I always thought that they removed it because keeping the music going would give the battle more of a "You have to try again" feeling. With it there, you feel like you suck, of course it is pure epic-sauce
Sorry for bumping, but i have to say when i heard this, my body temperature dropped by about seven degrees. It try gave me chills, which i find weird considering i'm someone that can read DK64 creepypasta a just laugh at it.
I think it fits too! Mainly because (this is the lost world one right?) It really takes away the monotony of the other death fanfares , especially since it is a different melody entirely than the usual one.
Mm i like how it sounds though. It's very nice to the ears, and menacing in a totally different way. Like said before, it gave me chills like... "did I just lose? Really?" That would have been my thought of this were kept in-game.
I really wanted them to use it! I mean, all the music is already good in the DKC trilogy, and why not make it better with this one? This even has the K.Rool Duel theme to it! They should of used it!!
Then all the world's children would run in fear, As the fanfare brings clear fear near to their ear! One loss to the Kaptain, and the game should be over, Yet the Kongs have the luck of a four-leaf clover! Those hopeful balloons, how they fly away, As K. Rool begins to whoop you in the fray!
This death music is stored and loaded in the same data block as the Crocodile Cacophony music track, along with unused renditions of Diddy and Dixie's victory music.
This indicates they would be used in a level where Crocodile Cacophony plays, namely K. Rool Duel or Krocodile Kore. Code was intentionally written to prevent all three sub-tracks from being played if Crocodile Cacophony (specifically track ID #$1F) is the music track data block currently loaded. The game's developers deliberately disabled them for whatever reason.
Disabling the checks will indeed enable the tracks, which is what the Pro Action Replay(PAR) codes do in the linked TCRF article. However, it's not quite as simple as that. The changes result in some undesired side effects, one of which is also mentioned in the article.