We may not be facing Titans in real life (thankfully), but with the upcoming Attack on Titan: Symphony from Paradis concert, it’s starting to feel like our emotions might not survive either.
Attack on Titan has built one of the most unforgettable soundtracks in anime history. And now, we finally get to experience it live—louder, more dramatic, and probably more emotionally damaging than ever before.

Photo: Crunchyroll
Whether you’ve been a fan since Wall Maria fell or you just recently joined the chaos during the final season, one thing’s for sure: this concert is about to bring back every single memory, plot twist, and existential crisis we’ve ever had.
From iconic openings to heart-wrenching instrumentals, here are nine Attack on Titan songs we’re fully expecting to lose our feels to at the concert:
“Guren no Yumiya”
If there’s one song that instantly transports you back to the early days of Attack on Titan, it’s this.
Explosive, dramatic, and impossible not to shout along to, “Guren no Yumiya” is basically the national anthem of AoT fans. At the concert, don’t be surprised if the entire venue suddenly turns into one giant choir of pure chaos.
“Shinzou wo Sasageyo!”
At this point, it’s less of a song and more of a shared ritual.
The moment those opening horns hit, you already know everyone’s going to stand a little straighter, breathe a little deeper, and yell “sasageyo!” like their life depends on it. And honestly, it kind of does.
“Ashes on the Fire”
This is what it sounds like when tension turns into sound.
Used heavily in the Marley arc, “Ashes on the Fire” feels like a slow march toward something irreversible. In a live setting, expect goosebumps, silence between beats, and that feeling of “oh no, something big is about to happen.”
“The Rumbling”
There’s dramatic… and then there’s the rumbling.
This track doesn’t just play—it arrives. Loud, intense, and apocalyptic, it’s the kind of song that makes you want to stare into the distance like you’re in the final scene of a movie you barely survived emotionally.
“Vogel im Käfig”
One of the most haunting pieces in the entire series.
With its eerie vocals and emotional weight, this track feels like grief set to music. In a concert hall, it’s the performance that will leave people quiet long after it ends.
“Barricades”
Fast, aggressive, and absolutely relentless.
“Barricades” sounds like running full speed through chaos with no time to think. It’s adrenaline in musical form—and definitely one of the tracks that will have the crowd fully locked in.
“Call of Silence”
A rare moment of stillness in the middle of everything.
Soft, emotional, and quietly devastating, this track feels like a pause button on the entire series. It’s the kind of song that sneaks up on you when you least expect it.
“Zero Eclipse”
Gentle, bittersweet, and emotionally layered.
This track captures the quieter heartbreaks of Attack on Titan—the ones that linger. In concert form, it’s bound to hit even harder.
From war cries disguised as openings to instrumentals that feel like entire story arcs, every track carries weight, memory, and meaning. And when they’re performed live, it’s less about watching a concert and more about reliving the series in sound.
If there’s one thing we’re certain of, it’s this: we’re not emotionally prepared, but we’re going anyway.
ALSO READ: Attack on Titan Symphony Concert Set for Manila in 2027
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