Who Composed The Track Nobody Wants To Die On The OST?

2025-08-31 19:36:00
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3 Answers

Finn
Finn
Bookworm Mechanic
I’m a bit impatient about mysteries like this, so my first instinct is to ask for context: which series, movie, or game has the track titled 'nobody wants to die'? Without that, there are multiple tracks with similar titles and it’s easy to mix them up. If you don’t have more info, try these quick moves: open the OST on Spotify or Apple Music and click the three-dot menu for 'Show credits'; check the album page on 'Discogs' or 'VGMdb' for composer listings; or copy a few seconds of the track and run it through Shazam/SoundHound. Another fast route is the YouTube upload — official uploads often put composer and label in the description, while fan uploads sometimes get corrected in the comments. If none of that works, drop the clip or the source name here and I’ll dig in with you.
2025-09-02 05:17:41
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Frequent Answerer Consultant
Funny thing — I’ve chased down obscure soundtrack credits late into the night more times than I’d like to admit, mug of cold coffee at my side and three tabs open. With just the title 'nobody wants to die' it’s tricky to give a single definitive composer, because that exact phrase shows up in multiple soundtracks and tracks across games, anime, and films. Before I guessed, I’d want to know which property you mean (which anime, game, movie, or album), because the same phrase can be used by different artists in totally different contexts.

When I’m hunting a composer, I follow a little checklist that usually gets me to the right name: check the OST liner notes or the digital album credits on streaming platforms, look up the release on 'VGMdb' or 'Discogs' for detailed credit listings, peek at the YouTube upload or the official channel’s description (labels and soundtrack publishers often list composers), and scan the comments — fans often ID composers quickly. For films or series, IMDb and official soundtrack pages can list composers; for games, the credits or the game manual/press kit often show the composer. I’ve also used Shazam or SoundHound when there’s a recorded snippet and searched that fingerprint against streaming metadata.

If you want, tell me where you heard the track — a specific episode, a scene, a game boss, or even a YouTube link — and I’ll narrow it down. I’ve helped friends find everything from an underrated instrumental at the end of a mecha episode to a barely-noticed battle theme in an indie game, so I know the little tricks. Either way, we’ll get that composer name; I just need one more clue from you so I don’t send you down a wild goose chase with the wrong artist.
2025-09-03 18:31:14
20
Faith
Faith
Story Finder Electrician
If it helps, I once found a similarly named track from a late-night anime fight by checking the end-credits in the episode itself — sometimes the composer is briefly credited there even when the soundtrack release is scarce. Little tip: bookmark 'VGMdb' if you care about OST credits; it’s saved me more times than I can count. Anyway, point me at the scene and we’ll solve it together.
2025-09-03 19:52:22
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Which artist wrote i don t wanna lose control for the OST?

4 Answers2025-08-24 15:07:26
Funny little hunt I went on last night with this exact question — I scoured streaming credits, YouTube descriptions, and my messy playlist notes — and the one thing I keep running into is ambiguity. There are multiple tracks titled 'I Don't Wanna Lose Control' floating around in different contexts (some are indie singles, some are soundtrack pieces), so without the specific film, show, or game name it's tricky to point to a single composer or performer. If you can tell me which OST you mean — for example, the series or movie it appears in — I’ll narrow it down fast. Meanwhile, my practical tip from late-night credit-sleuthing: check the official OST release (digital booklets on Bandcamp or the physical CD liner notes), Spotify/Apple Music song credits, or the upload description where the OST was posted. Those places usually list both the performer and the songwriter, which helps sort covers from original compositions. I’d love to help dig deeper if you drop the title of the show or the scene it plays in.
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