| | Great Movie Themes Soundtrack CD
Great Movie Themes Soundtrack Music Great Movie Themes Soundtrack Songs Great Movie Themes Soundtrack Review
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Purchase Music From Great Movie Themes CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Disco Dance CDs (2001)
Great Movie Themes Soundtrack album
$9.09
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Great Movie Themes Soundtrack music CDs
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| | Wicked: A New Musical CD (2003)
Great Movie Themes Soundtrack songs
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Great Movie Themes Soundtrack songs
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| | Love Honour & Obey Love, Honour & Obey CD (2004) Import
Great Movie Themes Soundtrack album
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| | Lost In The Stars CD (1949) Original Broadway Cast; Remastered
Great Movie Themes Soundtrack CD music
$12.65 `Lost In The Stars' opened on Broadway October 30, 1949. The libretto was written by Maxwell Anderson and the music was composed by Kurt Weill. The musical was based on the novel `Cry, The Beloved Country' by Alan Paton.
Recorded November 7 & 8, 1949. Originally released on Decca (8028). Includes liner notes by Max O. Preeo.
Based on Cry, the Beloved Country, Alan Paton's tragic novel set in South Africa, Lost in the Stars opened in New York in December of 1949 and had a modest run of 273 performances. Like Paton's book, the show's theme was very advanced for the year ...
| | Christopher Shaw Been To Town And Back Again CD (1994)
Great Movie Themes Soundtrack music CDs
$13.49 Christopher ShawSinger, Songwriter, StorytellerAs a descendant of steamboat pilots, \"pathfinders,\" and other rustic archetypes of the Adirondack region of New York State, Christopher Shaw is steeped in the lore of the American Northeast. Chris has done some steamboat piloting of his own, but it is in his professional role as a recording artist/performer that he carries forward the tradition of the great troubadour/storytellers who have enlivened parlors, taverns, and roadsides since America\'s colonial times. Chris has nine recordings to his credit including his 1988 debut, Adirondack, which has been entered into the Library of Congress Folk Archives. His tenth recording is in production now. Performers who have contributed to Chris\' recordings include such acoustic innovators as Artie Traum, John Sebastian, Garth Hudson (The Band), ...
| | Donnie Darko CD (2002)
Great Movie Themes Soundtrack songs
$15.95 The most remarkable thing about Richard Kelly's directorial debut, Donnie Darko, is its sheer tenacity. After suffering the fatal blow of a post-September 11 release date, the ominous film, which features the destruction of a sleepy suburban household by a falling jet engine, was pulled from theaters. Its subsequent release on video garnered a rabid fan base that elevated the movie to cult status, spawning hundreds of websites devoted to untangling its spidery threads of time-travel logic and spiritual chicanery. Rookie composer Michael Andrews, whose only previous work was for television's Freaks and Geeks, captures the underlying dread and unsettling beauty of the film by remaining reverent to it. Clocking in at just over 30 minutes, the heart of the piece is a pulsing, hypnotic waltz that transports you to the alternate-reality Middlesex, VA where the film takes place. His use of period (1980s) synths and a voxophone, tastefully punctuated by sparse choral arrangements, evoke a Danny Elfman score leached of bombast and quivering in its naked form. Like Air's soundtrack to The Virgin Suicides, Andrews' songs create such a specific sense of place that an entirely different film would emerge in their absence, robbing the consumer of its dizzying afterglow -- the soft, walking pianos on "The Artifact and Living" and "Rosie Darko" tiptoe through your subconscious for weeks. Due to the sparse, six-million-dollar budget of the movie, the producers had to decide whether or not to include celluloid-only tracks like "Killing Moon" by Echo & the Bunnymen and "Under the Milky Way" by the Church or pay for the special effects. They wisely opted for the latter, threw in an extra quarter and allowed Andrews and singer-songwriter Gary Jules to construct the heartbreaking re-working of Tears for Fears' 1983 hit "Mad World," that delivers the last play on Donnie Darko's haunting, apocalyptic jukebox. [In 2004, Sanctuary released a comprehensive two-dsic version in the U.K. that featured all of the songs used in the film, including tracks by Tears For Fears, the Church, Echo & the Bunnymen, INXS, Joy Division, Duran Duran and others.] ~ James Christopher Monger
The Donnie Darko story....Michael Andrews knew Jim Juvonen from way back. Juvonen knew that his friend was a name to watch and was an ...
| | Radio DJCD 'Hagaren Hosokyoku' Take Animation Soundtrack CD (2006) (Import)
Great Movie Themes Soundtrack album
$42.05 Includes a sticker.
| | Koisurutenshi Angelique-Sweetmemory2 Radio CD CD (2006) (Import)
Great Movie Themes Soundtrack CD music
$39.39 Includes a booklet.
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