As with 2006's PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN: DEAD MAN'S CHEST, renowned composer Hans Zimmer once again contributes a dynamic orchestral score to the third installment of the swashbuckling adventure series, AT WORLD'S END. Zimmer's string-laden ...
AWESOME Hans Zimmer has truly done a great job with this soundtrack Submitted by Somebody (IA, USA) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo
sucks boring Submitted by tim (river falls WI, USA) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo
Awesome This music is the best movie soundtrack of all time. Every emotion is made more powerful by this music - it certainly moves the film's story from adventure to epic. Submitted by agoergen (Bloomington, IL, USA) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo
Best movie soundtrack by far Oh Hans Zimmer did it again!. I was just more than amazed at the scene where the pirates were singing the "Hoist The Colours" song! it almost makes me bring the pirate guy out of me! lol. simply it's the best movie soundtrack by far Submitted by Darthzieg (Puerto Rico (the caribbean whohoooo)) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo
Dramatically brilliant The music this movie features is absoulutely superb. Forces you to empathise and feel emotion. Altogether a masterpiece of an album Submitted by Beck (London, England) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo
Buy Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End: Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack CD
Buy Pirates Of The Caribbean At World's End Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End: Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack Posters From Allposters.com
Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End: Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack CD music
$29.09 Dolan Ellis had already served for more than 20 years as Arizona's Official State Balladeer when Lance Bellville asked him to write the music for a stage play Lance was writing, to be called "Cowgirls." The play enjoyed some success, playing in many cities over several months. The Cowgirls music was first recorded on cassette tape and was recently remastered for CD. Each and every song on this CD stands alone as a wonderful production, from the opening song, Cowgirls ("Here's to the cowgirls who live in their own worlds and sing their own kind of song") to the plaintive Goin' Home to Springerville at the end. In between, there's lots of the great vocal work for which Dolan Ellis, with his incredibly resonant baritone voice, is famous. There is drama, humor, blues, and more.Alice Greenough is the only song on the CD that is not part of the play. When Dolan and Lance set out on their collaboration, they decided they needed to interview women involved in ranching or rodeo. They interviewed 100 cowgirls, including those who were competitors and those who owned their own ranches (as Dolan likes to say, "It was a tough job, but somebody had to do it").Alice's own story was very special: born in Montana to a rodeo family, very independent, World Champion Cowgirl in 1934. She had many triumphs over the years, and she was so important as the cowgirl who paved the way for others that she ...