacra" all end with noisy freakouts. (Though the last one is a bit more mild, it's just an unexpected sax solo)
  • "The Talking Drum" (or its pale copy "Dangerous Curves") by King Crimson — each builds up tension for about seven minutes and releases it in a startling, dissonant blast.
    • Most of King Crimson's work qualifies for this trope- they were well known for it. "Lark's Tongues In Aspic (Part 1)", "21st Century Shizoid Man", "Lament", "Starless", etc. King Crimon improvs (live or recorded) pretty much always did this.
  • Peter Gabriel's "Moribund the Burgermeister" tells the story of a mysterious and disastrous plague taking a medieval city by storm. The song is pretty creepy to begin with, but the last few seconds have Gabriel repeating "I WILL FIND OUT" in a deep, echoing voice over a very strange, minimal melody. As the song begins to fade out, he begins to address his mother, telling her "when I say I will, I will!" and "You'll be sorry. I'll make sure of it!" When you consider that plague can be interpreted to transform its victims into zombies...
    • Speaking of Peter Gabriel, listen to "Sledgehammer" sometime. Normally its a jazzy tune, but the last 15 seconds are some sort of drum bit that sounds like industrial machinery. And there is an abrupt last note.
  • The Fall of Troy's song "Chapter V: The Walls Bled Lust" consists of Epic Rocking for approximately the first five minutes. Then the instruments start playing without any rhythm at all, then the music completely cuts out except for some guitar feedback, then you get a ridiculously exaggerated breakdown where every third note is so high it literally brings pain to your ears.
  • "Radio" by the Dutch group Supersister is a classic bait-and-switch. The first half is a disarmingly cute and upbeat piano/celeste pop tune with soft, low-key vocals. Then it shifts gears suddenly and transforms into a frantic circus music section comprised of discordant fuzz-organ chords and wordless baritone choral singing over which flute player Sacha van Geest narrates a surrealistic tale.
  • The last chord in "Jordan Speaks", Jordan Rudess's "thoughts" about Mike Portnoy leaving Dream Theater.
  • "Abandoner" by Steven Wilson. A mellow (if not exactly cheerful) ballad ending in a series of dissonant chords.
    • "Get All You Deserve" ends similarly. In the album booklet, Wilson is credited with "vocals, piano, electric guitars, mellotron, glockenspiel, bass, total fucking noise."
  • The progressive rock band Pain of Salvation has used this effect at least three times-twice on their second album, One Hour by the Concrete Lake, and once on their first album, Entropia. In the last song of One Hour, "Inside Out," the song fades to an apparent end... but the song continues for a few minutes more, with various ambient noises. Then Daniel Gildenlow starts to sing about the various "machines" all around the world, accompanied by a slow-building, but frightening crescendo of chaotic instrument noise that slowly gets louder and louder before petering off. Two more minutes of silence, then a quick burst of chaotic noise, the sound of something deactivating, and an abrupt end. In Entropia, the song "Winning a War" ends with quiet sounds of various city interactions, followed abruptly by a loud, volume-boosted "YO!" The note can be considered another example of First Note Nightmare, considering it segues into the next song, "People Passing By."
    • The last song on Entropia has a bit of a Last Note Nightmare as well... in an otherwise upbeat song that encourages the listener to practice non-violence, act on their conscience, and overall be a good person, finishing with the line "if death is but a dream, then don't let me... fall asleep..." is pretty jarring, especially considering the fact that Daniel whispers the last two words in an almost fearful tone.
    • There's also two occurrences at the end of Be-one where the last man on Earth shoots himself, at the end of an otherwise upbeat and hopeful song, and another occurrence similar to the one listed above where, after a good amount of silence, there's a sudden burst of sound right at the end of the last song. However, this is offset by a fairly cutesy recording of a little girl saying "There's room for all of god's creatures... right next to the mashed potatoes," while a bunch of people, possibly the band members, laugh hysterically like the terrible human beings they are.
  • Another song with no "nice" parts is Elvis Costello and the Attractions' "Night Rally", from their 1978 album This Year's Model. Between its lyrical subject (the then-contemporary rise of the neo-fascist National Front in English politics) and tense arrangement, the song is ominous throughout — but at the end, Costello starts chanting the title over and over and some sort of weird, high-pitched warbling sound is added the mix. And then the song cuts off suddenly, just like The Beatles' aforementioned "I Want You (She's So Heavy)". For added nightmarishness, "Night Rally" was the last track on the original vinyl album's British pressing.
  • Kaleidoscope's "(Further Reflections) In The Room Of Percussion" is a fairly whimsical, lighthearted number like the rest of the band's psychedelic catalog... until it abruptly ends in the middle of what would normally be a verse. The effect of leaving the melody hanging and unfinished is rather disorienting, and the lyrics it ends with only make things worse: "My God, the spiders are everywhere".
  • Both "Religion Song (Put Away The Gun)" and "Untitled" by Everything Else feature such endings.
  • Gentle Giant's Concept Album The Power And The Glory ends with a song called "Valedictory", a Dark Reprise of the opening "Proclamation". Unlike its lighter counterpart, the song suddenly ends in the middle of a word with the sound of its tape rewinding.
  • The ending of "Entangled" by Genesis (a song documenting a mentally ill person in a nightmarish asylum) may count, with the unwinding, haunting wobbly synth melody over full-blast Mellotron choir chords.
  • "November Rain" from Guns N' Roses has one of these, and it's also made worse by the music video, but in more of a Tear Jerker way then a scary way.

Metal / Alt-Metal[]

  • Iron Maiden's epic "Phantom of the Opera" comes to what seems to be a normal end...then after about 10 seconds of silence, the singer comes in shouting the final lyric of the song one more time. Startling, to say the least.
  • The last second of Slipknot's "Disasterpiece". The song ends with the sound of a telephone receiver being hooked up...which implies that Corey Taylor had spent the last five minutes screaming the lyrics down the phone line. It's either oddly hilarious, rather creepy, or the crowning moment of Narm. Your Mileage May Vary.
  • Metallica's "To Live Is to Die" is a quasi-example; though the song itself has no dissonant ending, the last minute of the song had to be excised to fit CD limitations at the time, so the fade-out has been removed as well. What this translates into, if you're listening to the whole album, is you'll be listening to the pleasant, lilting outro of "To Live Is to Die" when all of a sudden the very loud intro to "Dyer's Eve" will pop up with no warning whatsoever.
    • "The Memory Remains" has a creepy old-lady voice singing wordlessly over the music, which cuts out at the end as the old lady sings "ladadada-dada, ladada-dadada over and over while everything else is completely silent...*shudder*
      • Worse still, as that sequence ends, you hear another voice say "Say yes, at least say hello" over it. TWICE.
  • Subverted-though no less scary-in "Stupify" by Disturbed. It's a heavy song all throughout, but the last chorus is good horror if you don't expect it to happen.
Cquote1

 "Look in my face / Stare into my soul / I begin to stupify...

RAAAH!!."

Cquote2
    • Enough follows a standard progression (opening verse, chorus, second verse, chorus, bridge etc.) and appears to fade out with the tune it'd been following: fast drum beat and bass/guitar riff ending in a power chord. Until at the last second after fully quieting down, the band threw the power chord in at full volume, then an abrupt end. Even when expected this one isn't easy to go unnerved to.
  • Subverted by Blaze Bayley's tune "Waiting For My Life Begin", which begins with an alarm clock and then segues into a metal tune.
  • The last chords of Black Sabbath's "War Pigs". It was probably originally intended to trick listeners into thinking their record player had suddenly jumped from 33 rpm to 45 rpm of its own accord somehow.
    • Also, "Children of the Grave" ends with a quivering note that fades in and out that lasts for a good forty-five seconds and is accompanied by an echoing whisper.
    • "Am I Going Insane (Radio)", which is otherwise one of their poppier songs, has multi-tracked psychotic laughter slowly fade in as the song fades out - and then demonic growls can be heard in the distance. .
  • "Eyes of a Stranger" by Queensryche. It ends with some chaotic, strange-sounding, nightmare inducing technological noise, about 15 seconds of silence, and finally a man saying "I remember now".
    • The end of "Anybody Listening?" off of the album Empire is the sound of rain, and you can hear in the background the sounds of some people arguing. Then, BAM! A door slams, and the song, and album, end.
    • The transition from "Breaking the Silence" to "I Don't Believe In Love" features whispered, "We know you did it? Why'd you do it?" overlapping with Nickie screaming, "No! No! NOOOOOOOOO!"
  • X Japan's "Jade". It's a loud song to begin with, but the chorus is quite uplifting and melodious, and at the end it sounds like it's going to fade out gently. And then the guitars come crashing back in and Toshi goes for a giant screeching high note. Yikes.
  • A variant appears in Alice in Chains' "Rain When I Die". The song fades out... then it starts to progressively get 2-3 times louder than the rest of the song and cuts off.
  • The song "Disgustipated", on Tool's Undertow has an extended version of this. After about 10 minutes of nothing but chirping crickets, a recorded message that may or may not be about a serial killer plays, cutting off just before the end. Said message was alleged to have been left on the band's answering machine by someone called 'Bill the Landlord'. Let the speculation commence.
    • "Faaip de Oiad" ('Voice of God', in Enochian) is the 'last note' of Tool's Lateralus album, and consists of mad, inspired drumming overlaid by a sample of a caller to Art Bell's talk-radio show. He's panicked, and describes things, hints and rumors, he's discovered while working at an Air Force base near Groom Lake, Nevada (Area 51). If you do your homework, you might find out that it's (most likely) a hoax, but before you do, or if you doubt the hoax story, the fear in the man's voice is genuinely terrifying.
    • "Lost Keys (Blame Hoffmann)" is an odd song, but not hideous. Then, on the way out, it takes a turn for the... suggestive.
    • The track "Intermission" from Aenima is a sort of peppy organ instrumental--which immediately transforms into the heavy, distorted guitar riff of the next track, "Jimmy".
    • 10,000 Days' song "Viginti Tres".
  • System of a Down's "Temper," which goes from a laidback funky groove in the verses to a grindcore chorus. And more notably, their song Mind which starts off in a very creepy fashion with quiet instruments and subdued vocals before the music fades out and a few seconds later Serj screams "GO AWAY! GO AWAY! GO AWAY!" and the music goes into what is easily the heaviest part of the album. Later in the song, the song returns to the quiet section that began the song. This section fades out.
    • "Lonely Day"'s last note is horrifyingly depressing, as it segues into "Soldier Side".
    • "Question!" may also count, if only on a small scale. Just when you think it's over... LA,LA LA, LA LA LA LA LA LA LA!
    • Toxicity opens with a first note nightmare. The first track "Prison Song" opens with a very, VERY quick low C power chord, which is so quick you doubt you actually heard it. Similarly enough, after the last track, Aerials, ends, a few seconds pass before a hidden track fades in, but unlike most albums, there's only 10 seconds of silence, thus givingyou no time to prepare. Following the ten seconds, a duduk solo fades in before some tribal percussion and chanting fade in as well. The song is a rendition of "Der Voghormia", a traditional Armenian song.
  • "Eleven Regrets" by Manic Drive is a beautiful, if sad, song. But toward the end, there is a sudden refrain of slightly dissonant voices singing a haunting tune wordlessly in the background, that seems to get louder and more chaotic as it continues. It doesn't last very long, but it will give you nightmares.
  • The last nineteen minutes or so of Fantomas's untitled album-length song from Delìrium Còrdia is the looped sound of a needle being lifted off a vinyl record - save the last four seconds, in which someone suddenly yells out "1-2-3-4" while hitting together drumsticks and the sound of a record being scratched plays. Not exactly a Last Note Nightmare in its own right, but certainly very surprising.
    • Worse, though, is the section at about 54 minutes through. Some ambiance and sounds of machinery plays before everything turns to chaos and someone breathes frantically over the top. Considering the album is supposed to be a soundtrack to a non-existent horror film about surgery without anaesthetic, this is particularly horrifying.
  • Strapping Young Lad's "Home Nucleonics" ends with razor-sharp low-quality recording of random people screaming. Not to mention the whole track "Info Dump".
  • "Dead Winter Days" by Agalloch ends in totally uncalled for piano chords.
  • On David Bowie's epic Diamond Dogs album, both at the end of the very disco "1984" and the stuck syllable at the end of the album's funky closer "Chant Of The Ever Circling Skeletal Family"
  • The last few measures of The Ark's "Father of a Son", represented in the video by a guy in a polar bear suit tumbling onto the stage and destroying it.
  • Sentenced's "No One There" ends with about half a minute of ambiance with bird calls.. and then the volume is turned way up with the birds doing their best impression of The Birds.
  • Type O Negative's "Haunted" , which is already rather dark, as are most of their songs, abruptly cuts off in midriff at the end. The version featured in Descent II: The Vertigo Series has a middle note nightmare; an orchestral interlude accompanied by orgasmic moans, although it fades out at the end instead of abruptly ending.
  • On the subject of first note nightmares, grindcore band Pig Destroyer have a lovely little song called "Towering Flesh". The whole song is heavy, but the instantaneous, ear-splitting scream in the first second will seriously scare the shit out of you if you accidentally have the volume up full. In fact the same song has a last note nightmare about halfway through. Things become calmer and the singer is no longer screaming and is singing in an echoed lullaby tone. "Her lips are wet with venom. Her posture serpentine. She touched my arm and flowers grow, they're hideous and OBSCEEEEEEEEEEENE."
    • Not to mention the album's intro. First track is about a minute of quiet echoing footsteps ending in a sudden inhumane scream, which abruptly opens the next track. Pig Destroyer's music is mostly like this, there are many examples, among which the end of Hyperviolet (which bleeds away into a wailing siren-like drone), but their creepiest closing ever has to be the end of Piss Angel, where a computer-generated voice recites a disturbing story about two girls, and an extremely distorted woman voice starts to sing (but not on tune with the already creepy music, it also sounds like she's crying while singing).
  • Korn's "10 or a 2-Way"; the ending with the creepy voices and bagpipe riff is surreal and oddly frightening.
  • "VITRIOL" by Eths. A few seconds after the song fades out, a woman starts screaming.
    • Happens again in "Samantha". And "Bulemiarexia" ends with the sound of someone being violently sick. Eths like this trope.
      • Indeed. The ending of "Priape" has a woman screaming in an utterly terrified voice, and repeated thumping in the background. Given the lyrics and name of the song...
  • "Haunted" by Evanescence is a mild version. Throughout the whole song, a beep like that of a heart monitor is used as a recurring theme, and isn't an unexpected thing to hear in the song once you get used to the pattern. It's still rather jarring on the first listen when the final note of the song is just one of those beeps on dead silence.
  • "Event Horizon" by Stratovarius combines this with Talky Bookends— alarms go off as an automated voice warns about approaching a black hole, and in the end, the last seconds before entering the event horizon itself are counted.
  • Opeth's "Burden" ends with a mellow acoustic guitar outro, during which, the guitar slowly untunes and then you hear a looped laughter which transforms into some mechanical knocking, which finishes the song. "Black Rose Immortal" also shows a very good example by ending with a whisper "At night I always dream of you..." after which there is a EEEEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHH growl and scary echoing riffs which then dissolve.
  • Dream Theater, being Progressive Metal, does this a lot. The Octavarium album has tons of these. An example is the end of "Panic Attack", in which the last note repeats many times, gradually decreasing in volume, while a collection of unnerving synth noises and some kind of strange growling play in the background. Then there's "Misunderstood". The last 3 minutes of the song could qualify as this.
    • The iTunes version cuts the sing off at the last piano note, as does the live version.
    • At the end of "Finally Free," the last track on the story album Scenes from a Memory, Nicholas, the main character, arrives at his house, satisfied with the apparent end to the mystery of his past life. He plays some triumphant music when his hypnotherapist, the reincarnation of his past murderer, barges in and murders him... the song ends to the sound of the record player's static. The live rendition of the song-at least, the "Scenes from NY 2000" version-cuts this section out and, instead, plays a reprise of an earlier song's epic opening bridge, only to end it with a pair of nice, long Scare Chords. Similarly, "In the Presence of Enemies Part 2" ends with a long sequence of Scare Chords. (It's also fun to listen to the latter song live, because the lead singer repeatedly yells "come on" as the sequence starts, lightly lessening its impact.)
      • Also notable is that the static that ends "Finally Free" is the very same static that begins "The Glass Prison", the first track on the following album, Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence. So, if you lined those songs up, the creepy chimes in the opening of "The Glass Prison" would complete the effect.
    • "Pull Me Under", much like "I Want You" above, just seems to cut off at the last note (Not in the middle of a note, but you get the gist of it). [1]
  • Nevermore's "This Godless Endeavor" is actually more of a "Last verse nightmare", but Dane sings most of the song in his general mid-range - until the very last line, when he unexpectedly belts a blood-curling "THE SKY...HAS OPENED!" shriek in a hateful, shrill voice. Given the tense mood of the entire song, it's just the thing to send shivers down your spine.
  • Devin Townsend, famous for being the frontman of extreme metal group Strapping Young Lad, released more albums as a solo artist that, for the most part, contrasted the sound of his band. His first album Ocean Machine ends with a calm and tranquil acoustic song [1] that sounds much like the ocean itself. At the end, it fades out, and then after about 10 seconds of silence, Devin comes back with a BLOODCURDLING, distorted scream, sure to punish anyone who falls asleep with headphones on.
  • Inverted by the Melvins' "The Fool, the Meddling Idiot": An oppressively dark grunge song that near the end turns into upbeat electronic pop.
  • "At The Base Of The Giant's Throat" by Battle Of Mice. The whole song is quite aggressive, but the last three minutes is a horrific 911 call that will scar you for life and have you crying like a baby in the fetal position. Try listening from 7.00 onwards
  • While Anthrax's Sound of White Noise is hardly a comforting album to listen to, the last song "This Is Not An Exit" fades out a little earlier than anticipated, then silence, then suddenly- what sounds like an advisory on an AM radio broadcast (a voice says "they're dangerous, they're unpredictable, and they make a lot of noise") plays, only to be interrupted by- of course- the white noise sound effect at the beginning of the album, which ends abruptly.
  • Fates Warning did an 'album' called "A Pleasant Shade of Gray", which was essentially one song split in twelve parts. Not surprisingly, the nature of this music would have put more than a few listeners to sleep, so there is a sufficiently long gap before the last song ends, followed by a very loud ringing bell- maybe a wake up call?
  • The very end of "Colony of Birchmen" by Mastodon. As if the whole song wasn't inexplicably unsettling, the final chords are cut off and replaced with crude, distant-sounding indigenous music that appears to be growing closer and closer before getting cut off itself. How close an eye do you pay to the trees in your backyard?
  • "Beyond Belief" by Epica. The lyrics are all about how advances in science and technology will lead us to our demise, but the band's Epic Rocking style kind of obscures this. So, just to make sure you remembered the point, the final chorus ends on a cold wooshing noise, followed by a slowly fading heartbeat...
  • Apocalyptica's "Kaamos" ends so abruptly that many people were concerned that their disc was damaged.
    • Fisheye, from their self titled album, ends with both a case of this and Ending Fatigue. When you think the song is over, a few more measures of thrashy and cacophonic cello and drum noise ensue.


Punk / Alternative / Indie[]

  • "Pink Flag" by the late-70s punk/post-punk group Wire actually has two Last Note Nightmares. After about three minutes of a song that's already a bit morose, the band erupts into a painful minute-long cacophony highlighted by repeated screams of "How many?" Then, just when you think it's over, there's one more stinger.
    • Wire were big fans of this trope early on. The first song on the album Pink Flag (of which the above is title track), "Reuters", ends with a lengthy coda involving the whole band chanting "RAPE!"
      • "Indirect Enquiries" on 154 takes this to the border of Narm. "You've been defaced..."
    • See also Dome and Colin Newman.
  • Siouxsie and the Banshees made a cover of "This Wheel's on Fire" (the song most famously used as the opening theme to Absolutely Fabulous). It ends with what sounds like an assault on the musical instruments used.
    • Playground Twist is already a pretty scary song, but this is Siouxsie and the Banshees for cryin' out loud!. However, the song ends with the sound of children in a playground as the rest of the song fades out. The B-side of the single is called "Pulled to Bits", which is easily one of the most wrong things ever recorded has this looped throughout the whole. Friggin. Song.
  • "L.A. Blues", the closing number from The Stooges 1970 classic Fun House, consists of screeching guitar and saxophone and Iggy Pop screaming unintelligibly like a madman. Ironically, the most eerie part is in the last couple of seconds with Iggy mumbling over a brief feedback loop.
  • Calibretto's "American Psycho" is a pretty energetic horror-punk song. Then the last organ note holds and turns into an ominous drone, and then one of Patrick Bateman's confessions is played over it. It then segues into the ominous bell that begins the next song. The result is far creepier than it has any right to be.
  • "Death Sex" by The Distillers does this, ending with manic laughter and even more distortion than normal, of course this is pretty much par for course.
  • Most of They Might Be Giants' song, "S-E-X-X-Y" is played out like a 70's-era funkadelic groove song — until the ending stinger, which features creepily arpeggioing classical violins that totally kill the mood, likely in tribute to "Glass Onion" by The Beatles.
    • There's also "Fibber Island", a gentle folk-rock song from one of their kids albums, which after a false ending, jumps into an outro with some jarringly dissonant flutes, possibly as a nod to "Strawberry Fields".
    • And then there's "Employee of the Month", an upbeat song about making crumbs at (what else?) a crumb factory. In and out, fun nonsense, the end. But one instrument keeps going on in a haunting, almost droning whistle.
    • The most striking one I've heard from them is "Hide Away, Folk Family," whose genuinely beautiful instrumentation closes with a noise that I can only describe as Courage the Cowardly Dog going into catatonic shock.
    • Inverted with Istanbul Not Constantinople, the beginning features creepy and wild violin playing, then the song starts.
    • The version off Severe Tire Damage is even worse! Creepy organ playing, and eerie trumpet. *Shudder*
    • "See The Constellation" from Apollo 18 fades out to reveal a creepy, out-of-place, Middle Eastern-sounding song playing in the background, which also fades away after a few seconds. (This mystery song is actually "Side Two," a Dial-A-Song exclusive.)
  • Mae's "We're So Far Away" is a slow song played on piano and keyboards, then the final note is accompanied by a loud electric guitar chord that quickly turns into a howling wall of feedback. On the album, this segues into the hard-rocking next song. (Anyone with prior exposure to Mae would have been wondering where the guitars were up until this point.)
  • "Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots pt. I" by The Flaming Lips. It's an incredibly happy song about, yes, a girl named Yoshimi fighting a pink robotic menace, until the guitar is drowned out by what could be a demonic growling pink robot. With that said, the vocals of Part 2 consist entirely of a woman screaming.
    • Yeah, but it's not like she's screaming in pain or anything: it sounds more like she's having a lot of fun battling some robots. I actually find the screaming pleasing to the ear: after all, it's basically the sound of someone having a good time.
  • Our Lady Peace's album Spiritual Machines is a Concept Album that draws ideas from a similarly-named book, complete with tracks that are actually excerpts from the book read by the author. The final track includes the final song, followed by a few minutes of silence, and then a bizarre transhumanist dialog between the author and the fictional "Molly," a once-human who explains that she no longer has a physical form, and, when asked if she is a machine, says that it doesn't have the meaning it once did, and she doesn't properly know anymore. It's actually extremely interesting, but when you're listening at night, alone, in a dimly-lit house, it becomes pure horror.
  • Radiohead's "Karma Police". As the rather mellow melody of the song fades out at the end, some very dissonant feedback fades in... which is in turn followed by a nice closing piano chord. Then again, it is Radiohead; this sort of thing is to be expected.
    • And then it fades right into "Fitter Happier", a spooky monotone over a series of bizarre sound effects that are just darned spooky.
    • And of course "Paranoid Android" features two transitions from slow and sad to heavy and chaotic. One of those is situated near the middle, the other at the very end.
    • On Kid A, 'In Limbo' ends with a horrifying, electronically-modified wail of Thom Yorke screaming 'come back' as it fades into nothingness, alongside jittery feedback.
    • 'Morning Bell' also deserves a mention with Jonny Greenwood's shrieking, coin-generated guitar outro. You know what, all of Kid A probably invokes this at some point, barring Treefingers, maybe.
    • "15 Step", the intro track from In Rainbows, keeps a consistent 5/4 rhythm and consistent key until the very end of the song, which fades out on a distorted off-key chord. In the Animated Music Video, it's made even scarier with a completely Off-Model gun zooming in toward the viewer.
    • 'Codex' starts with a *First* Note Nightmare, with just the beginning of...something being shouted, which immediately cuts off to a fairly slow and mournful tune.
    • Climbing up the Walls is scary enough already. And then at the end most of the instruments fade out, leaving 16 violins playing notes separated by quarters. It can leave you thinking "Wait, how long were they there?!"
  • "Marching Bands of Manhattan" by Death Cab for Cutie is a milder example, which at the end interrupts the repeated chorus with a single note on the piano.
  • The Pillows' "Sweet Baggy Days" ends with the same thing that starts the CD the song was featured on, "Wake Up! Wake Up! Wake Up!": a loud jarring sound that sounds like somebody randomly hitting piano keys. It's a pretty mellow closing song up to that point.
  • U2's "The Wanderer" (closing off the Zooropa album) fades out, stays silent for 30 seconds, then an alarm sound suddenly bursts out (an alarm DJ a hears when there is 30 seconds of dead air on the radio). Completely terrifying.
    • Word of God states that this is a metaphor, telling the listener to "Wake up" as our world, our way of life is slowly coming to an end
  • "The Day After the Revolution", the final song of Pulp's album This is Hardcore, finishes with approximately ten minutes' worth of swirling ambient noise. And then Jarvis Cocker says "bye-bye" and makes you jump out of your skin.
  • The Shins' early song "One By One All Day" is mostly calm...until the end, where there's a very loud, jarring chord to end the song.
  • More of a first note nightmare, but 'Admit It!!!' by Say Anything starts off with them shouting, well, "ADMIT IT!!!!!" which is enough the startle you right after a slow song like 'I Want to Know Your Plans.'
  • Jeff Buckley's song "I Know We Could Be So Happy Baby (If We Wanted To Be)" has an incredibly dissonant power chord at the end of the chorus. The song's ambiguous subject matter makes it that much worse.
  • The song "Luca" by Brand New is a slow, beautiful song that goes along with a steady, calming acoustic and great vocals on the track that eventually devolve into whispering of the lyrics, that get softer...and softer...and softer...accompanied by the guitar that gets softer...and softer...and softer...to the point of prompting one to turn up the volume to hear the song, until it EXPLODES IN YOUR EAR, with the singer SCREAMING AS LOUD AS HE POSSIBLY CAN. The rest of the song continues in the tempo, but nothing could recover the song from the sheer shock it deals you.
    • They did a less-extreme version on their first album with "Soco Amaretto Lime." It's a rather peaceful acoustic ballad to teenage love that cuts off rather abruptly halfway through a line as if someone pulled the needle off the phonograph. Not entirely scary, but incredibly unexpected and will make you jump.
    • It's not last note, but "Welcome To Bangkok" is rather, surprising. It starts of with the "space cadet, pull out" lines being repeated rather softly, then the light acoustic guitar, and works it's way into full band. Then it suddenly just becomes a mess of drums and guitar. You'll jump the first time, and any subsequent time you aren't paying enough attention
    • The noises at the end of "The Archers Bows Have Broken". It sounds like a horrible wail.
    • The song "Vices" from the album "Daisy" is a perfect example. It starts out with an old hymnal sung by a soft female voice. The vocals trail off and seconds later you're hit with wailing guitars and screaming lyrics for the remainder of the track. (The album closes with the rest of that hymn).
  • A few seconds after pop-punk band Goldfinger's cover of the Cold War anthem "99 Red Balloons" seems to fade out at the end (at about 3:28 to be exact), a man with a deep, eerie voice can be heard saying "Goodnight children, everywhere."
  • "...A Psychopath" by Lisa Germano is an inversion. It's an incredibly creepy song about a Stalker with a Crush from the stalkee's point of view, with a real 911 call playing in the background. Until the last 30 seconds or so, with a cheerful-sounding instrumental that wouldn't sound out of place at a circus.
    • Someone commenting on the video above noted that, at the 2:10 mark, it sounds like the woman says "Bundy," making the song that much creepier...
  • Muse's "Take A Bow" is already a dark, chaotic song, but the last chord is more than enough to scare the living crap out of me. Guitar wailing, Matt Bellamy wailing, synths wailing, waaagh.
    • Same could be said of the last minutes of "Space Dementia" and (much, much more so) "Megalomania" on one of their earlier albums. "Megalomania"... The circus-style keyboard line could not possibly be any more sinister, and just when you think "Space" is over, it kicks back in with this monstrous, threatening coda. Still, "Megalomania" is the best closing song on any of their albums, by far. Even the first chorus transition is tremendously startling.
    • Their early B Side "Host" starts off with some creepy ringing chords and a generally eerie feel, and moves into mid tempo minor chord ballad feel. After its bridge, the tone of the song suddenly shifts into speed metal at around 45 seconds from the end. This is guaranteed to shock people hearing it for the first time, though it is an extremely satisfying solo.
  • Manic Street Preachers' "This Is Yesterday" has this. It's a relatively laid back song for the band at that point in their career (though plenty of Lyrical Dissonance is going on) until the last crunchy chord, which is followed by a guitar playing a variation on the main rhythm with descending chords... until it gets more distorted and turns WAY minor. Subtle, but it effectively underscores the bleak lyrics.
  • Ween's "Don't Laugh, I Love You" is a cute, light song until, after a little of what at first appears to be the setup for the fadeout, becomes over a minute of a sound very much like an audiotape audibly rewinding, overlaid with nonsense syllables. Not scary as much as irritating.
  • The Weezer song "Undone - The Sweater Song" eventually ends on an extremely unsettling clash of noises reminiscent of someone mashing the keys on the far left and right sides of a piano.
  • Subverted in Lemon Demon's "Mold en Mono". The happy, bouncy song starts to fade into sinister static and backmasking at the four-minute mark, then slides into portentous violins and creepy moaning...then all of the nightmarish sounds go silent, and a squeaky voice says, "Can we have, like, 'dun dun dun dun dun dah', like an ending part? So, just like...'dun dun dun dun dun dah'?" The requested cheerful guitar riff is provided, and the voice chirps, "Great!" Considering Lemon Demon has written a song called "Nightmare Fuel", it's almost certainly an intentional subversion of the trope. And, yes, subversion or no, it's not fun to listen to late at night.
  • The untitled ninth track of Sonic Youth's "Washing Machine" (sometimes called "Becuz Coda" since it picks up exactly where opening track "Becuz" fades out): After 2 minutes and 20 seconds of lulling instrumental jamming, it seems to come to a close... then after a few seconds of silence, a loud chord jumps out at you. Not a hugely ominous one, mind you, but just unexpected enough to potentially make you jump out of your seat a bit.
    • Also, "Mildred Pierce" from Goo, for that matter. The song starts off as a steady, repetitive instrumental jam...which makes it that much more shocking when the WHOLE SONG breaks down into noise. Not to mention the distorted screaming.
  • The song "Dream" by Forest for the Trees is a fairly upbeat blend of psychedelic sitar-strumming and Irish folk melody that segues out at the end into a series of idyllic sounds reminiscent of a sunny morning in the suburbs: birds chirping, grass rustling, the rhythmic "sput-sput-sput" of a lawn sprinkler...and then the harsh BEEP BEEP BEEP BEEP BEEP of an electronic alarm clock.
  • Phish's "Maze" has an inversion of this: after a very fast, aggressive jam section, the song suddenly quiets down, seeming like it's going to come to a soft, eerie end with the protagonist lost in the "maze" forever. Making it a bit jarring when the last measure of the song is a happy polka riff.
  • A First Note Nightmare, which is most effective when you hear the radio version first: The album version of Blue October's "Hate Me" begins with a rambling phone message from the narrator's mother. Without that bit the song sounds like a girlfriend breakup, unhappy but standard fare; when you realize it's his mom, well, that's just heartbreaking.
    • "Hate Me" has a Last Note Nightmare as well, with a distorted recording of children chanting and of lead singer Justin Furstenfeld's mother (from the intro) saying "Hey Justin!"
    • "Razorblade" by the same band ends with about twenty seconds of increasingly-desperate yelling over demonic distorted screaming and heavy breathing, which then cuts off rather abruptly. It's not particularly jarring in context, though, because the song is made of Nightmare Fuel.
  • The transition between "Falls Apart" and "Forever" on Hurt's Vol. 1 album. "Falls Apart" is a pretty standard rock song, but at the very end the song ends suddenly, and is instantly replaced by static, which leads into the next song.
  • The Flaming Lips' "Love Yer Brain" is a quiet piano ballad, but it ends with someone trying to smash the piano, with a very short loop of "Tomorrow Never Knows" playing over and over in the background. This could almost be considered an Overly Long Gag because of how long it goes on, and because band members can faintly be heard chatting and laughing about it afterwards. However, the fact that it goes on for so long could also make it more disturbing, especially considering the main message of the song is "every man needs something to keep him from going insane". So they are unloading all their negative emotions on the piano.
  • Inverted with Beck's "Lord Only Knows", which starts off with a first note nightmare but immediately calms down.
    • Played more straight with the B Side "Alcohol", a gentle, slightly eerie folk song that ends with about a minute of tribal drumming and harsh feedback. And while "Fume" is a bit noisy and queasy-sounding to begin with, it's sudden mock-death-metal coda is pretty jarring.
  • Modest Mouse's song "Parting of the Sensory" ends with what sounds like someone trying to spit something up.
  • "Tonight is the Night I Fell Asleep at the Wheel" by Barenaked Ladies ends with a strange opera-esque high note. But somehow it seems appropriate as it seems to coincide with the final result of the title...
  • Another Wire alumnus, Colin Newman, has his fair share of perverse transitions and endings, the most sinister being the bizarre middle-eight to "Image" and gradual breakdown of "The Classic Remains", both on A-Z.
  • Thrice's "Digital Sea" is overall a calm, if a bit melancholy, tune however in the last few seconds the song takes a turn into unsettling territory as the line "here my voice goes to ones and zeros" fades into a murmur... then a distorted murmur... then sounding as if someone is underground and calling out in a guttural voice as they are fading away. All accompanied by radio static. Yeah, just a little haunting.
  • "A Favor House Atlantic," by Coheed and Cambria. This otherwise upbeat song ends with the intro for another of their songs, "The Crowing," reversed. It's quite creepy.
    • Also on the same album, the ending of "Backend of Forever" ends with a creepy piano melody.
    • At the end of Coheed and Cambria's "Three Evils (Embodied in Love and Shadow)", the sound of rain and a vaguely creepy piano are punctuated by sobbing and an absolutely terrifying scream.
  • Electric Six's "It Ain't Punk Rock" is a playful new wave/surf rock song that ends in about 2 minutes of feedback and distant, rumbling drums. Which is fairly long for a last note nightmare to go on for, especially considering that the whole track is 4 minutes long.
  • Double-subverted in Spacehog's "In The Meantime". The song begins to grind to a halt in a spiraling flurry of ominous, spacey synth and guitar feedback...which fades away to reveal a pleasant, quiet piano interlude. The final chord of this interlude, however, is played against a thundering piano chord in reverse — it gets progressively louder and then cuts off abruptly.
  • The last song on Silversun Pickups' album Carnavas is "Common Reactor", which is a kind of light-hearted Ear Worm until you hit the outro, where all calm is suddenly sucked out and replaced by a good minute and a half of discordant whirring and sputtering.
  • How about "Rubber Ring" by The Smiths, it's a cool, upbeat tune with an awesome bassline and nice relaxed vocals, but comes to an abrupt end, leaving us with a woman repeating "You are sleeping, you do not want to believe" If you read the origin of those words, it gets worse.
    • That's because "Rubber Ring" leads into "Asleep" on the original "The Boy with the Thorn in His Side" 12", on every other release the songs were divided in two.
  • The unearthly wailing and echoing bodhran drum that end The Cranberries' "Dreams".
  • Anyone ever listen to the Red Hot Chili Peppers' album One Hot Minute when you're really listening to the music? The title track comes in towards the end of the album, and is arguably one of the most hardcore songs that the Chilis have ever written. But after the already very dissonant end, you can hear someone yelling in pain. It's presumed to be their bassist, Flea. But still after a really heavy song like that, it's a little more than unsettling.
  • "Wraith Pinned To The Mist (and other games)" by Of Montreal features a stinger note that sounds like muffled audio recorded from a construction site. (The song itself is pretty weird though, so it doesn't sound all that out of place.)
    • A much better example is "Id Engager," an otherwise uncomplicated dance song about a one-night stand — it cuts out mid-measure, all the instruments come in at once and all settle on a single legato note, except for a fiddle that loops two ominous notes. Both then rise in volume until the song (the last on the album) abruptly ends.
  • The song "Slide" by the Dresden Dolls is mostly just a very quiet piano piece with a couple drum flourishes, then just before the end is an UNHOLY SCREAM. Granted, the entire song is full of creepy double entendres and it feels like it's building up to a bad ending, but nothing prepared me for "THE ORANGE MAN'S GOT YOOOOOOOOOOU."
    • In the official songbook, Amanda has scribbled "saddest note in the world" with an arrow pointing to the final note.
    • Similarly, "The Lonesome Organist Rapes Page Turner" is obviously not a happy song, but it is fast paced and intense. The natural ending of the song is followed by crashing drums and a scream, after which there's a little "dun dun dun" on the keyboard.
  • Panic! At The Disco's song "When The Day Met The Night" is a lovely, happy song about the moon falling in love with the sun. However, the last few seconds are devoted to the barely audible sound of a girl screaming, "Let me out! Get back! Let me out!" as the music fades away. Being in part a tribute to the Beatles, this is hardly surprising.
    • That leads into epic Fridge Brilliance - the song is actually about a rapist and a little girl.
    • On Panic! At the Disco's earlier album, A Fever You Can't Sweat Out, there is the track "Intermission". It begins with some techno music, which abruptly cuts into static, and a voice akin to a radio announcer telling that due to uncontrolled circumstances, the dance music would have to be replaced with a piano song. Pretty normal, as the piano keeps playing. Toward the end, however, the music begins to break down, and become rather loud and very discordant, and quite a bit unsettling.
      • Also more Fridge Brilliance, all the songs before "Intermission" are fairly standard electropop songs heavy on the pop, if occasionally with some literary flavor. Everything after "Intermission" has a swinging cabaret feel.
  • Spoon's "The Underdog" ends, right in the middle of a big brass fanfare, with what sounds like a piano being slammed shut.
  • "Brighter Day", the last tune on the Jellyfish album Spilt Milk, has a tuneful, circus-like atmosphere reminiscent of an oompah band, until it breaks down into a Parisian-sounding, carousel-like melody on flutes, followed by accordions and strings, followed by a raucous, dissonant, nightmarish jumble of ringing telephones, crashing drums and cymbals, orchestral cacophony, and sound effects. It leads to an ominous high drone of arco strings (similar to that which begins the album) and outdoor noises, like birds twittering, cars passing by and dogs barking. It seems like you can verrrrry faintly hear near-inaudible female whispering, too. Sounds like waking up from a dream, which is appropriate as the first song is a lullabye.
  • Starflyer 59's "First Heart Attack", the final track on the album Old, is an indie rock song with a space-prog guitar solo in the bridge; then the final chorus is followed by 15 seconds of a drum simulating a heartbeat, while an audio clip of a doctor operating plays over it. "How's the blood pressure?" "Not good... falling." (If you listen closely, you can hear one of the musicians say "Stop," just as the track ends.)
  • The Protomen's "The Fall" is incredibly optimistic and inspiring, but in the last few moments everything plunges downwards. Literally.
    • Made even more stinging once you realize that the fading main guitar sounds like a typical hospital heart machine flat-lining. Of course, as mentioned above, the story going with the song's liner notes proves that this is because Joe accidentally blew himself off the top of the radio tower after he placed the explosives at the end of his heroic climb.
  • "I Was Meant For The Stage" by The Decemberists begins pleasantly enough, with an upbeat tune, and sweet, if a little depressing, lyrics...and then at about 5:37, the tune starts becoming more and more dissonant, and it gets worse and worse and worse until you're left wondering why the hell you decided to listen to this song at 1 in them morning.
    • Possibly worse is the transition between "The Crane Wife Part 3" and "The Island" from the CD The Crane Wife. The final chords of "Crane Wife", a catchy balladic major song, are held and replayed until the first strains of "The Island" come in, a deep bass minor chord; there's no real break between the songs, so although "The Island" is technically its own song, it still qualifies.
  • "Who Could Win A Rabbit?" by Animal Collective fits. While the entirety of the song is a bizarre romp into the art of making things sound simultaneously horrific and badass awesome, the song itself cuts abruptly to about 20 seconds worth of looped inhuman gurgling and honking sounds. The music video only serves to extrapolate the nightmare; mostly a trippy take on the Tortoise and the Hare story, when the LNN kicks in, the video suddenly cuts to grotesque imagery of the tortoise eating the hare.
    • It doesn't hurt the nightmare octane at all that the song itself is currently being used extensively in the Everyman HYBRID ARG series...
  • Spoon's tense, funky "Mystery Zone" cuts off abruptly, after 5 hypnotic minutes of bass, in the middle of a line.
  • "Complainte d'un Matelot Mourant" (Laments of a Dying Sailor) by the Avett Brothers has one towards the end of the song. The whole song is creepy as it has a very melancholy instrumental line with vocal accompaniment played over the creak of a ship in the ocean at night, but the vocals start turning into horrified screams and you start hearing the violent rattling of a door as if someone is trying to break in to a room. Considering the album this song is on is called "Mignonette" which is named after an English yacht that sank off of the Cape of Good Hope, this can become Nightmare Fuel because the song is about the surviving people killing one of their men and eating him. Try listening to it driving at 3 in the morning by yourself as I did.
  • Arguably, The Real Tuesday Weld's song "Return I Will To Old Brazil," as seen here. It's a relaxing, soothing song for most of its duration and quite catchy. Then, right before it ends, you hear crabs scuttling around and a woman's voice screaming out.
  • "Lighthouse" by The Hush Sound is a sad, slow melodic piece with slightly creepy yet not outright scary lyrics. Then you reach the end and it says "The door locked from the outside / Three ghosts in a lighthouse" — and it abruptly ends. Pretty much, it suggests that the narrator and the person they're with are also ghosts along with the one ghost they've been talking about.
  • Kate Nash's "Skeleton Song" has a verse right before the end of a fairly poppy song where she dreams of smashing her skeleton in with a hammer, complete with screeching violins as her speech gets more guttural.
  • Mazzy Star's "Into Dust" is a haunting, five-and-a-half-minute Drone of Dread in itself, but it ends with a discordant string riff that doesn't resolve — truly unsettling.
  • Bis' already creepy song "Two Million" has a fake-out-ending. But then, a slow beat starts and a new song-within-a-song starts with no resemblance to the song that preceded it. The effect makes you feel like waking up from a dream, but then realizing the dream is real.
  • The Zutons' Oh Stacey (Look What You've Done) has this. It's a fairly cheerful-sounding song, albeit one about a willful girl who drives her father into an early grave and blows her inheritance on drink. And then it suddenly slows down at the end and ends in a minor key, with Dave Mc Cabe singing 'Oh Stacey, look...what you've done', followed by a drawn-out, distorted chord.
  • The outro of Ultravox's "Dancing With Tears In My Eyes".
  • At the end of "Are Friends Electric 2.0" by Information Society (on their Don't Be Afraid album), there's a weird mechanical whirring noise, accompanied by backmasked robotic speech. I originally thought it was the voice of the malfunctioning "friend".
  • Klaus Nomi does this twice in a row on his first album. The otherwise calm Nomi Chant becomes a Scare Chord in it's last second, and his rendition of the aria "Mon coeur c'ouvre a ta voix" from Samson and Delilah ends with what can only be described as him getting back in his space ship and taking off. It makes sense in his live shows.
  • Finch's "Ender" tapers off in to this kind of thing.
  • "Concentrical" by Sonny Moore inexplicably ends with some strange squealing and crackling noises.
  • Chiodos's "Deserving an Explanation". It winds down with your standard Ominous Music Box Tune, and a very low growl at the close. Your mileage may vary on how effective this is.
    • Another early song, Bulls Have Horns fades out with a series of beeps, only to then fade back in with a high-pitched scream and the lead singer repeating the chorus once more, which then cuts to the whole band laughing. It's not that scary per se, but... unexpected.
    • From their latest album, there's "Love is a Cat from Hell", which ends with Brandon Bolmer repeating the second part of the chorus in a really creepy falsetto.
  • "Labyrinth" by Enter Shikari, probably the most upbeat sounding song on their first album, is even more synth-laden than is standard for Shikari. It fades out from the cheery synth lines into deeper, more subdued ones. VERY unsettling.
  • The blood-curling scream that interrupts the fade-out coda of The Cure's "Subway Song".
  • The weird ending to "when i was bed" from Christian Death.
  • The lyrically dissonant "Perfect Kiss" by New Order ends with a Last Riff Slowdown followed by a gunshot, representing the singer's friend (Ian Curtis?) shooting himself.
  • Inverted by Godspeed You! Black Emperor's "The Dead Flag Blues".
  • Mk II by Madness. Throughout the song is a wonderful piano tune, at one point breaking into more of a rock song. But at the end of the song, after the vocals end, the piano starts up again, but this time is slower and ends with two notes out of place from the rest of the song. After that, we hear the distant sound of birds singing as it fades out.
  • Reel Big Fish do this on the final track to their 2005 album, "We're Not Happy 'Til You're Not Happy". After an upbeat, but angry, short track called "Your Guts (I Hate 'Em)", the track ends with what sounds like a tape deck closing, then six minutes of silence. Suddenly, you hear backwards whispering, disjointed guitar and bass, loud, drums, then a snippet of an unfinished song, followed by frontman Aaron Barrett whispering "You're gonna die", then screaming and a guitar that sounds like it's being played by the Devil.
  • Steel Train's B Side "Shapeshifter". Starts with a couple dissonant notes, continues into a fairly conventional song with a slightly creepy tinge to it, and ends with an instrumental section that sounds completely crazy for the last 13 seconds.
  • Cursive's "Some Red Handed Slight of Hand", a short fast-paced song that ends abruptly with an organ being pounded with the same chord a few times.
  • Matchbox Twenty has a bit of one with "You Won't Be Mine," on their Mad Season album. You get to the end of the song and the guitar fades out into silence - but wait, the track is still running! So you keep listening, dead silence. Then, two minutes later, a full string section cuts in, in what turns out to be a partial orchestral reprise of the song. Maybe not a nightmare, though the tone of the song is somewhat gloomy, but it will certainly make you jump if you're not ready for it.
  • "Lo" from O'Brother has this, but it is made even worse in the music video because it has the video's cast finding a monster fetus. Extra high pitched noises are also added to the LNN in the video.
  • The Beach Boys's "Be With Me" is an emotional love ballad, but at the end, all the instruments fade out, leaving the listener left with a single violin which plays alone for a short while, while in the middle, a faint scream can be heard.


Electronic / Industrial[]

  • The track "the Eve of the War" in Jeff Waynes War of the Worlds is a pretty upbeat (and very bombastic) song about the martian invaders coming, that ends with a sound that could be a martian beacon or radar along with a pumping heart.
  • The 30-minute piece "Bayreuth Return" from Klaus Schulze's Timewind album speeds up slightly for the final few minutes, then finally, an explosion abruptly ends the piece.
    • Similarly, halfway through "Wahnfried 1883", the tune slowly morphs into a cacophony of eerie distorted organ drones, building up to a final climax with the wind and space sound effects.
  • For a Stupid Statement Dance Mix, "One-Winged Scout". The start is what you'd expect, Team Fortress 2's Scout "bonking" over Sephiroth's (in)famous theme, then after some time the Scout's Man On Fire soundbites start playing.
  • Portishead's "Silence" brings together Last-Note Nightmare and Nothing Is Scarier: It cuts off abruptly in mid-note. No last note, no fade out, not even some weird sound. Just spontaneous silence. Yikes.
  • "Encoder" by Pendulum fades out while the sound of Water splashing can be heard, and a man can be heard breathing heavily as if he just swam a long distance. Then a wham noise begins to fade , but before it does, the song abruptly cuts out. Bam, album over.
    • Similar to it is the upbeat song "I'm Talking 'Bout Me" by Admiral Twin. The chorus is building up at the end and after the second to last word, cuts off abruptly.
  • Portishead's Third: the ending track, "Threads." The whole song is already a nightmare, but if the end of the world doesn't sound like the blasts of noise at the end of the song, I'm going to be disappointed.
    • Inverted with a later track on the same album, "We Carry On". Weird oscillating, then the conga-ish beat starts.
  • The first movement of Kraftwerk's "Kometenmelodie" (from the Autobahn album) is an airy ambient piece, then while the last chord is still playing, it abruptly cuts to the second movement with a high-pitched screech, it doesn't help that the main melody of the second part is also mostly harsh high-pitched instruments.
  • The Black Bag Project's "Electric Swine" does this. The song itself is horrifiyng enough, and then you get to the last minute or so, where it disintegrates into hollow-sounding echoing harmonics and faint laughing, with unsettling chords playing... Needless to say, it really isn't something to listen to at night.
  • The 1981 album Claro que si by the band Yello featured a hypnotizing instrumental track "Take It All". At the end, while the song was slowly fading away, a strange noise was growing in the background, kind of a nonsensical robot rambling, really creepy as if a weird and unpredictable robot was closing on to the listener. This immediately segued into the next song, "The Evening's Young", with the robot voice still around. A few second into the song, the robot voice started coughing and shut up.
  • After the first movement of the long (28-minute) version of Orbital's "The Box", it delves into horror territory, with creaking noises, dissonant guitars and piano, ominous harpsichord, etc.
    • The Diversions remix of "Impact (The Earth is Burning)" starts out mostly the same as the original, but then halfway through, an ominous buzzing 303 riff takes over the melody, emphasizing the "the earth is burning" subtitle.
  • Daft Punk's "Prime Time Of Your Life" has also one of these. Expect it goes on for half of the whole song, and there's even another regular Last Note Nightmare at the end within the extended Last Note Nightmare. Also, watching the official music video with it only makes it even more of a nightmare because it has a girl skinning herself and accidentally killing herself because she wanted to be like the pink skeletons she was seeing, but it was all her illusion because she thought she was fat even though she wasn't.
    • Not the first time they've done this, either. Their track "Short Circuit" has an extended Last Note Nightmare too.
    • And less than some of the other examples here, but the last note of the light & happy One More Time is For Doom the Bell Tolls. Somehow, it's put there as the song ending upruptly in the music video would be stupid.
      • The bell is cut out on iTunes. But at the end it sounds like a man screaming, but only for a nanosecond because he's cut off.
  • Dome, the Head-Tiltingly Arty side-project of Wire members Bruce Gilbert and Graham Lewis, produced an album called Dome 2 that is made of this trope. For proof, just listen to the first track, "The Red Tent". Starts off weird enough, but then it changes... You'll never look at hiking the same way again.
    • Subverted at the end of "Madmen" on Dome.
Cquote1
Cquote2
  • John Heartson's "The Silicon Invasion" is an upbeat techno-pop song about how computers are running our world. The vocals get more robotic with every verse, and by the last verse they are completely Machine Monotone:
Cquote1

 Billions of names erased from the file

Purging is complete

Only a few organics remain

The so called elite

Illogical species, faulty programming

Consume more than required

Fatal exception, self destructive behavior

It's why they expired

Cquote2
  • While the whole song is rather disturbing, the lyrics being a message left on an answering machine by a man who knows his plane is going down, I think 30k Feet by Assemblage 23 qualifies. The last line runs something like "Just one more thing to tell you now before I have to go. I-*SCRIIIICH!*"
  • On the US edition of BT's ESCM, the ambient outtro of "Remember" abruptly jumps to the very loud Scare Chord intro of "Love Peace & Grease (BT's Puma Fila Mix)".
  • The end of "Twisted Little Star" by Bertine Zetlitz is a mass of random distortion that grows progressively louder as the song draws to a close, ending in one big distorted mess.
  • All of Nox Arcana's albums end on these if you leave them on after the last track goes quiet. Winter's Knight's example was intended to be uplifting, but may very well be unsettling to some people.
  • Vladislav Delay's album-length piece "Anima" starts with a conversation: "Danny, are you awake yet?" "No, are you"? before slipping into 60 minutes of ambiance and random, sometimes scary synthesizer noises, which finally ends with a splash and the words "I may never go to sleep again, I might stay awake forever". Try listening to it in the dark.
  • Patrick Wolf's "Wolf Song" is a folk song performed with traditional acoustic instruments. The last chord, however (together with a wolf-like howl), is digitally mutilated to be a glitchy stutter. Someone who doesn't know Mr. Wolf's other work might think there's a playback error.
  • Kind of a reversal into First Note Nightmare: Rammstein's "Reise, Reise" is a creepy song in and of itself, moreso if you speak German, but the first thirty seconds or so consist of a clip from the blackbox of Japan Airlines 123 immediately before it crashed.
    • Then there's the song right after "Reise, Reise", called "Mein Teil", which starts loudly and suddenly after "Reise, Reise" ends, being a last-note AND first-note nightmare at the same time.
  • Nine Inch Nails' "Hurt" is a quiet, melancholy song that morphs into a strangely uplifting ballad...then looks like it's going to taper off quietly. Instead, the last line is accompanied by a crashing, detuned guitar. It fades out for over a minute, followed by an ominous wind/static sound (on the album version).
    • Similarly at the end of "Closer", the song seems to build up to a climax, then peters out with a muted and distorted guitar hook that then fades.
      • The last couple notes are played much clearer, however, which adds to the atmosphere.
    • The Fragile taken as a whole. Granted, it's not the happiest album, but it's energetic and has tones of working towards something great. Then comes "Ripe".
    • "A Warm Place" has a literal Last-Note Nightmare if played on repeat. The piece begins with a brief burst of static noise — an intentional artifact from the previous song in the album — which is quickly forgotten about as the sounds develop into a soothing melody that can only be described as "womb-like". You're practically asleep by the time it ends... at which point you're suddenly startled awake by that damned burst of static.
    • "Twist" ends with someone who may be Trent screaming.
  • "Laser Fear" by Laserdance, from Future Generation, has both a first and last-note high-octane nightmare consisting of slowed-down baby cry samples.
  • Myvoice's Nosmo King, shortly after its Truck Driver's Gear Change, abruptly ends with a gunshot-like sound. Did the titular character shoot himself?
  • The after the fade out of the relatively mellow And One track "Sometimes", suddenly a very loud noise that sounds like a UFO crashing or something explodes out of your speakers. It can definitely make you jump.
  • Depeche Mode's "Somebody" ends with what sounds like the intro to a horror movie theme.
  • The song "London Town," the final song from William Control's first album, Hate Culture, features a supposedly real recorded 911 call that starts playing a few minutes after it ends. The authenticity has been debated, but real or not, it's damn scary.
  • The eerie whispering at the end of The Birthday Massacre's "Play Dead" is an example of this.
  • "Untrust Us" by Crystal Castles is a rather soft song, which ends with the abrupt wailing of a guitar.
  • The Abney Park CD Lost Horizons ends with a "ghost track". Leave the album going after the last song ends, and you might notice the distant sound of seagulls and waves, but quite possibly you won't. You WILL notice the sudden, loud and profoundly unnerving sound that follows, something like metal scraping and shuddering. Creepy.
    • Similarly, KMFDM's Nihil ends with a minute of silence followed by a minute or two of similar grinding noises.
  • Doctor Steel, "Build The Robots", which ends with the vocals fading out and a note uncannily like a sped-up version of the THX Deep Note sound.
  • "Diabolical" by Mindless Self Indulgence is an entire song that's sole purpose was to invoke this trope. Seriously. The intro consists of a somewhat unsettling, off-key electronic violin which loops throughout the track. It seems fine until the very end, in which the volume gets pumped up and becomes SO loud that it can literally BREAK your speakers. In fact, the purpose of the song was to do that, as said by the band and in the lyrics, that say "I got the diabolical sound comin' through your speakers" Needless to say, if it's your first time listening to it, you WILL get the crap scared out of you.
  • "Ecos" by Mexican EBM band Hocico ends with a series of noises that sound like malfunctioning synthesizers-as if the band's equipment suddenly stopped working.
  • "Spindrift" by Covenant ends with an unsettling harpsichord dirge.
  • The original mix of "Sun" by Slusnik Luna ends with the lone, fading sound of what seems to be heavily digitized breathing. With the rest of the song having been driven by a percussion beat throughout, it's quite jarring and unnerving.


Hip Hop[]

  • The last five notes of Romeo Miller's "Romeoland". If anyone could find the video...
  • "Word Of Mouth" by John Reuben ends with about 15 seconds of the narrator asking, in a whiny voice, if the listener will please like him.
  • SHAKKAZOMBIE's "Recover The Sky Of Day" is a case of First Note Nightmare. Before the actual song, is about one second of what appears to be the members of the band screaming. Thank god they left that out of the Cowboy Bebop recap episode.
  • "Stepfather Factory" by El-P is a song which is highly unsettling and depressing in itself all about domestic abuse. It only gets worse when all you hear at the end is silence and a robotic, Creepy Monotone voice repeating over and over, "Why are you making me hurt you? I love you. Why are you making me hurt you? I love you."
  • "M1 A1" by Gorillaz is a strange reverse example. The song starts out with a brief clip of a heartbeat, followed by weird, dissonant tones and a creepy-sounding, crescendoing baseline while an echoing voice repeatedly (and increasingly desperately) shouts "Hello? Is anyone there?", sampled from Day of the Dead, but after the first minute and a half or so, the song transitions into something more conventional and upbeat in sound.
    • More recently, "On Melancholy Hill" uses this straight. It starts calm and melancholic, but the last note is a gong that has nothing to do with the song.
  • Slenderman: The Album is already full of pretty creepy instrumental hip-hop, but two tracks, "Fighting Back" and "The Library is Flooded", stand out the most. The former is a much more upbeat, triumphant rock-style song than the rest of the album, but near the end, switches to a minor key and then finally slows down into distorted, low-pitched noise before an equally-distorted voice mumles something about "dark forces". In the latter, the song seems to end about halfway through before returning with distorted, frantic drums and threatening bursts of static and distortion.
  • Imogen Heap ends and begins "Leave Me To Love" with some heavy screeching.


R & B / Soul[]

  • Marvin Gaye's "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)" ends with a long instrumental section concluding with a haunting chorus, a dissonant horn, and some drumming. At least one station actually cuts it short.
  • "Russian Roulette" by Rihanna ends with the sound of a loud gunshot. Not creepy, though, just annoying as all heck.
  • Steely Dan's "Josie" has an oddly menacing fade-out.
  • Bill Withers' "Better Off Dead," a mournful but relatively smooth R&B song, has not so much a Last Note Nightmare as a sound effect nightmare: the final iteration of the chorus — "she's better off without me/and I'm better off dead now that she's gone" — is interrupted after the titular phrase... by a gunshot. One of the great shock endings in pop music.


Jazz[]

  • Pick up any jazz CD, and you're likely to find at least one track that ends with a long solo riff over sustained chord that's way more dissonant than the rest of the song.


J-Pop / J-Rock[]

  • The last minute or so of Kono Daremo Inai Heya De" by Gackt is something resembling a spectral chorus singing "Hey, Jude"; he fade-out is a harsh violin crescendo.
    • "Longing" plays with this. The verses are distorted and end on nightmarish notes, and the bridge changes melodies entirely, giving way to Ominous Pipe Organ, more distorted screams from Gackt, a woman screaming in terror...and then it goes right back to normal.
  • Sort of a weird example in Ali Project's lesser-known song, "Akai Suiren no Gogo", for the first 2 1/2 minutes, is a soft, relaxing yet sort of odd melody. Then, towards the end, there are four rather startling fortissimos (if that's the proper term) before going back to normal, except for a chilling, deep "I love you" in English near the end. It should be noted that this is only true for the earlier Gensou Teien + 1 version, not the Moonlight intoxication version.


Vocaloid[]

  • Alice Human Sacrifice ends on a very creepy chord.
  • Black/White ward ends with the loud beeping sound of a heart monitor
  • Knowledge of the Late Madness ends with the crank organ music heard in of Dark Woods Circus.
    • Dark Woods Circus itself ends with the sound of an ominous cymbal, and horse hooves.
  • The scream at the very end of Guilty Verse can be pretty startling.


Country / Folk[]

  • Miranda Lambert's "Gunpowder and Lead" tells the story of an abused wife waiting in ambush with a shotgun for her husband, who is freshly out on bail. The song seems to trail off normally, only to be punctuated by a shotgun blast, followed by the metallic ring of an ejected shell hitting the ground. Somehow the merry little "ting!" of the shell just makes it worse.
  • The Pete Seeger anti-nuclear song "Odds on Favorite" is creepy to start with, talking about how God designed a universe with built-in obsolescence, then gets more cheerful--for a while.
Cquote1

 Thank God this great combustion day

Is several billion years away

So as philosophers all say

Why fuss, why fume, why worry?

A jillion moons will wane and wax

Sit down, make out your income tax

Enjoy your life, be calm, relax

For God is in no hurry.



Reassuring, right? Then it ends:



But oh, my friends, I have a hunch,

Mankind might beat God to the punch.



And it abruptly ends.

Cquote2
  • "Universal Soldier" by Buffy Sainte-Marie has a fairly pleasant melody most of the way through, although the antiwar message is obvious, but it's driven home when the last line ("This is not the way we put an end to war") drops into a minor key.
  • Loreena Mc Kennitt's "Never-Ending Road" (from the album An Ancient Muse) is a quiet, pretty love-song - but its last few notes are underlined and followed by a few bars of a different, eerie melody.
  • Jay Malinowski's Animal ends with a piano chord that fades out, then back in, gets louder and louder until it abruptly cuts out.
    • Made worse by the fact that on some prints of the album, Animal is the last track.
  • Simon & Garfunkel's "Richard Cory" features this with a stinger just before the final chorus, sure to startle.
Cquote1

 He freely gave to charity, he had the common touch

And they were grateful for his patronage, and they thanked him very much

So my mind was filled with wonder when the evening headlines read:

Richard Cory went home last night and put a bullet through his head.

Cquote2
    • The lyric then continues with
Cquote1

 And I wish that I could be, yes I wish that I could be, Oh I wish that I could be Richard Cory.

Cquote2
  • Harry Chapin's "30,000 Pounds of Bananas" ends in an elongated scream.
  • Love's "The Good Humor Man He Sees Everything Like This": It's a mellow psychedelic folk song where every verse is followed by a horn fanfare, and the final few repetitions of said fanfare are edited in a jumpy manner to imitate a skipping record.
  • The music of Sufjan Stevens sometimes falls under this trope. "The Predatory Wasp of the Palisades Is Out to Get Us!", for example, is a soft, sentimental song, but the last twenty seconds slip into an unsettling white-noise grind that grows louder, then abruptly stops.
    • Not to mention the song "Seven Swans" which has a slow, almost calming cadence thanks to its use of only a few banjo chords throughout most of its length, along with some pretty, but slightly odd, imagery with the lyrics. But, then the last minute or so of the song comes, and we get a crescendo involving a chorus of female voices (eliciting images of a angelic choir), but singing supremely creepy lines such as "He will take you; if you run / He will chase you, / 'cause He is the Lord." And at this point, you realize that the imagery earlier in the song isn't so pretty, is actually reminiscent of the Book of Revelation, and pretty creepy indeed.
  • "Bowl of Oranges" by Bright Eyes is very much a Crowning Moment of Heartwarming until you get to the sinister instrumentals at the end of the track.

Classical[]

  • The last three bars of Mozart's "A Musical Joke" are in a polytonal jumble of five different keys.
  • Haydn's Surprise Symphony has a nice peaceful melody, but is then rudely interrupted by loud, accented notes. Haydn did it to wake up slumbering members of the audience. He was known as a prankster, and this is one of the many jokes in his pieces.
  • Haydn's Farewell Symphony, while not a nightmare ending, is pretty disconcerting. The last movement ends with the musicians, one or a few at a time, quietly leaving the stage, with the final part played by just two violins. This was Haydn's hint to his patrons, the Esterhazy family, that his orchestra's stay at their summer palace had gone on for too long and that they would really like to get back to their families.
  • Tom Turpin's "A Ragtime Nightmare" is actually a very cheerful upbeat ragtime work despite the name, best known for its use in the Good N' Plenty commercials of the 60s. But the last chord sounds like a bunch of random keys hit at once, but you can tell it wasn't because it's pure dissonance. A sharp contrast to the pleasant tune known for its use in candy commercials.
  • "Black Angels" by George Crumb, while the whole piece is surreal, is something of an inversion. The first section, Night of the Electric Insects, features multiple screeching violins playing loudly then softly then loudly again. It's Nightmare Fuel that will keep you up at night. Not to be listened to while reading the Nothing Is Scarier section.
  • Maurice Ravel's Bolero can come across as this. The last time the melody comes in, it is stronger, with much of the orchestra playing the theme, or counter melodies that seem wild. In some recordings, this section comes across as significantly louder. Some of the stated counter melodies also change the chords to dissonant ones. The song is major until then.
  • Edvard Grieg seems to scare many with the final chord of "In the Hall of the Mountain King."


Other[]

  • The Residents' song "Elvis and His Boss" begins to end with a slide guitar/kazoo solo, back up by what's either a trombone or a Minimoog. Then the instruments become uncontrollably pitched and distorted, up to the point that the entire song sounds more like TV snow.
  • The Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band number "Slush" is a variant on this. Another gentle instrumental, it is interrupted about halfway through by a manic laugh. This laugh then repeats at precise intervals for the rest of the tune to the fade-out, and beyond...and beyond...and BEYOND. Genuinely un-nerving.
    • They also had "11 Mustachioed Daughters", rather unnerving all the way through, but ending with some...extremely creepy dialogue accompanied by instrumentals, creepy because it's just so strange and leaves you the impression something's really seriously wrong with the talkers. "Worship for Satan! (giggle) Glad that's over with..." "I don't remember too good, but I think John Wayne is here." "Oh yeah?" "I don't remember too good, but I think John Wayne is here." "Oh no." "I don't remember too good, but I think John Wayne is here..." "Oh my..."
  • Parodied by "Weird Al" Yankovic, with his single "You Don't Love Me Anymore". After the song ends, there are 10 minutes of silence followed by 6 seconds of backwards drumming, guitar feedback, and Al screaming at the top of his lungs, after which, the song ends. According to Al, this "most annoying 6 seconds of audio ever recorded" was meant to scare the listener if he or she forgets toturn the CD player off. (This snippet is called "Bite Me".) This was a parody of "Endless, Nameless" by Nirvana, which came on about 10 minutes of silence and was, essentially, 6 minutes of cacophony. Even more bizzarly, if you play "Bite Me" in reverse and slow it down, you will hear distorted voices. These voices are from David Hallyday's song "Tears of the Earth".
  • "Kingdom in the Sky" by Da Vinci's Notebook ends with the guys' harmonies breaking down terribly on the final "sky" lyric, some late, some early, some just too high for their normal singing range... the lead tenor sing-says quickly at the end "We'll redo that ending."
  • While it's got a little bit of a creepy undercurrent throughout, Mr. Bungle's "Pink Cigarette" is an uncharacteristically pretty, doo-wop influenced ballad... then, as it seems to be winding up to a climax, the beep of a heart monitor creeps into the mix, and the song gets abruptly cut off by said heart monitor flat-lining. Of course, the lyrics seem to be a husband's suicide note to his cheating wife, so...
    • Mr. Bungle's music being nightmarish as is, After School Special is an only somewhat eerie song about a kid talking about his abusive parents. The track ends with a horrifying metallic rustling sound and a distorted mutant child-like voice giggling repeatedly saying "Stop tickling me" and then "Why are you touching me?"
      • Actually, pretty much all of the first album qualifies as this. The first song, "Quote Unquote", is about a cocaine addict who has no arms, no legs, and lives mostly in his own doped-up fantasies. "Slowly Growing Deaf" lives up to its name. "Dead Goon" is about a boy dying while doing... *ahem*... something. "My Ass Is On Fire", though in a somewhat bizarre fashion, seems to be about a man murdering his wife after finding out that she's cheating on him. It gets worse.
  • William Shatner yelling "Mister Tambourine MAAAAAAAAAAAN" at the end of his cover of that song.

Other Categories[]

Advertising[]

  • Early commercials for Verizon's Android offerings started with Mo Zella's upbeat, "It's Magic" to parody iPhone commercials, switching midway to a much darker theme, to establish Droid as more serious operating system.
  • The Nissan Juke commercials use Frederika Stahl's cover of a Nursery Rhyme, namely Twinkle Twinkle Little Star. Said cover begins with a melancholy wail, but that alone is not nightmarish (and therefore not even one of the cases of "First note Nightmare"). However, some versions of the commercials use such an opening as their ending, thus not only coming off as mildly scary, but also just plain sad.


Anime[]

  • .hack//Legend plays background music normally and then as the Corrupted Mook is about to be summoned from the Chaos Gate, the music begins to slip.
  • In Soul Eater, the soundtrack 'So Scandalous' has a creepy piano playing in between the techno/hip pop/jazz number.
  • "Reborn," the first ending song from Baki the Grappler, is a mellow guitar song with lyrics about love and happiness, while images of the various cast members who are clearly not thinking about love and happiness float by in the background--for example, Ando is gritting his teeth and swinging an axe. And then as a coup de grace, the song ends with a slightly eerie echo and an image of Yujiro looming over Baki.
  • "Amusement Park", from the Cowboy Bebop boxed set. The song is a creepy carnival theme that fades out into a rather loud eerie note.
  • There's a version of Pachelbel's Canon in D on disc 2 of the "Evangelion Symphony" album that is completely normal. Considering the popularity of the piece, your mind tunes it out as background music... until about five seconds before where it should end, there is a noise like a gunshot and all of the string instruments screech to a halt.
    • The track "Honeymoon with Anxiety" (Fuan to no Mitsugetsu) from the End of Evangelion soundtrack is a cool bit of music that ends with an unsettling... violin... thing.
    • And then from Rebuild 2.0, there's Kyou no Hi wa Sayounara (Farewell for Today). You know, that wonderfully sweet little song that was playing when EVA 01 ripped 03 apart with Asuka inside while Shinji begged his father to turn off the Dummy System. It's wonderful and sweet, but on the soundtrack, we get a weird little... thing at the end, which consists of a somewhat distorted repeat of part of the song... which then gets some absolutely chilling violin chords and echo effects.
  • Higurashi no Naku Koro ni has lots of character songs that start out happy, then turn... disturbing. The best example of Last Note Nightmare is Keiichi's song, Cool ni Nare! ~Keep On Our Love~, which is a Hot-Blooded appeal to Screw Destiny, the final line being Keiichi abruptly saying "Oops, I screwed up" (and, since this is Higurashi, presumably dying).
    • Actually, the line before that is "Yes, Hinamizawa", which is a reference to another character song that featured Keiichi (and Mr. Delicious). So, it was probably more of an "Ah crap, wrong lyrics" thing.
      • ... and that song has it's own Last-Note Nightmare. It's a silly nonsensical rap mainly consisting of phrases from the anime... until Keiichi starts scratching out his throat. And it's played for laughs.
        • At the very end, you can hear Keiichi over the phone saying very quietly "Please, someone end this case", with the last word being cut off as soon as he says it. Then you hear a quiet scream. It's a goofy scream, but...
    • The anime gives us its own soundtrack and the track "Oyashiro Sama". It's already creepy on it's own, but its creepiness has a musical pattern... and then the final note is not what you musically expect, it goes lower instead of higher and the percussion vanishes as if it wasn't even there in the first place. Absolutely nightmarish and fits the anime incredibly well.
  • "Warera Gatchaman", the closing theme of Gatchaman II. The song itself is a rousing anthem about how awesome the Gatchaman team is and how they're going to defeat Galactor and save the day... but then, out of nowhere, the song ends with a sudden and nasty Scare Chord.
  • Russia's version of Marukaite Chikyuu appropriately has the character singing the chorus cute as anything until his "Kolkolkol" chant comes out of nowhere, and then just goes right back into being cute again before you have the chance to process the horror of what you just heard. It also didn't help this was the first time the fans actually heard the chant.
    • Then of course, there's the part where his voice dips to a deeper, not-so-much-cute-as-menacing tone as the end of the third repetition of the chorus.
    • Then there's the ending of his character song Winter, where there's chanting for the last roughly 40 seconds, and grows louder when the music itself ends. His Hatafutte Parade starts to be this trope too with some surreal echoing, but he stops and screams about Belarus at the last second, acting as Nightmare Retardant.
  • School Days: Kanashimi no Mukou e is hardly a happy song; it's moody, depressive, almost heartbreaking. But when it's almost over, a very ominous and slightly out-of-place drum music starts playing... and you suddenly get the feeling that something has gone very, very wrong.
    • This song is inspired by School Days. I mean, the song is entitled "Nice Boat." Watch till the ending and be spooked.
  • Misa's song from Death Note. It starts out slightly creepy, then evolves into a very heart warming song, only at the end, the piano begins playing a goosebump inducing minor chord. The lyrics also hint at Misa's suicide at the end of the series.
  • Every episode of Ghost Hunt ends with a last note nightmare. After the slow, eerie ending song, a sudden burst of maniacal piano starts playing, then a voiceover Mai warns us about the next episode.


Film[]

  • Alien³ had the standard 20th Century Fox fanfare, right up until the final bar. Instead of finishing the triumphant ditty, it hangs and turns into something quite the opposite.
  • The grand opening music of Star Wars ends in a dark ominous tone once the narrative text begins to fade.
  • In Willy Wonka and The Chocolate Factory, one of the many variations of "Pure Imagination" plays as the boat starts down the chocolate river, then when it enters the psychedelic tunnel, the music appropriately turns ominous.
    • Also occurs earlier in the film-- the final note of the upbeat 'Candyman' is off key.
  • A milder, but still significant example: At the end of West Side Story, there is a touching reprise of the song "Somewhere," but just as the scene is ending and the music is calming down, dissonant, deep chords start playing in the background...
  • The soundtrack to The Wicker Man is a great find as it includes all the Celtic folk songs featured in the movie, including the classic round "Sumer Is Icumen In," which is sung by the townsfolk at the film's climax. It takes a turn for the horror however when that track on the album ends with Sargent Howie screaming, "Oh, God! Oh, Jesus Christ!" in absolute terror as he sees the wicker man.
  • Two words: "Withnail's Theme." The melody itself is haunting and fitting for a Sad Clown but the flat note at the very end of the movie makes you wince every time.
  • "Nature Boy (reprise)" from the Moulin Rouge soundtrack. The instruments are creepy enough as is, but the ending was edited to sound like the CD was scratched, for a very strange effect.
    • There's also the other version on that soundtrack, in which David Bowie is singing along very nicely until the last word, which is about a million decibels louder than the last song, accompanied by an intensely creepy swell of music.
  • "The Hunt Builds" from the soundtrack to Bram Stoker's Dracula. Not only does it end with 4 scare chords, sad music can simultaneously be heard playing as well.
  • The famous The Pink Panther Theme Tune ends suddenly loud with a jarring chord.
  • The opening theme for Star Trek: First Contact is a warm, slow and dramatic one. Then as it fades into silence...WHAM.
  • After the credits of Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban, Harry says "Mischief Managed... Nox." The map parchment folds and we see the film's title, and the seven iconic notes of the Potter theme. The screen fades to black, an after 20 seconds of silence, Peter Pettigrew's eerie theme can be heard. Sure to scare a few.
    • The Chamber of Secrets' Theme ends with no less than 4 Scare Chords, each when you think that the piece is ending.
  • The opening to Star Trek (while you watch the Vanity Plates) starts with a warm horn-and-strings combo (a slow variation on the main theme). Roughly 40 seconds in, you see the Bad Robot vanity plate (which is a bit creepy) while the music lets a little dissonance pop in. About 55 seconds in, the music just slams and cuts off--right as the movie begins.
  • "Furious Angels" by Rob Dougan (from The Matrix Reloaded) ends with unsettlingly loud and distorted violins. The fact that Rob sounds a lot like Tom Waites doesn't help.
  • The end credits piece from the Jurassic Park soundtrack. It starts out with the epic Island theme, then transitions into a soft, gentle version of the main theme. However, it ends on a rendition of the rather unsettling Raptor theme.
  • The theme from Poltergeist is a soft, pleasant tune with children singing...that ends with some very creepy high-pitched laughter. Not that surprising when you consider the source material.
  • "I See Dead People In Boats" from the soundtrack for Pirates of The Caribbean: At World's End. Instead of having the violins play the last note, it's done by an organ.
  • "528491" from the Inception soundtrack has a 'kick' at the end of the song, followed by the sound of a train.


Live Action TV[]

  • Doctor Who had this in "The Pandorica Opens", when The Doctor is sealed in the pandorica, a beautiful score begins playing and swooping, then the camera zooms out and shows the universe exploding.. And the music suddenly stops... Mid-Note...
    • Just as the Master and the Time Lords disappear back into the Time War in The End of Time, and the Tenth Doctor thinks he's somehow managed to avoid his own prophesied demise, we hear four knocks, and the chords played by the strings appropriately fall apart and gliss down with tons of dissonance, mirroring the Doctor's own sinking realization.
  • Happens in Lost a few times, most notably at the end of the episode where Aaron is born.
    • Lost's soundtrack is full of these. They can be rather jarring when you're listening to an emotional piano piece, only for it to end with some creepy twinkling followed by a loud brass note.
  • In the M* A* S* H episode "Dear Uncle Abdul", Father Mulcahy tries to compose a rousing, patriotic, "Over There"-style war song; eventually he comes up with something that has one of these downbeat endings, musically and lyrically
  • BBC's Sea Monsters ends with an epic credits theme on each episode... when suddenly the final credits pop up with a loud shocking theme.
  • The Bub-Bubs music video from the "Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!" kind of has this more for the video than for the music itself, because the part dancing fetuses at the end can be very disturbing, especially since the music already ended at that part, so the only noise being made was from the dancing fetuses and the woman's man dancing in the open womb.


Opera / Theatre[]

  • The Puccini opera Madama Butterfly ends with a scary, unexpected major chord (in first inversion).
  • "Music of the Night," from Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical version of The Phantom of the Opera. The Phantom has lulled Christine almost to sleep, the song's soft, everything's pleasant, then DUN! DUN DUN DUN DUN DUN DUNNNNNNNN loud discordant organ. Especially seizure-inducing if you're listening to the song at night in bed and do not expect the ending.
  • The song "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" on the Cabaret 1998 Broadway Cast Recording is already kind of creepy since it's intentionally made to sound low-quality and distorted. Then it stops and the MC harshly whispers the last two words. At least they give you a few seconds to brace yourself.
  • The song "So Happy" from Into the Woods starts out nice and happy... until half way through when there's a crashing noise and the number takes a very dark, eerie turn. Then there's the blood-curdling scream that occurs after you've think the song has faded out. Something similar occurs with the bouncy, romantic "It Takes Two" abruptly switching to "Stay With Me" (which opens with a blood-curdling scream!) Stephen Sondheim loves this trope.
    • Also from Into the Woods, the witch's version of "Children Don't Listen" after Rapunzel's death is a flowing albeit sad song. The last note ends with the witch's voice breaking causing the song to go very sharp.
  • The song "Three-Five-Zero-Zero" from the musical Hair is a Last/First VERSE Nightmare, combined with Lyrical Dissonance. It begins with a melancholy and gory description of war-wounds, switches to an upbeat tune about "beginning to kill", then reprises the first verse.
  • The last number from A Chorus Line, "One", is a joyful and optimistic song throughout, but the final four shrieks of the word "one" over a terrifying major chord take the cake.
  • The loud factory whistle that screams at seemingly random times in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street. Definitely something you don't want to be listening to with headphones. In the show, the whistle blows every time the title character kills someone - there's no such siren-like sound in songs without Sweeney Todd. Most of the victims have no lines, so the audio recording provides no warning for the shrieking whistle. That Sweeney is slitting throats casually while singing about other things adds to the nightmarish quality of the recordings.


Software[]

  • The Vocaloid song "Alice Human Sacrifice" is a rather creepy parody of carnival music - which ends with the music getting slower and slower, and then just one note that is creepily off key. See what I mean?
    • And don't forget the Nico Nico Chorus version of "Daughter of Evil". At the song's end, a few bars start to play from the sequel song, "Servant of Evil", until they're brutally cut off by a terrifying, realistic guillotine sound. Literal Last-Note Nightmare, there.
    • DYE by AVTechNO! is at its loudest and busiest near the end, and then the song ends abruptly. It's not as bad in this upload because of the ending credits, but on the version that can be found on [DYE] -synthesis-, the sudden stop is the last thing you hear on the track.


Video Games[]

  • Cave Story's main theme manages to do this, even though it's used as looping level theme music in the Plantation area. It plays the very upbeat main melody twice in a row, to trick the listener into thinking the entire song's just a 44-second loop. As it starts to play for the third time, a dissonant counter-melody emerges--the song gets as dark as the Retraux soundcard lets it, eventually grinding to a halt before restarting.
  • 111.mp3, "Good Morning" from Ragnarok Online starts off as a peaceful and upbeat piano tune, then at 1:06 onwards starts to slip. It makes more sense when you consider the place where this song plays in-game...
  • Eversion's World X-8 theme is very creepy and filled with Psycho Strings, but there are no surprises and it's actally quite calm. Then the music slowly fades out... All of a sudden, there's this really loud, startling drum. It's hard to describe, but really creepy.
  • In the secret "Revenge" ending of Silent Hill 3, the "Silent Hill Song" ends with the singers being shot to death with a machine gun. It's actually kind of funny, because of how ludicrous and over-the-top that whole ending was.
  • Silent Hill 2: The end of the track Null Moon fades down to the chime chords, then the instrument shifts to an ominous tone in the last couple of phrases.
  • Much of the music in Endgame: Singularity sounds like this; it starts out one place and goes somewhere else entirely. This holds particularly true for the music that plays when you win, which starts out something like the twilight zone theme and somehow manages to get more chilling.
  • Spelunky has the moderately cheerful background music trick you into thinking it's just an endless loop like the title and boss music. Then, at the 2 minute mark, the music plays backwards for a second or two and then proceeds to play normally again, except that it's much lower, much slower, and bizarrely warped. You WILL jump five feet into the air the first time you hear it. With such an utterly bizarre warning music, it makes you wonder why they need an ultimate invincible enemy coming in at 2:30 to encourage you to hurry up.
  • The song from the End Credits of Resident Evil 4 springs to mind. As the song starts, it's a pleasant recap of how village life used to be when everything was pleasant. . . . . And then the Plagas show up . . .
  • When you get a Time Paradox in Metal Gear Solid 3 Snake Eater, the music goes on for a while until the whole screen reverses color and plays a loud noise when the letters become "TIME PARADOX".
  • The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask: The title demo sequence. It originally shows various scenes of Clock Town and its inhabitants, with a peaceful-sounding rendition of the Clock Town theme playing in the background. But at the last 30 seconds, the scene shifts toward the Skull Kid and the falling moon in the night sky, and at this point the Clock Town theme starts to blend into the ominous theme of the Skull Kid, before transforming into it completely. A definite change from the simplistic yet cheery demo of Ocarina of Time (the previous N64 Zelda title), reflecting this game's comparatively darker atmosphere.
    • Even worse is this remix of the Final Hours theme, which takes an already Nightmarish piece and, somehow, turns into Awesome Music. Despite that, it does revert back to its hellish origins during its last few moments, wherein the music (and the Clock Tower bell in the background) suddenly shifts into grainy, distorted feedback, then gradually grind to a halt, simulating the moons imminent impact with Termina.
  • Earthbound's "Pokey Means Business"/ Sounds like a fairly epic 8-bit final boss music, and then...
  • From Mother 3, we have Tazmily Village's two themes from Chapter 4: "A Railway Through Our Village?" and "Happy Town?". Their final notes really capture the Uncanny Atmosphere the village now has...
  • Animal Crossing Wild World: One of the many songs you can play in your house is "K.K. Lullaby" which is basically what it sounds like - a calm music box tune. The version you hear sung in the coffee shop is normal, but then when you bring the CD home it's a case of Last Note Nightmare; the song goes for about 2 minutes before suddenly devolving into four screechy notes and then abruptly cuts off. Then starts looping the pretty music box tune again like nothing happened.
    • A certain note from the normally calm and quiet song that plays at 11 PM in the original (Wild World for the DS and City Folk for the Wii use a different soundtrack) has a similar effect, as well as the unexpected (during the first time hearing it) and bizarre sneezing sound effect in K.K. Cruisin' (though the latter doesn't have this effect for everyone).
  • The track "Showdown at Hollow Bastion" from the Kingdom Hearts II OST. The abrupt transitions are heart-quickening (no pun intended) and can be slightly nightmarish: it begins with a mild little score, suddenly picks up tempo and sounds like montage music, and THEN suddenly becomes all-out battle music complete with a choir that has a similar effect to Ominous Latin Chanting. And the entire piece is under a minute long.
    • Then again, stop for a moment and consider the situation in which the song is used. Everything in the song, from start to finish, is Awesome Music (duh) and builds up - and perfectly synches to - the war sequence (go to the article for The War Sequence, the pic shows the exact instant in which said "Last Note Nightmare" occurs), making it full-fledged (as the caption for the image in The War Sequence says, "BRING IT!") Awesome Music.
  • Pac-Man World 2 features a boss fight called "Pinky's Revenge." The BGM starts out as a very upbeat piece meant to evoke happy feelings about the snowy surroundings ... but then a dissonant chord strikes, followed by a couple more ... then it gets back into the happy groove again. But at 0:53, it totally breaks down, with blaring Psycho Strings and sudden hard percussion as the whole thing turns absolutely horrifying. It gets a little Narm-y when it starts using Stock Sound Effect muted-trumpet hits later on, but overall it's quite scary.
  • Doom has an excellent example. At the end of the game, you're teleported back to Earth after fighting through the legions of Satan and the fires of Hell itself, treated to a scenery shot of a frolicking meadow before noticing that the demons got here first. The music reflects this.
  • Final Fantasy VI has the soundtrack version of Ghost Train theme. While the entire song is basically a funeral march, the song ends with a loud, piercing train whistle.
    • It also starts with that same whistle; the ending is the first few seconds of the song, slowly fading out.
  • Final Fantasy VIII's "Fithos Lusec Wecos Vinosec," from the orchestral arrangement album of the same name, has a beautiful, dramatic rendition of this iconic piece... and ends, about a minute before the final note, with a horrific, ear-piercing wail with unintelligible (and honestly quite infernal-sounding) lyrics. Even people who know to expect it are jolted by its sudden intrusion.
    • The lyrics are actually an attempt at Latin, not done all that well. They're something about "lighting a torch in this darkest of hours."
  • Chrono Trigger has final boss theme, which last note is similiar to trope Hell Is That Noise.
  • IOSYS's (the fellows who brought you Marisa Stole The Precious Thing) "Blue Cirno" is an extremely jovial song that sounds like a mix of upbeat Latin music and happy Christmas music. That is, until it ends off with a Last Note Nightmare that makes people think their souls are being sucked out.
    • Speaking of Touhou, two particular remixes of "U.N. Owen Was Her?" included (1) gradually overlapping lines followed by a somewhat sudden cutoff of the voices, with the music slowing down to normal after the overlapping voices have been building to a more and more frenetic pace, and (2) putting in an increasingly less subtle creepy laugh. Then you remember that this is Flandre's theme...
    • "Marisa Stole The Precious Thing" also features a nasty bit near the end, where the song pauses for a moment so loud static can be played. It's all technopopping along and suddenly DRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR.
    • DRR you say?
  • Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards. The "bad" ending that you see if you don't get all of the crystal shards is a nice, happy, appropriately victorious song... which happens to end on the creepiest five notes you will ever hear in a Kirby game, synced up with the fairy queen's Psychotic Smirk.
    • Also from Kirby 64 comes the OST version of the 100-Yard Hop theme. It's a rendition of the classic Gourmet Race tune, and it plays exactly as you'd expect it to... until the final seconds, where it ends abruptly with a loud crashing noise.
  • Inversion, aka First Note Nightmare: in Ray Crisis, the song "Vit-Symty" has a rather ominous intro, before changing into the usual techno-jazz style, then at its end, it becomes Awesome Music epic trance tune.
    • Played straight with another Raycrisis tune: two thirds of the way through "Son Dessein", the music starts to fade out, but then a screeching Scare Chord cuts in, followed by a darker piano tune with said scarechord repeating periodically. It gets scarier when it changes again to a weird tribal beat and ominous strings.
  • In Halo 3, the last movement of "Black Tower" starts with a series of ascending Ethereal Choir notes, but then the choir switches to a tear-jerking dirge-style tune, which is the music heard during Cmdr. Keyes's death cutscene.
    • "Halo Reborn" starts with an Ethereal Choir remake of "Under Cover of Night", then becomes a dark drum & bass piece, then finally a rendition of the Psycho Strings piece "Shadows", before concluding with a Scare Chord.
    • Similarly, "Roll Call" begins with a triumphant remake of the Halo title theme, followed by a medley of "Farthest Outpost" and "Under Cover of Night", but the last movement is a sad piano and strings tune, similar to the Easter Egg music "Siege of Madrigal". Apparently to underscore Master Chief's absence from the "roll call", and his presumed death.
    • Then last, but not least, there's "Legend", the Legendary bonus cutscene music, which starts off the a peaceful drifting music similar to the opening scene, transitioning into Psycho Strings before abruptly ending with this.
    • In Halo 2, the "Antediluvia" movement of the High Charity Suite starts off the same as "Wage" from Delta Halo Suite, but then is interrupted by a Scare Chord and dark ambient noises, as the Flood arrive on High Charity and infect the Prophet of Mercy. BTW, the title is Latin for "before the flood".
  • Tsukiko Amano's "ZERO no Chouritsu" from Fatal Frame 4 does this. It opens with a gorgeous piano solo, then it goes into awesome Amano rock. Then it makes out like it's going to end on a repeat of the piano solo...before playing a sudden crashing jumble of notes.
  • Victims of Science's "The Device Has Been Modified" is, like most things involving Portal, is both unnerving and hilarious all the way through. But after it fades out, wait a few seconds. Are you still there...?
    • Not to forget halfway through, after a quiet bit, you hear GLADOS say "Please proceed to android HELL. BLARGGGHH
  • This remix of a song from Doom's soundtrack basically keeps the same tone as the original song, which is more quiet and mysterious than anything else, but at the end the song begins to rather literally break down and some unidentifiable but hellish noise plays in the background.
  • The J-core song "to luv me I *** for you" by t+ Pazolite starts off with a sorrowful, gentle melody, then kicks into an extremely fast tune that borders on scary, and ends with the same melody, only playing at a slower tempo and stopping one measure before it were to completely finish playing.
  • Most versions of "One Winged Angel" from Final Fantasy VII have the instrumental break segue right into "Veni, veni, venios" (the creepiest part of the song, but okay if you have buildup to it). This even goes for the Advent Children version THAT YOU HEAR IN THE MOVIE. However, a new release of the Advent Children version on iTunes kicks it up a notch. The instrumental segue fades into another instrumental, this time a reprise of the verse and chorus that is almost corny. Then it ends, or so you think. Then after a few seconds of dead silence, MI FILI VENI VENI...
  • In Scratches, when quitting the game before finishing it, you are taken to a rolling credits screen with a soft piano music, at the end of it there's a very unsettling Scare Chord.
  • The Donkey Kong Country series' Nightmare Fuel page cites the death-against-K-Rool music to have been cut (from a game with so much Nightmare Fuel, no less) because it was too scary. The Last Note Nightmare trope is the exact reason behind that.
  • The worst ending in Myst III: Exile starts with the return to Tomahna theme (just like two of the other endings), which is a soft wind-instrument piece. Bt then it's interrupted by a violent, percussion-heavy Scare Chord right when your character is hit and killed from behind by the Big Bad, who then goes onto likely kill Atrus and his family. In the official soundtrack, this piece is appropriately titled, You've Been Followed.
  • The final boss music for Sonic the Hedgehog 2. The song looping comes with blaring klaxons.
    • In the mirror section of Amy's Twinkle Park stage, the music initially starts out as cute, quiet, and innocent... Then the music seems to take a darker turn, becoming much more tense, you can also hear a child laughing for a brief moment.
  • Happens in Paper Mario the Thousand Year Door when you win but your partner's at 0 HP. The victory music can be quite chilling.
  • While not entirely a Last Note Nightmare, because the transition happens only a third of the way in, the Team Fortress 2 Engineer's theme More Gun qualifies. The song starts out as the pleasant guitar riff (Taken from the Wilco song "Someone Else's Song") that the Engineer plays throughout his Meet the Team video. At 0:54, however, the song quickly changes gears, with a sudden shift from major chords to minor ones, with a louder, deeper and more ominous guitar riff overshadowing the original and a low, foreboding trumpet playing backup.
  • "The Rowhouses" from Medal of Honor: Frontline starts with a continuation of the "Nijmegen Bridge" theme, adding a jaunty oboe motif to it a third of the way through, but then the ominous Panzer Leitmotif starts to creep in, completely taking over in the last third.
  • The Mars Maze theme in The Journeyman Project slows down as your Oxygen Meter depletes, decaying to a Heartbeat Soundtrack and heavy breathing.
  • Insanely popular indie game Minecraft actually features one of these. In the record "11", all that can be heard is the sounds of what could be a man loading a gun, or simply shifting around in his chair. For the most part, it's a quiet song, devoid of any music and comprised absolutely of ambiance. Near the end, however, the music abruptly shifts to the man walking down a path, then breaking into a run. As the music builds, we hear some type of inhuman noise roar at the man before it abruptly cuts out, switching to a soft beeping noise before going completely silent.
  • The last few seconds of "Alexander's Suicide" in King's Quest VI: Heir Today Gone Tomorrow. It gets coupled up with Heartbeat Soundtrack, as it is incurred by Alex's heartbeat slowing down to a stop via "Drink Me" potion.
  • In The Path, "forest theme" sounds perfectly soothing and calm in-game. But when you listen to it in the soundtrack, the last two minutes end with a rasping screeching echoey voice screaming repeatedly "and I will eat you!" for the rest of the track without any music playing. Also the in-game version of "the girl in red" ends with a disconcerting staticy scream overtake the whole song.
  • The credits song of New Super Mario Bros. 2 ends with an ominous vocalization which lasts for about five seconds before the credits, and the game conclude.


Web Comics[]

  • "Let The Squiddles Sleep (End Theme)", from the "Squiddles!" album, a collection of songs meant to be the soundtrack to a made-up kid's TV show that exists in the Homestuck universe. Listening to it after the rest of the sickeningly adorable songs multiplies the effect to Serial Escalation levels.
    • And yet it somehow becomes even worse when used for the "Jade: Wake Up" Flash update.
    • From Volume 5 of the music for Homestuck itself, Savior of the Waking World plays like a grand, orchestrated version of the theme for the Land of Wind and Shade. Even if not totally upbeat, it's at least somewhat hopeful sounding, especially with the title. And the song gets to its end, the melody becomes the same as the original song, except heavily distorted by static, and it fades into nothing as a deep gong sounds three times.
    • While not whiplash-tastic, Midnight Calliope from the Alterniabound soundtrack (also used in one of the flashes) may also qualify for this, as what starts out as a vaguely-spooky carnival tune descends into a low, menacing drone. And just as the track fades out... HONK.
    • Also on Alterniabound, the track "Killed by BR 8 K Spider!!!!!!!!" is an awesome-sounding tune that gives a healthy serving of Vriska's cocky badassery. However at around twenty seconds from the end the notes turn sharp, the guitar playing gets sloppy, the tempo slows, and it ends with one last, faltering note that echoes into silence. Given the title of the song, Vriska's current plan in-story, and Hussie's tendency to use music with sudden stops and tone-switches during character death sequences, this does not bode well.
      • Indeed it does not...
  • The VG Cats comic "A Magical Wonderland". Taken Up to Eleven here (6:08)


Web Original[]

Cquote1

 And believe me I am still alive.

I'm doing Science and I'm still alive.

I feel FANTASTIC and I'm still alive.

While you're dying I'll be still alive.

And when you're dead I will be still alive.

Still alive

STILL ALIVE!!!

Cquote2
    • The very last "STILL ALIVE" gives the impression that he's right behind you.
    • Nico Nico Douga's first medley. Everything is fast, upbeat, and happy, but then a little bit of silence, and following that is a very off-key, very off-beat, 8-bit rendition of Sakura Sakura.
  • The ending of Something Broke (a fan-made rock opera based on Cupcakes). A mellow reprise of the "All is Normal" section suddenly becomes "HELP ME CHASE AWAY MY FEARS!!!" painfully screamed over a series of loud, dissonant scare chords before cutting off abruptly after the fourth "my".
  • Dont Hug Me I'm Scared. The worst part is not the sudden switch in the animation (though that is just as terrifying), but the continuous, soul crushing minor chord that somehow carries with you for several days where ever you go...
  • This protest video against BP's greenwashing at the 2012 Olympics. The music starts out with peaceful piano, but when the BP cyclist shows his true colors and starts turning the environment into a Crapsack World, the music changes to a dark Industrial tune accompanied by dissonant 8-bit-style jingles reminiscent of "game over" music.


Western Animation[]

  • Unsurprisingly, the song "Source Music of Doom" from the Invader Zim soundtrack has this. Not at the end, only about 30 seconds in, but definitely worth mentioning. Starts out with a strange tune about tacos before going into light flute-ish tune that seems very happy and cheerful before an out-of-place chord blares in your ears and kids sing "Bloaty's Pizza Hog!" over and over in your ears.
  • "Rock-A-Bye Baby" in the Crashcup segments of The Alvin Show, namely the ones where he invents the bed and the baby. Played at the end of the episode - normally the first time around, then as things go awry for good it repeats - but speeds up and slows down like a warped record.
  • My Morning Jacket's album Evil Urges closes with the melancholy, muted synth beat of "Touch Me I'm Going To Scream Pt. 2" followed by a 5 second track of screaming and someone saying "Okay, cool."
  • The recorder song in South Park's "World Wide Recorder Concert (The Brown Noise)". Everyone in the WORLD will remember the last note of that song...
  • Oddly enough, Muppet Babies features one of these in its ending credits theme: the very last part where Spider-Man jumps down onto the Marvel logo segues from the cheery instrumental theme to a dissonant, screechy horn.
    • Only in the second season onwards. Originally, it was just a straightforward instrumental version of the theme song, which faded out (during the "I got my computer..." part) when it reached the logo (which then was the standard "static blue background" version).
  • The song "The Theatre" from Coraline's soundtrack. Now, quite a few songs on the soundtrack are rather creepy, but this one stands out. It starts with vaguely cheerful tinkling, accompanied by a distant-sounding snippet of the earlier track "Sirens of the Sea", progresses to some low-key ambient noises, and then suddenly explodes into... some kind of discordant noise.
    • Here's the song. Just so you can hear first hand how creepy it is. (Probably best not to turn the volume up too loud.)
  • On the DVD of Disney's Fantasia, the background music that plays on the Title Menu is the Toccata and Fugue in D Minor. Seeing as the last peice of the film is Franz Schubert's "Ave Maria", having the DVD cut straight back to the Toccata is rather jarring.
  • Disney's Dinosaur: When the Pterodactyl drops the egg...
  • The song "A Girl Worth Fighting For" from Mulan is a rather optimistic ditty sung by the soldiers during their march across the Chinese countryside about how they're trying not to go to war. The song ends with said soldiers arriving at the mountain village they're supposed to protect from the Huns, only to find out that said village was already burned to the ground.
  • Happens at the end of the closing sequence in The Flintstones, just after the "WIIIIIIIILLLLLLMAAAAAAAAAA", while Fred continues to pound the door.
  • A "three note nightmare" happens in Jem. It occurs right after the end of the PSA's[2], and before the "JEM!" at the end.
  • "The 'O' Song", an old animation from Sesame Street, ends with one of these.
  • Rupert and the Frog Song, which is a cartoon about a little bear cub and several cute singing frogs, actually ends with a demonic-looking owl swooping down and scaring away all of the singing frogs.
  • Some of the BGM from Ren and Stimpy can come across as this. Notable examples include "Maniac Pursuit" and "Terror".
  • For your consideration, Inspector Gadget. Wonderful cartoon, Ear Worm of a theme song, but that last low note always sounded ominous to me. Even more frightening with the end credits variation with Dr. Claw's booming voice saying, "I'll get you next time, Gadget, next time.
  • The short version Season 1 theme for Young Justice was a triumphant and brash brass-led flourish. The Season 2 theme is the same until it suddenly switches to a somber dirge for the Title In of the "Invasion" subtitle.


Other[]

  • At the end of his "Guitar Fever" review, Ashens puts a monstrous sound of 8-bit terror. It's actually code for a ZX Spectrum computer, so he didn't put it there to be mean.
  • Maybe this doesn't count as a last note, but look on YouTube for video people have taken of the US analog TV switchoff. It's just creepy, as most of them went from everything as normal, to static. As if all of civilization had just suddenly collapsed.
  • Used humorously in the theme song for Married... with Children. Frank Sinatra's "Love and Marriage" plays until it's abruptly cut off by a loud bang
    • The DVD version, however, ends normally, followed by a less startling clang.
  • Music boxes, especially older ones that have been played many times, will often distort the sound as they wind down. No matter how cheerful the song, the final notes will often sound creepily off key.
  • The Blue Oyster Cult use this with telling effect on the LP Secret Treaties, where eight progressively sinister and moody tracks (ranging from the Lovecraftian Astronomy and Sub Human, through the suspected paedophilia of Dominance and Submission and the teen-on-the-edge-of-going-Columbine Cagey Cretin) are linked with keyboard effects made to sound like a nursery room music box - together with distortion...
  • The "Blue Mountain" Paramount TV logo (which was first used in a later version of the "Closet Killer" logo)
Cquote1

  "DA-DA-DA-DA-DA-DA, DA-DAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA"[3]

Cquote2
  1. But actually, it does have an ending. The song is played in 4/4 time, and bars 3 and 4 in the final bar are emphasized, followed by abrupt silence. The band would use the same technique in a later song, "Raw Dog".
  2. "Doing the right thing makes you a superstar"
  3. Although in some versions, a harp glissando plays, making less of a nightmare than usual.
Advertisement