| | Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack CD
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack Music Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Additional track information is unavailable.
Purchase Music From Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Twilight New Moon Twilight Saga: New Moon: The Score CD (2009) Original Soundtrack
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$14.50 Virtually every aspect of the Twilight saga was taken to a grander scale with New Moon, the second film in the series of screen adaptations of Stephenie Meyers' books. This reflected not just the success of the first movie, but the wider scope of New Moon's story, which encompassed werewolves and Italian vampire royalty along with girl-falls-in-love-with-vampire, vampire-breaks-girl's-heart drama. The film's score, which is composed and conducted by Alexandre Desplat and performed by the London Symphony Orchestra, is certainly bigger, but not always better, than Carter Burwell's music for Twilight. Desplat takes a more traditional approach, favoring soft string passages highlighted by flute, piano and occasional brass for his cues, which are lush and often lengthy: "To Volterra" hovers around nine minutes. Given that the ...
| | O Brother, Where Art Thou? CD (2000) Enhanced CD
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$10.45 Includes a 24-page booklet with liner notes by Robert K. Oermann.
O BROTHER, WHERE ART THOU? won the 2002 Grammy Awards for Album Of The Year and for Best Compilation Soundtrack Album For A Motion Picture, Television Or Other Visual Media. "O Death" won the 2002 Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance. "I Am A Man Of Constant Sorrow" won the 2002 Grammy Award for Best ...
| | Streets Of Fire CD (1984) Original Soundtrack
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$7.05
| | Pirate Radio Motion Picture Soundtrack CDs (2009) Original Soundtrack
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$15.96
| | Dances With Wolves CD (1990) Bonus Tracks
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$7.59 This is a Super Audio CD playable only on Super Audio CD players.
John Barry's fifth Oscar-winning score is a profoundly moving body of music, generally (though not entirely) elegiac in tone, very much like the movie for which it was written. It's also a bit of a mixed bag, occasionally falling back on material that will be familiar to fans of the James Bond movies that Barry scored during the early/mid-'60s. The main title theme uses some of those devices -- dense, heavy string passages adjacent to trumpet calls -- but it is hardly representative of the full score. The real heart of Dances With Wolves is the pensive, tragic "John Dunbar Theme," which is far closer in spirit to Barry's music for Somewhere in Time or They Might Be Giants, films (and scores) far removed from the Bond movies. It seems as though, when Barry is asked to write music for characters that are complex and troubled (of which Bond is neither), he delivers the goods in the guise of musical material that reflects those elements. Some elements familiar from the Bond films can be found scattered throughout this soundtrack, particularly the violin-driven "stings" ...
| | Li'L Abner CD (2002) Original Broadway Cast; Bonus Tracks
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$8.99 Music composed by Gene De Paul. Lyrics written by Johnny Mercer.
Songwriter Johnny Mercer did not have much luck writing for Broadway, but the exception was Lil' Abner, based on the satiric Al Capp comic strip about the rural residents of Dogpatch. Mercer wrote the song lyrics to music by Gene DePaul, with whom he had worked on the movie musical Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. After the show opened on November 15, 1956, it became the only stage work with which Mercer was associated to turn a profit, running 693 performances. Actually, the score isn't as strong as that for one of Mercer's flops, St. Louis Woman, but it is appropriate to the subject matter. The songs "Jubilation T. Cornpone," "The Country's in the Very Best of Hands," and "Progress Is the Root of All Evil" wittily capture Capp's sense of humor and dim view of politics. There are also some attractive romantic ballads, notably "Namely You" and "Love in a Home," both of which became minor hits. Edith "Edie" Adams and Stubby Kaye lead a cast of unknowns who give their all to the show's broad comedy. A key element of Lil' Abner's success was the staging ...
| | Sondheim: A Musical Tribute CDs (1973)
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$23.69
| | John - Guitar Williams John Williams Plays The Movies CD (1996)
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$9.99
| | Fifty Years Of Hungaroton: Singers CDs (2001) Boxed Set
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$46.39 | | Empire Brass Joy To The World CD (1988)
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$9.39
| | Handel Chamber Music 4 CD (1994)
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$13.25 | | Essential Hollywood CDs (2006) Remastered
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$16.95
| | Haydn Cassation In F / Divertissement In B Flat CD (1996)
Joplin: Treemonisha / Original Cast Recording Soundtrack
$12.09 |
|
|
|
 |
|

|