| 1. Bangalore |
| 2. Score |
| 3. Name Game |
| 4. Morning Song |
| 5. Pipe Dream |
| 6. Vamp |
| 7. Marble Sea |
Score,Brecker Brothers,Jazz Door [Tko Mag],Jazz,Pop
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Wicked (2003 Original Broadway Cast)
Stephen Schwartz , Kristin Chenoweth , and Idina Menzel Manufacturer: Decca Broadway ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000TB01Y Release Date: 2003-12-16 |
Tracks:
- No One Mourns the Wicked - Cristy Candler
- Dear Old Shiz
- The Wizard and I - Idina Menzel
- What Is This Feeling? - Kristin Chenoweth
- Something Bad - William Youmans
- Dancing Through Life - Michelle Federer
- Popular - Kristin Chenoweth
- I'm Not That Girl - Idina Menzel
- One Short Day - Kristin Chenoweth
- A Sentimental Man - Joel Grey
- Defying Gravity - Idina Menzel
- Thank Goodness - Kristin Chenoweth
- Wonderful - Idina Menzel
- I'm Not That Girl (Reprise) - Kristin Chenoweth
- As Long as You're Mine - Norbert Leo Butz
- No Good Deed - Idina Menzel
- March of the Witch Hunters
- For Good - Kristin Chenoweth
- Finale - Kristin Chenoweth
Amazon.com
One of the most common complaints about musicals is that the books are flimsy pretexts from which to hang numbers. Wicked runs into the opposite problem: it has a great plot, but too often the songs just get in the way. Based on Gregory Maguire's novel of the same name, Wicked tells us what happened between Glinda the Good and Elphaba, the Wicked Witch of the West, before Dorothy showed up in Oz. And the show is lucky to boast a pair of ace leading women in the main roles. As Glinda, Kristin Chenoweth delivers a sensational star turn, displaying a crystal-pure voice and sharp comic timing; Idina Menzel lends her powerful pipes to the tricky role of Elphaba. Unfortunately, you wish they had better material to work with. Stephen Schwartz's pop score is often dragged down by overly synthetic orchestrations and sentimental lyrics (think Chicken Soup for the Witch). Still, at its best Wicked is a seductive slice of popular entertainment that could well give a younger audience a lasting taste for musical theater. --Elisabeth VincentelliCustomer Reviews:
Wickedly disappointing.......2007-07-20
Defying Gravity and all expecations..........2007-07-16
The CD comes with the lyrics as well as the other important information for each song (producer, etc). If you haven't already seen Wicked, you may have trouble following what the show is about just from listening to the soundtrack-- you will get a feel for it but reading the Grimmerie (the Wicked book- also sold on Amazon) or seeing Wicked either on or off Broadway will make you fall in love faster with this soundtrack-
The Wicked Witch of the West is misunderstood........2007-07-14
My sisters refuse to read the book they are afraid it will take away from the show. I say they are dead wrong and the book and music reviewed ahead of time will definitely enhance the theater experience. You decide, either way it's a great read, 5 stars for the generation who grew up with the Wizard of OZ classic.
A Wicked musical.......2007-07-13
Over all I enjoyed the CD, being a massive wizard of Oz fan, it was interesting to listen to the story from an altogether different perspective. Enjoyable, memorable and fun- a great purchase, that comes highly recommended.
Wicked Wonderful!.......2007-07-12
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Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
Manufacturer: Warner Bros/Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000OLGCHA Release Date: 2007-07-10 |
Tracks:
- Fireworks
- Professor Umbridge
- Another Story
- Dementors in the Underpass
- Dumbledore's Army
- The Hall of Prophecies
- Possession
- The Room of Requirement
- The Kiss
- A Journey to Hogwarts
- The Sirius Deception
- Death of Sirius
- Umbridge Spoils a Beautiful Morning
- Darkness Takes Over
- The Ministry of Magic
- The Sacking of Trelawny
- Flight of the Order of the Phoenix
- Loved Ones and Leaving
Amazon.com
For its fifth cinematic installment, the Harry Potter franchise gets a new composer as England's Nicholas Hooper (a usual collaborator of new director David Yates) succeeds Patrick Doyle and John Williams. The screeching electric guitar that suddenly irrupts on the very first track, "Fireworks," lets the listener know that all is not quiet on the Hogwarts front. The kiddies are growing up, evil is spreading: which is worse?! But actually this modern sonic touch is deceiving: Hooper works within an old-school format and mostly sticks to tried-and-true effects. His score is best when it goes for tension and unease, particularly in its use of low, rumbling tones: A choir starts by humming in a menacing manner in "Dementors in the Underpass"; the sound at the beginning of "The Death of Sirius" feels as if it's being belched out from some deep, dark, scary place, creating an effective atmosphere of dread. Elsewhere, the beginning of "Possession" feels as if it belongs in a J-horror movie, and then the track becomes deceptively calm before the storm hits again. Keen listeners will recognize Williams' "Hedwig's Theme" in "Another Story," but mostly Hooper is his own man. Just like the overall series, which gets darker and darker as it goes along, this CD makes for a rather brooding listening experience--the pizzicato violins on "Umbridge Spoils a Beautiful Morning" provide one of the few jaunty touches. --Elisabeth VincentelliAlbum Description
Featuring a colorful and inspiring score by Nicholas Hooper, the soundtrack to Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix takes the movie-goer to the next level of magical enchantment right along with Harry and his friends.Customer Reviews:
out of order and out of touch with Harry Potter.......2007-07-20
Nicholas Hooper's score to Order of the Phoenix is improved to that of Patric Doyle's score in the Goblet of Fire but it still is nowhere near that of John William's Harry Potter scores. Hooper's music is disappointing in that it doesn't capture the mood of the movie like it should. Umbridge's theme is peppy because she may look nice, but it doesn't hold that she is downright evil. We don't feel Harry's angst as he is entering the prime of his teenage years. The music wasn't as complex as I thought it would have been and overall, it just didn't seem very "Harry Potter-like."
I have heard that Hooper is set up for Half-Blood Prince and I hope that he makes the music far superior to that of Order of the Phoenix in capturing the mood, which will be a difficult task as Half-Blood Prince is the darkest of the books and the darkest of the movies so far.
Out Of Order.......2007-07-20
The music is ok, could use more of the original themes to suit me though, I guess don't mess with success.
If anyone has a better order to these tracks (the order they are in the movie) please list it - that would be nice.
Best of the Franchise.......2007-07-19
Quality Work.......2007-07-19
Hooper Rises to the Challange.......2007-07-18
The Umbridge theme is, yes, annoying, but that is its intention. It is, however, well written and beautifully played by strong and confident strings, accompanied by accentuating chords in the brass, giving it an almost humourous touch. The Possession theme is emotional and features throughout the soundtrack in different forms. Chords are what makes this piece effective; dissonant chords and intervals cause uneasiness and there are many moments where the music does not go where we expect it to. Other themes include the frantic racing cues for the Department of Mysteries, and even these cues are thematic. If you listen carefully, the chord progression of these cues are based on the Possession theme, which I think is extremely clever. There are also cues such as the final minute of the piece titled 'Sirius Deception' and also Dumbledore's Army and the Room of Requirement which add a fresh tone to the CD. Although the writing is simple, is it cleverly constructed and fits in perfectly with the actual viewing of the film.
All in all, this soundtrack is suitable for anyone who will listen to it seriously and will be prepared to allow some time for it to sink in. Although it is not music you really play in the background while doing something, it does make an enjoyable experience to listen to when really concentrating and perhaps even analysing.
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Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End
Manufacturer: Walt Disney Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000P0J02E Release Date: 2007-05-22 |
Tracks:
- Hoist the Colours
- Singapore
- At Wit's End
- Multiple Jacks
- Up Is Down
- I See Dead People In Boats
- The Brethren Court
- Parlay
- Calypso
- What Shall We Die For
- I Don't Think Now Is the Best Time
- One Day
- Drink Up Me Hearties
Amazon.com
The music for this third chapter in the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise is a traditional, efficient action score that, due to the film's setting, occasionally incorporates light Asian touches. The popularity of Hans "Long John" Zimmer (all the credits in the CD's liner notes include pirate-themed nicknames, like the roll call in a Simpsons Halloween episode) isn't in doubt--he sure is one in-demand composer--but afficionados are divided about his artistic worth, and this score isn't about to reconcile them. Some think that Zimmer relies too much on his stable of composers and sticks to tried-and-true recipes; others admire his capacity to weave themes in and out of cues, creating a whole made of subtly interrelated parts. At World's End feeds both camps: Seven of his collaborators are credited with writing "additional music," and the album feels by-the-numbers at times; but those inclined to listen very closely will be rewarded by the way Zimmer sneaks in bits of two main melodies (especially variations on the first track, a pirate theme titled "Hoist the Colours" and cowritten by director Gore Verbinski) throughout. The use of electronics is so light as to be almost undetectable, which will please fans of a more organic orchestral sound. --Elisabeth VincentelliCustomer Reviews:
Wow.......2007-07-17
Movie Soundtrack Review.......2007-07-16
Get on the freeway, roll down the windows and DRIVE!.......2007-07-16
If you gotta' travel the road to work, school, etc.
or you gotta' run errands or you are just in the
mood to GO -
Well, get in the car, get on the road, stick in this CD,
roll the windows all the way down, turn up the sound,
and DRIVE!
Have a ball!
AHOY!.......2007-07-14
Pirates Of The Caribbean:At World's End CD.......2007-07-13
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Pirates Of The Caribbean: The Curse Of The Black Pearl
Manufacturer: Disney ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000A1RJI Release Date: 2003-07-22 |
Tracks:
- Fog Bound
- The Medallion Calls
- The Black Pearl
- Will and Elizabeth
- Swords Crossed
- Walk the Plank
- Barbossa Is Hungry
- Blood Ritual
- Moonlight Serenade
- To the Pirates' Cave!
- Skull and Crossbones
- Bootstrap's Bootstraps
- Underwater March
- One Last Shot
- He's a Pirate
Amazon.com
Loosely based on the popular Disney theme park audio-animatronic ride, one might expect a modicum of good-natured "Yo-ho-ho-ing"--or maybe a little rousing Korngold/Errol Flynn/Captain Blood orchestral romanticism--here. Instead composer Klaus Badelt initially entices us with some sparing Celtic folk charm, then unleashes a furious broadside of symphonic and choral thunder to rival his ominous score for K-19. The composer's fellow German mentor is an obvious influence throughout (the album is credited with a wink as "Score overproduced by Hans 'Long John' Zimmer") but Badelt brings his own muscular instincts to bear throughout. Perhaps shrewdly realizing that genre cliches are nothing if not for reinventing, Badelt delivers his rhythmically nervous Eurocentric sensibilities--sort of Holst duels Shostakovich on the Spanish Main--with the subtlety of a scorching cannonball. It's seasoned with a little romantic respite in the final act, if a bit gingerly, and could no doubt profit by some of Korngold's sparkling melodic verve. But it's a loud, unabashed Summer Blockbuster score at heart; alert the neighbors. --Jerry McCulleyCustomer Reviews:
Music review Pirates of the Caribbean.......2007-07-18
Great music.......2007-07-08
This soundtrack will make you feel like a pirate.......2007-07-07
yes, all true, but the sound!!!.......2007-06-28
Secret - listen for hints of Gladiator and Mission Imossible. He helped with those films - maybe they are little inside jokes?
awesomee.......2007-06-21
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Ratatouille
Manufacturer: Disney ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000PKG7HK Release Date: 2007-06-26 |
Tracks:
- Le Festin
- Welcome To Gusteau's
- 'This Is Me.'
- Granny Get Your Gun
- 100 Rat Dash
- Wall Rat
- Cast Of Cooks
- A Real Gourmet Kitchen
- Souped Up
- Is It Soup Yet?
- A New Deal
- Remy Drives a Linguini
- Colette Shows Him Le Ropes
- Special Order
- Kiss & Vinegar
- Losing Control
- Heist To See You
- The Paper Chase
- Remy's Revenge
- Abandoning Ship
- Dinner Rush
- Anyone Can Cook
- End Creditouilles
- Ratatouille Main Theme
Amazon.com
As befits an American movie set in France, this score starts off by quoting the French national anthem; fortunately, Michael Giacchino quickly turns off the cliché tap and gets the fun started. The composer, best known for his work on Alias and Lost, shows he can do light and nimble--and elegant, too: not many animated/kiddie movies have scores that evoke vintage Henry Mancini ("Losing Control"). "Wall Rat" is a good example of Giacchino's MO: It begins with a slightly melancholy melody played on the cello; that thread soon gives way to flutes and piccolo violins, which of course evoke the scampering of little feet--and that's when the bongos come in. Actually, those delicious bongos pop up regularly, flavoring the jazzy feel of "Cast of Cooks" or the tango-style "Special Order." Even when Giacchino uses that universal signifier of all things Gallic, the accordion, he does it sparingly ("A New Deal," "Ratatouille Main Theme") and with flair. And of course, Giacchino throws everything but the proverbial kitchen sink in the sprawling "End Creditouilles." Note that this instrumental CD starts off with the quirky pop song "Le Festin" (the feast) by the wonderful French vocalist Camille. --Elisabeth VincentelliCustomer Reviews:
Pixar's musical legacy continues to grow.......2007-07-16
Growing right alongside that legacy is another: that of producing extremely memorable music for the movies.
If you want further proof, look no further than "Ratatouille," which is a great movie with a great score. Composer Michael Giacchino proves again that his style can melt seamlessly into just about any kind of film. This score could easily have gone way over the top in its "Frenchness," given the setting -- instead, Giacchino provides just enough Parisian styling to keep us grounded; otherwise, his music serves to put us in the mindset of Remy the rat, who just wants to be all that he can be. Thus, the music is a sort of psychological journey, and it's that aspect that makes the CD so successful. It aurally replicates the experience of the film's storyline, which, I think, is one of the best compliments a score CD can be paid.
Especial praise needs to be set aside for the gorgeous song "Le Festin," a Giacchinooriginal sung by Camille (whom I had never heard of, but would like to hear more of). As far as I'm concerned, this song immediately joins the ranks of timeless Disney classics, and if at least a nomination at next year's Ocars doesn't result, I will be calling foul.
This is an enjoyable score.......2007-07-12
Wonderful soundtrack to an equally stellar movie.......2007-07-11
Come June 29th, I watched this sublime movie and decided that it was one of the best Pixar films to date, rivaling Toy Story 2 and The Incredibles for my personal favorites. One great thing about the movie was the music, however. The closing music in the final scenes of the movie was beautiful, forcing me to check out the soundtrack. I later found out that the music I heard was part of the opener to this CD, Le Festin.
Listening to the whole soundtrack, I would have to say that there is not one sagging part in all of its music. There are some definite highlights, of course, but as a whole, the music is cohesive to a tee. My personal favorites would have to be the beautiful Le Festin (the sound in the middle of the song where the singer goes, "Laisser moi vous émerveillez," is golden), and then two of the chase scenes -- the very upbeat 100 Rat Dash and The Paper Chase. For those who have seen the movie, you know that the choreography to these two chase scenes is awesome. However, the factor that seals the deal was the music that accompanied them.
I'm very happy to have purchased it and would urge the readers of these reviews to do the same. If you're still unsure if you wish to make the purchase, I suggest looking at the samples Amazon provides to hear for yourself.
It'll pick you up, and in some cases, bring tears to your eyes.......2007-07-10
Definitely worth a purchase, the disc features songs that are playful, reflective, jazzy... sometimes all at once. As another commenter rightly noted, one of the songs -- "Anyone Can Cook" -- is particularly notable for how it tugs at your heartstrings and evokes the more sensitive moments towards the end of the film.
In contrast, "Le Festin" (the opening track) is an delicious and quite hummable ditty of a theme that'll have you smiling every time.
Oh, and listen to that amazing trumpeter saucily shine through in the jazzy-and-multi-mood'd End Creditouille (the credits-music that kept nearly all theatregoers in the show I attended quietly in their seats 'til the very last moment)
So, given that I clearly love so many of the tracks on this CD, why only four stars? Alas, a number of the tracks just don't have that repeat-listenability thing going for them. It's not a CD I'll regularly listen to from start to finish.
But, oh, the rest of the tunes! Such a pleasure, bringing back great memories from the film. They'll be listened to again and again.
Perhaps anyone can cook. But not everyone can make such engaging compositions and arrangements, and for that, I salute Mr. Giacchino :)
Beautiful music with just a touch of French .......2007-07-07
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Closer
Josh Groban Manufacturer: Reprise / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000CFW87 Release Date: 2003-11-11 |
Tracks:
- Oceano
- My Confession
- Il Postino (Mi Mancherai)
- Si Volvieras a Mi
- When You Say You Love Me
- Per Te
- All Improvviso Amore
- Broken Vow
- Caruso
- Remember When It Rained
- Hymne a l'Amour
- You Raise Me Up
- Never Let Go
Amazon.com
Thanks to a fortuitous intersection of talent and fate, 22-year-old Josh Groban hasn't finished his senior year in performing arts school but has already released his sophomore effort on a major major label. Fans of the young vocal phenom's debut will find much to enthrall them here, even if it nudges the singer closer to the center of producer/mentor David Foster's MOR pop sensibilities. Eschewing much of its predecessor's more overt classic-lite pretensions and pop-rock covers for a slate of dramatic, Eurocentric ballads that serve as a showcase for the singer's inviting baritone, Groban shrewdly positions himself as the American alternative to the Bocelli-Watson crossover axis. "Caruso" may find the singer falling short of its operatic inspiration, but "Oceano" and "My Confession" quickly showcase his true dramatic range (which seems to all but yearn for a bona fide Broadway musical challenge), while a vocal take of Bacalov's graceful "Il Postino" theme uses classical virtuoso Joshua Bell's violin flourishes to good effect. To his credit, Groban displays some promising efforts at songwriting collaboration on the bittersweet "Per Te" and "Remember When It Rains," while the ambient/ethnic soundscape of Deep Forest's "Never Let Go" offers a teasing alternative to the record's otherwise melodramatic production formula. Groban has found commercial triumph via Foster's mentoring, but there remains a nagging sense here that he hasn't truly pushed himself as an artist--yet. --Jerry McCulleyCustomer Reviews:
Beautiful Soul.......2007-07-13
Happy listening.......2007-06-27
fantastic voice.......2007-06-01
CLOSER-JOSH GROBIN.......2007-05-14
HOT! HOT! HOT!.......2007-05-10
Average customer rating:
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The Sound of Music (1965 Film Soundtrack - 40th Anniversary Special Edition)
Julie Andrews , Rodgers & Hammerstein , Marni Nixon , The Sound Of Music (Related Recordings) , and Irwin Kostal Manufacturer: RCA ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000BFNZAQ Release Date: 2005-11-08 |
Tracks:
- Prelude And The Sound Of Music
- Overture And Preludium (Dixit Dominus)
- Morning Hymn And Alleluia
- maria
- I Have Confidence
- Sixteen Going On Seventeen
- My Favorite Things
- Do-Re-Mi
- The Sound Of Music
- The Lonely Goatherd
- Edelweiss
- Laendler
- So Long, Farewell
- Ent'acte
- Climb Ev'ry Mountain
- My Favorite Things
- Something Good
- Processional And Maria (The Wedding)
- Sixteen Going On Seventeen (Reprise)
- Do-Re-Mi (Reprise)
- Edelweiss (Reprise)
- So Long, Farewell (Reprise)
- Climb Ev'ry Mountain (Reprise)
- Finale
- Robert Wise Interview
- Richard Rodgers Interview
- Charmian Carr Interview
Customer Reviews:
a classic.............2007-05-17
This edition features bonus transfers of interviews with those involved in bringing THE SOUND OF MUSIC to the screen. What's more, this is the complete soundtrack (instrumental and music featuring vocals is included here). Definitely a "must buy" for true fans.
Sound of Music--Still Great.......2007-05-13
Sound of Music.......2007-05-07
I love The Sound of Music!.......2007-04-14
Loved it so much, we bought it twice........2007-04-11
Average customer rating:
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The Last Of The Mohicans: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Trevor Jones , and Randy Edelman Manufacturer: Edi Video ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000042MY Release Date: 2001-11-13 |
Tracks:
- Main Title
- Elk Hunt
- The Kiss
- The Glade Part II
- Fort Battle
- Promentory
- Munro's Office/Stockade
- Massacre/Canoes
- Top Of The World
- The Courier
- Cora
- River Walk And Discovery
- Parlay
- The British Arrival
- Pieces Of A Story
- I Will Find You - Clannad
Amazon.com
This is a production rife with odd pairings: English actor Daniel Day-Lewis joining up with the Mohawks; James Fenimore Cooper adapted by Michael Mann; disparate composers Trevor Jones and Randy Edelman teaming up. This last pairing seems a suspicious attempt to endow the score of this modern film adaptation of a junior high school literary evergreen with both a golden age of Hollywood dramatic bent (Jones) and a '90s-slick guitar-muzak veneer (Edelman). A strange amalgam that doesn't quite work. --Jerry McCulleyCustomer Reviews:
Mohicans Rules.......2007-07-20
Very moving--you relive the scene in the movie!!.......2007-07-12
Sharon Ascherl, Maryland, USA
Last of the Mohicans.......2007-07-12
Addictive, breathtaking, and atmospheric.......2007-06-29
Who is this idiot Jerry McCulley ?.......2007-06-24
The music also can stand alone by itself. I cant name favorites. But this is one piece of art thats universally loved by everybody. Get it, you never will regret it.
Average customer rating:
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Pride & Prejudice
Caroline Dale , Benjamin Wallfisch , William Lyons , English Chamber Orchestra , Jean-Yves Thibaudet , and Aidan Broadbridge Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000BEZQ0Y Release Date: 2005-11-15 |
Tracks:
- Dawn
- Stars And Butterflies
- The Living Sculptures Of Pemberley
- Meryton Townhall
- The Militia Marches In
- Georgiana
- Arrival At Netherfield
- A Postcard To Henry Purcell
- Liz On Top Of The World
- Leaving Netherfield
- Another Dance
- The Secret Life Of Daydreams
- Darcy's Letter
- Can't Slow Down
- Your Hands Are Cold
- Mrs. Darcy
- Credits
Amazon.com
The year 2005 was big for Italian composer Dario Marianelli. His score for The Brothers Grimm received much applause (probably more than the film itself) and a few months later he came back with another batch of compositions for a period film. This time around, the plaudits are reversed: The film is better than the score. And that's not the only reversal: Since several of his compositions were to be performed by some of the characters on screen, Marianelli wrote parts of the music before the movie was shot, switching the order in which these things are usually done. The onscreen pieces are for solo piano, and Marianelli got a huge leg up by having them played by famed classical performer Jean-Yves Thibaudet. Marianelli was instructed by director Joe Wright to think along the lines of Beethoven (tall order!) but unlike The Brothers Grimm, which cleverly mixed and matched its classical influences, Pride & Prejudice fails to acquire a personality of its own. A few tracks, such as "Arrival at Netherfield," even border on George Winston territory. The intervention of the English Chamber Orchestra usually helps, but overall the score's palette sticks too much to a monochromatic beige. --Elisabeth VincentelliCustomer Reviews:
Brilliant Score, Brilliantly Performed by Thibaudet!.......2007-07-13
If more modern music was of this caliber, the world would be a more noble place. No film score collection is complete without this item.
=).......2007-07-01
Just lovely.......2007-06-12
Piano Enthusiasts - rejoice!!!.......2007-06-01
Best movie soundtrack of all time!.......2007-06-01
Average customer rating:
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The Mission: Original Soundtrack From The Motion Picture
Ennio Morricone Manufacturer: Virgin Records Us ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000WFZ Release Date: 1992-06-29 |
Tracks:
- On Earth As It Is In Heaven
- Falls
- Gabriel's Oboe
- Ave Maria Guarani
- Brothers
- Carlotta
- Vita Nostra
- Climb
- Remorse
- Penance
- The Mission
- River
- Gabriel's Oboe
- Te Deum Guarani
- Refusal
- Asuncion
- Alone
- Guarani
- The Sword
- Miserere
Amazon.com essential recording
Ennio Morricone's Academy Award-nominated score captures the conflict between 18th-century Jesuit missionaries trying to convert the native Indians, and the slavers who want to destroy them. In keeping with the serious subject matter and epic scope of Roland Joffé's film, the score is by turns grave, lyrical, and tense. Ever inventive, Morricone mixes liturgical chorales, native drumming, and Spanish-influenced guitars, often in the very same track, to capture the drama of the culture clash. His trademark lyricism also comes through, notably in the beautiful themes for "Gabriel's Oboe" and "The Mission." Not as over-the-top as his well-known spaghetti Western scores, The Mission shows Morricone at his dramatic best. --Heidi MacDonaldCustomer Reviews:
If you saw the movie or do not need music material for a performance, forget it........2007-06-13
wonderful music.......2007-06-09
Excellent Sound Track.......2007-05-13
The Mission.......2007-05-12
Great music.......2007-03-31
Jazz Music: