)Grab it yourself at the iTunes store. Take your favorite fandoms with you and never miss a beat. AHere's How Jeep Is Training Its Dealerships To Take On The Ford BroncoIn Case You Were Wondering, Vulva Taillights Appear To Be A ThingRhode Island Is the 'Calamari Comeback State' Because All the Other Fish Are DeadReds Suspend Broadcaster Thom Brennaman for On-Air Homophobic Slur [UPDATED] The iTunes listing credits the cover to Copilot Music, an organization which specializes in music to accompany trailers – including Bethesda games like Wolfenstein II, Doom, and Fallout 4.Bethesda has pledged a minimum donation of $100,000 regardless of sales once Fallout 76’s take on ‘Country Roads’ hits the iTunes store on July 4th.The music played in the first look at any Fallout game tends to stick in the head: think Dion’s ‘The Wanderer’ from Fallout 4, and ‘I Don’t Want To Set The World On Fire’ from Fallout 3 – another Ink Spots classic that was actually Black Isle’s first choice for the original game.In fact, you can hear the opening chords of ‘Set The World On Fire’ as the radio kicks in during Fallout 76’s trailer – the bulbs flickering just as they did in Fallout 3’s first teaser. According to Bethesda senior vice president of global marketing & communications Pete Hines, the team admits that they misunderstood their audience. While he's freelance now, we still think of him as part of the family. He has written for GameCritics, USgamer, Kill Screen & Entertainment Fuse.This is one of those games that seems like a really hard sell if you’ve been reading about it at all on Kotaku. The dangerously catchy song has been named a state anthem by West Virginia, which it wistfully namechecks, making it the perfect match for Fallout 76’s setting. While the most popular rendition of the song was recorded by Denver, the version appearing in the trailer is a cover performed by New York-based doo-wop group “One of the early challenges as an arranger was, ‘How do you keep the song intact, which is very straight ahead harmonically and thematically, and somehow get it to meet in the middle with the jazz harmony and the swing feel of that earlier music?” says Copilot co-founder Ravi Krishnaswami. (You’ll also have the benefit of hearing those soothing sounds at a moment’s notice. It’s all connected, man. On July 4, the cover of John Denver’s “Take Me Home, Country Roads” heard in the Fallout 76 trailer will be sold on iTunes. If you're like us, Fallout 76's version of John Denver's Country Roads song has been stuck in your head since Bethesda's big reveal for the next step in their iconic franchise. A cover version of the song, a collaboration between Copilot Music and Sound and the vocal group Spank, was commissioned for and featured in both the teaser and full E3 2018 trailers for the 2018 video game, Fallout 76, whose plot events are set in West Virginia. To bring the essence of the Ink Spots to life, Copilot co-founder Jason Menkes tapped New York City vocal group Spank to take a crack at merging the musical worlds of ‘30s doo-wop and ‘70s country. It also appears in the Fallout 76 trailer. We know where the game takes place, when it fits into Fallout lore, and how the new online gameplay will work. Fandom may earn an affiliate commission on sales made from links on this page.Fandom may earn an affiliate commission on sales made from links on this page.Take Me Home, Country Roads Fallout 76 (Original Trailer Soundtrack)To pay homage to both the game’s legacy and “Fallout 76”’s West Virginia setting, Bethesda’s game director Todd Howard commissioned New York-based music content and strategy firm Copilot Music + Sound to craft an Ink Spots-like take on “Take Me Home, Country Roads” that could accompany the new title’s trailer. “We tried to create something that felt not only like two great musical traditions smashed together, but a cohesive piece of music that stands on its own.” Fans have been trying in vain to work out exactly which cover of the song featured in Fallout’s reveal. Spank recorded a cover of "Take Me Home, Country Roads which plays on Appalachia Radio in Fallout 76 and was used in the Fallout 76 trailer.The teaser trailer was released on May 30, 2018. That included partnering with Habitat For Humanity as the campaign’s charity partner, with all proceeds from the “Country Roads” iTunes download going to the organization.

Group member Scout Ford was interviewed by the expatalachians website on March 5, 2019 regarding the recording process.According to Ford, the recording process for the song was fairly involved, with Fallout 76’s creators sending guidance on the specific harmonies they were looking for in the song and Spank giving several recordings to the game makers. Stream Fallout 76 Country Road song by Brian Baltazar from desktop or your mobile device. Comment by Le cringe boi. “We did it according to what the client wanted, but we were able to layer the harmonies with our own sound,” Ford said. Fallout 76’s cover of the John Denver classic ‘Take Me Home, Country Roads’ got a lot of play back at E3, especially at the PCGamesN offices, with the trailer playing on near constant loop here. Fallout 76 Country Road song by Brian Baltazar published on 2018-06-14T20:54:35Z. But there’s still one thing we don’t know: Who sings that catchy cover of John Denver’s “Country Roads” in the trailer?Thankfully, we may get an official answer in a few short weeks.On July 4, the cover of John Denver’s “Take Me Home, Country Roads” heard in the But in the meantime, I decided to do a little internet sleuthing and see what I could come up with. Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube. Many of the mysteries laid out in the original ‘Fallout 76’ teaser trailer have already been explained. Fallout 76 is coming to Steam this week. SoundCloud. A quick internet search reveals that no one seems to know.