Requiem For A Dream: The Remix Project (2002) Soundtrack Songs
Requiem For A Dream: The Remix Project (2002) Soundtrack Album Track Listing
1.
Tappy's Intro
2.
In the End It's All Nice - Plant
3.
Ghosts in the Machine - Psilonaut
4.
Aeternal - Paul Oakenfold
5.
Film Score - Seacoast Towers
6.
Coney Island Express - Jagz Kooner
7.
Film Score - Seacoast Alarm
8.
Haunted Dreams - Wish FM
9.
Tense - Kronos Quartet
10.
Full Tension - Josh Wink
11.
Film Score - Food
12.
Deluxed - Delirium
13.
Film Score - Island
14.
Body & Fear - A Guy Called Gerald
15.
Film Score - 112
16.
Over Turned - Ils
17.
Film Score - Sara
18.
Hand Jive - Hive
19.
Film Score - Arnold
20.
Ghosts - Clint Mansell (vocal version)
Requiem For A Dream: The Remix Project (2002) Soundtrack Music Review
Customer Requiem For A Dream: The Remix Project (2002) Soundtrack Reviews
Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)
Great This movie is the best movie i've ever seen in my whole entire life. Submitted by disturbed_hoksha (Egypt) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo
if you love the film you want this the film is the best i've ever seen, an amazing work of art in the story and its presentation. if you feel this way about the movie you must own this cd. i'm told the regular soundtrack doesn't stand alone without aronofsky's incredible visual presentation, but the remix version certainly does, it assaults your senses and haunts you just like the film. the voices from the film on track 2 and the vocals on track 20 are distractions, they take away from the music so i recommend playing tracks 3-19 if it is the music you're looking for, that's how i'll play it from now on. Submitted by eric (maconga) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo
Requiem For A Dream: The Remix Project (2002) Soundtrack
$14.35 It took more than 30 years for a soundtrack album drawn from the 1972 film Dr. Phibes Rises Again to be released, and all the while, according to Paul Tonks' liner notes, the tapes sat undisturbed in a London recording studio. That may help explain why the sound quality of this disc is so good, far better than what you'd expect from a decades-old album. The quality of the music is another matter. Director Robert Fuest had shot and edited the film with a temporary score of classical music he liked, but then needed to bring in a composer to write an original score. This is not an uncommon practice; in some cases (e.g., 2001: A Space Odyssey), directors have even ended up keeping the "temp" music they used originally and rejecting the new compositions. It does tend to irritate many film composers, however. But not John Gale -- the proprietor of a recording studio dedicated to churning out commercial music -- had no problem working with Fuest to come up with close substitutions for the Wagner, Villa-Lobos, Schumann, and other pieces the director had used for the rough cut. Of course, that means this isn't exactly the most original-sounding film score ever written. In fact, it all sounds second-hand. But that is not inappropriate to the movie itself. When Basil Kirchin, the composer of The Abominable Dr. Phibes, the predecessor to Dr. Phibes Rises Again, asked Vincent Price how he intended to play the title role, Price replied, "Straight," thus informing Kirchin that the film ...