I'd definitely want to see a return to the more thematic songs of Daggerfall. As much as I enjoy the soundtracks in the newer games, Eric Heberling, to me, is
the person that embodies the spirit of TES the best in music - adventure, mystery, intrigue. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZ97I2p4_YY I know that we'll never get him back, but at the very least, I hope that the music used in TES V is broken up into more playlists as it was in Daggerfall. Instead of just having public, outdoor, and dungeon rotations of music, there should be a few more tracks based on time of day, weather, et cetera.
Perhaps not even totally new pieces - but subtle rearrangements with the instruments or tempo could do wonders, kind of like Monkey Island 2's http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7N41TEcjcvM&feature=related system. For those who don't know what this is, it was basically employed by LucasArts in many of their later adventure games for adding additional variance to the soundtrack. For example, there would be a town that had its own theme, and each area within the town played its own variant (different instruments and whatnot) when you entered. This wasn't a boring crossfade or sudden change, however. The engine would slowly change instruments, or loop a 1-5 second "filler" bit in the old song until the rhythm synchronized with the new one. Perhaps the tempo would pick up for the underlying drumbeat but not the other instruments, so that the pace of the new song would come into effect with the other instruments remaining ambient. Or new instruments would be added to the rhythm as you progressed farther across the screen. It was very cool, and I'd love to see something in this spirit for TES V. Or even a less sophisticated system of variants and crossfades. Please.
...There's no "Strong, bold, spirit-raising (Guild Wars: Eye of the North)" option
Seriously, though, that's about as close to what I want for Skyrim as you can get. *sigh* I love Jeremy Soule. :wub:
It's odd. I love Jeremy Soule's compositions for Guild Wars, but I really don't care much for his Oblivion soundtrack.