Videos by ComicBook.com
None of that is to say A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms‘ ending is bad. It’s an excellent, character-driven episode, and still finds room for some small surprises, like Rowan’s marriage to Raymun Fossoway, Egg running away from Maekar Targaryen, and even the bees on Humfrey Beesbury‘s coffin. But perhaps the most unexpected and unusual choice in the finale was the end credits song. The installment plays out to the sound of “Sixteen Tons” by Tennessee Ernie Ford, and it’s both surprising and perfect.
A Knight Of The Seven Kingdoms’ Ending Song Is Great (& Has A Deeper Meaning)
The reason the song is so unexpected is that it’s not something the Game of Thrones franchise has done before. For the most part, the only music we hear comes from the composed score (by Ramin Djawadi for Thrones and House of the Dragon, and Dan Romer for A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms).
Very occasionally, bands have recorded versions of in-universe songs that’ve played over the end credits, such as The National’s “The Rains of Castamere,” The Hold Steady’s “The Bear and the Maiden Fair,” and Florence + The Machine’s “Jenny of Oldstones. Never, though, has real-world music been used in the fantasy series. It makes sense as to why, given that modern music largely wouldn’t fit with the universe these shows take place in, but A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms has already shown it’s willing to break all the rules, and it does that again here.








