Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Desperate Teenage Lovedolls (soundtrack) Destination Berlin; Dick Tracy (orchestral score) Diên Biên Phu (soundtrack) Downhill City; The Draughtsman's Contract (soundtrack) Drawing Restraint 9 (album) Dream, After Dream; Drowning by Numbers (soundtrack) The Dub Room Special (soundtrack) Dueling Banjos (album) Dutch Harbor – Where the Sea ...
The sessions turned out a fiasco; of the eight songs recorded, two had been edited out of the film, and even with "How Can You Lose What You Never Had" restored to the soundtrack, that left an album of merely seven songs. [5] The album would prove to be a turning point in Presley's career.
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band is a double album produced by George Martin, [1] featuring covers of songs by the Beatles.It was released in July 1978 by RSO Records as the soundtrack to the film Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, which starred the Bee Gees, Peter Frampton and Steve Martin.
Henry Mancini, who won an Emmy Award and two Grammys for his soundtrack to Peter Gunn, was the first composer to have a widespread hit with a song from a soundtrack. Before the 1970s, soundtracks (with a few exceptions), accompanied towards musicals, and was an album that featured vocal and instrumental, (and instrumental versions of vocal ...
In 2023, the A.V. Club listed it as the 12th best movie soundtrack of all time. [60] That same year, Cosmopolitan ranked it as the 38th best movie soundtrack of all time, while The Independent ranked it 35th place in its best top 40 film soundtracks. [61] [62] In 2024, it was listed among the 101 Greatest Soundtracks of All Time on Rolling Stone.
Apart from the original songs, some of the incorporated tracks are featured in the film, while not in the soundtrack. These tracks include: [21] "Sticks and Stones" – Ray Charles [22] "Don't Take My Whiskey Away From Me" – Wynonie Harris [23] "So What" – Miles Davis [24] "Have a Good Time" – Ruth Brown [25] "You Say You Love Me" – The ...
Or people who never heard the songs before might be like, 'This is cool.' When you see the movie, you're gonna see the uptempo songs and the songs that are remakes in there as they would have sounded in the '80s, but the album is the way that I would make the record now, and the ballads can stand on their own as songs from a Mariah Carey album ...
The soundtrack album includes original score and the theme song composed by Rahman, the tracks "Never Hear Surf Music Again" by Free Blood, "Lovely Day" by Bill Withers, Frédéric Chopin's Nocturne No.2 in E flat, Op.9 No.2, "Ça plane pour moi" by Plastic Bertrand, "If You Love Me" by Esther Phillips, and "Festival" by Sigur Rós. [5]