Archive for the ‘Soundtracks’ Category

Out Of Africa: Music From The Motion Picture Soundtrack

Amazon.com essential recording
The great irony of John Barry’s Academy Award-winning score for Out of Africa (which also took the Oscar as Best Picture) is that it almost never was; director Sydney Pollack had originally envisioned the film with native African music, going as far as laying the indigenous score down as he was editing. But the weight of John Barry’s arguments–not to mention his considerable track record and composing gifts–held sway, and the composer delivered on his intent: a lush, romantic masterpiece for the ages. –Jerry McCulley

Out Of Africa: Music From The Motion Picture Soundtrack

Blues & Ballads at the Movies

Product Description
CD 4215 Blues and Ballads at the Movies: Laura As Time Goes By Love is Here to Stay Love Walked In Blues in the Night Over the Rainbow The Summer Knows Stella by Starlight and more. Joe Utterback, pianist

Blues & Ballads at the Movies

Snow White & The Seven Dwarfs

Amazon.com essential recording
Disney’s Snow White, the world’s first animated musical feature (1937), is still a standard in the industry. Though 1930s recording technology was primitive by today’s standards, the Disney music studios have always used the available technology to its fullest, and this recording still stands up. The mature but hauntingly childlike Adriana Caselotti as Snow White is a unique vocal presence, and the songs include “Whistle While You Work,” “Heigh-Ho,” and “Some Day My Prince Will Come.” The score is nearly as great an accomplishment as the film itself. –John Sanchez

Snow White & The Seven Dwarfs

Surf’s Up

Amazon.com
Penguins, real or computer-generated, are hot property in Hollywood. First came “March of the Penguins,” then “Happy Feet,” and now “Surf’s Up.” If it’s gotten easy to confuse one penguin flick for another, though, mistaking their soundtracks is pretty much impossible, owing to the top-tier talent. Surf’s Up, like Happy Feet before it, catapults kiddie soundtracks to a new level of cool by recruiting a never-before-heard track from an artist adults have been wanting to hear from for a while: Lauryn Hill. That song, “Lose Myself,” is as mature and distinctive as Prince’s contribution to Happy Feet, “Song of the Heart.” But where Surf’s Up outdoes itself is with the surrounding material; 311, Sugar Ray, Nine Black Alps, Ken Andrews, and Big Nose each hand in spiffy new tracks. Picking a favorite can be as difficult as differentiating one penguin from the next, so don’t. Sit back, settle into the standbys threaded through the new stuff (the Romantics’ “What I Like About You” is a good one), and enjoy the ride. –Tammy La Gorce

Surf’s Up

Shaft: Music From The Soundtrack

Album Description
Of the many wonderful blaxpoitation soundtracks to emerge during the early ’70s, Shaft certainly deserves mention as not only one of the most lasting but also one of the most successful. Isaac Hayes was undoubtedly one of the era’s most accomplished soul artists. With the Theme From Shaft, Hayes delivered an anthem just as ambitious and revered as the film itself, a song that has only grown more treasured over the years, after having been an enormously popular hit at the time of its release. Soulsville operates effectively as the sort of down-tempo ballad Hayes was most known for, just as the almost 20-minute Do Your Thing showcased just how impressive the Bar-Keys had become, stretching the song to unseen limits with their inventive, funky jamming. This CD features cinematic moments of instrumentation, composed and produced by Hayes while being performed by the Bar-Kays – some down-tempo, others quite jazzy. A Stax recordsAmazon.com
The “Theme from Shaft” is now so ingrained in popular consciousness as the blaxploitation-movie track that it’s hard to listen to it without a faint smirk. (“Who’s the black private dick that’s a sex machine to all the chicks?”!!) But if you can get past the inadvertent humor, it’s still a devilishly exciting piece of music–all hi-hat 16ths, wah-wah guitar, strings, and woodwind, like a Norman Whitfield Motown production taken to a baroque extreme. The rest of the album consists mainly of incidental mood music of no great worth: “Walk from Regio’s,” “Ellie’s Love Theme”–you know the sort of thing. Only two other tracks feature the Black Moses pipes, while the endless “Do Your Thing” takes its place in the catalog of Hayes epics that began with Hot Buttered Soul. –Barney Hoskyns

Shaft: Music From The Soundtrack

Pirate Radio

Album Description

Pirate Radio is the newest ensemble comedy from filmmaker Richard Curtis (screenwriter of Four Weddings and a Funeral and Notting Hill, and writer/director of Love Actually), spinning the irreverent yet fact-based comedic tale of a seafaring band of rogue rock and roll deejays whose “pirate radio” captivated and inspired 1960s Britain. Playing the music that rocked a nation and a decade, the group boldly and hilariously defies the government that tried to shut them down.

Broadcasting live 24/7 from an old tanker anchored in the middle of the North Sea (just beyond British jurisdiction), Radio Rock sends out a vibrant and unifying signal to millions across the nation, ranging in age from wide-eyed pre-teens secretly tuning in long past their bedtimes to everyday people in need of a musical pick-me-up.

Pirate Radio

The True Hearted: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

Product Description
Imported CD of original publisher, Rock Records, Brand New and Factory-sealed, Highest Quality.

The True Hearted: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

Grey’s Anatomy, Vol. 2

Product Description
No Description Available

  • Track: 10: Grace Master – Kate Havnevik,
  • Track: 11: Sexy Mistake – The Chalets,
  • Track: 12: Bound by Love – Gran Bel Fisher,
  • Track: 13: I Hate Everyone [Clean] – Get Set Go,
  • Track: 14: Homebird – Foy Vance,
  • Track: 15: Chasing Cars [Acoustic] – Snow Patrol,
  • Track: 1: How to Save a Life [New Drums Album Version] – The Fray,
  • Track: 2: War on Sound – Moonbabies,
  • Track: 3: I Me You – Jim Noir,
  • Track: 4: Kaboom! – Ursula 1000,
  • Track: 5: Miss Halfway – Anya Marina,
  • Track: 6: Multiply – Jamie Lidell,
  • Track: 7: Universe & U – KT Tunstall,
  • Track: 8: Monster Hospital – Metric,
  • Track: 9: How We Operate [Radio Edit] – Gomez
    Media Type: CD
    Artist: GREY’S ANATOMY 2
    Title: TV SOUNDTRACK
    Street Release Date: 09/12/2006
    Domestic
    Genre: SOUNDTRACKAmazon.com
    This soundtrack to the hit TV series starts off with a melancholy ballad by Denver’s the Fray (fittingly titled “How to Save a Life”), but the well-curated CD isn’t all thoughtful adult alt-rock–reflecting the series’ mood changes, it offers a wide range of modern sounds. In addition to the expected acoustical numbers (in this case, from Anya Marina, KT Tunstall, and Snow Patrol’s live version of “Chasing Cars”), the album reaches across genres and continents to offer the sunny-’60s-pop vibe of Jim Noir’s “I Me You,” Jamie Lidell’s electro-jazzy “Multiply,” the edgy punky-pop aggro of Metric, the rambunctious “Sexy Mistake” from the Chalets, and the winning singalong misanthropy of singer-songwriter Foy Vance’s “I Hate Everyone.” Ursula 1000’s Alex Gimeno lightens up the proceedings with one of his trademark upbeat, hip-gyrating numbers (which seems to pay tribute to Serge Gainsbourg’s “Comic Strip”), while the Moonbabies’ sweet, swirling harmonies deliver the kind of perfectly crafted pop we’ve come to expect from the Swedes. If this compilation turns people on to these deserving acts, it will have done its job. –Elisabeth Vincentelli

    Grey’s Anatomy, Vol. 2

  • Mob Hits II: More Music from the Great Mob Movies

    Album Description
    Features 16 of the most memorable songs from the most powerful mob movies such as ‘The Godfather’, ‘Bronx Tale’, ‘Donnie Brasco’ & ‘Goodfellas’. Artists include Louis Prima, Connie Francis, Bobby Darin, Nat King Cole & Celia Cruz. 2000 release. Standard jewel case.

    Mob Hits II: More Music from the Great Mob Movies

    Star Wars: The Clone Wars

    Album Description
    The Soundtrack to the all-new animated Star Wars feature film. Composer Kevin Kiner has created a dynamic score for CLONE WARS which builds upon the classic themes created by John Williams. Contains an exclusive fold-out poster!

    Star Wars: The Clone Wars

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