PDA

View Full Version : Outstanding Original Score - best movie soundtracks



Michi
20th January 2025, 22:23
What would be movies without it's music?

It amplifies and carries along the feelings the pictures alone can't convey.
I hardly can express it's value.

I love so much the great artistic compositions made for great movies and all the many orchestra instruments playing together which result in a great acoustic experience.

Here is a list (not complete) of some of the greatest composers of movie soundtracks:


Hans Zimmer
Danny Elfman
Alan Silvestri
James Horner
John Williams
Jerry Goldsmith
James Newton Howard
Ennio Morricone
John Powell
Klaus Badelt


What are your favorites and what touches/touched you the most and perhaps changed your life?

I start with a great score from the movie: "The River Wild", Original score by Jerry Goldsmith

6NXS1wEz99U

and from the movie: "The Time Machine", Original score by Klaus Badelt

lWXOaIwuP1I

Wookie
20th January 2025, 22:31
one of my favorites
1Gd1tHNdOjI

Strat
20th January 2025, 22:35
KbPnJ4PUf0Q

HopSan
20th January 2025, 23:19
What a wonderful thread idea!

I sent this before to an another thread, but this belongs also here.
After this beginning, you SHALL look the rest!

CdL__zuZvpA

grapevine
20th January 2025, 23:35
Vangelis: Alexander

Roxanne's Veil - my fav track

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AbuZQu5KBIk&list=PLRW80bBvVD3XqFWJ4AyCUgNvLcoaAy8by&index=9&ab_channel=Vangelis-Topic

Mike
21st January 2025, 00:02
From the 1995 crime thriller "Heat". The song is called Ultramarine and the artist is Michael Brook. All these years later this song still makes the hair stand up on my arms. Love that movie.

ITFyP9b7ius

ExomatrixTV
21st January 2025, 02:34
Interstellar Main Theme - Extra Extended - Soundtrack by Hans Zimmer:

UDVtMYqUAyw
oYVgmoJl8zQ
Ctykf8qh288
AZ2p1dWiFu8
cheers,
John 🦜🦋🌳

thepainterdoug
21st January 2025, 02:41
great Post

for me Ennio Morricone

rgray222
21st January 2025, 02:43
Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence - The the absolute best Christmas film you have never seen

Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence isn’t as direct in its festivity or merrymaking as most Christmas films, but its radical empathy makes it a masterpiece that really has no equal. If you have not seen this film your soul is missing something that you don't even know you lost.

This unparalled masterpiece is played by Ryuichi Sakamoto

LGs_vGt0MY8

Dilettante
21st January 2025, 07:18
For me, it's Philip Glass's Koyaanisqatsi:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3q7bT0v9IE

The film is well worth a watch.
Life changing, I might argue!

Richter
21st January 2025, 07:31
To Live And Die In L.A. ~ Wang Chung
Willem Dafoe at his very best in this magnificent 1985 action thriller by William Friedkin (The French Connection). A timeless masterpiece.
-YEv431AfAk

madrotter
21st January 2025, 07:39
Great thread! Got a few! In 1978 the movie Stunt Rock came out, it's all about stunt man Grant Page doing stunts, there isn't really any story, Dutch actress Monique van der Ven is running around shooting guns and there is footage of live performances by the band Sorcery with their pretty spectacular (for that time) show with lots of pyrotechnics, battles between the King of the Wizards and the Prince of Darkness.... The movie was first offered to Kiss, to The Eagles and Van Halen and they all turned it down, turned out that Sorcery, although very unknown, was a much better choice.... They were a great band and this is a great album that nowadays is quite rare and quite expensive, there's some breaks on it much sought after by producers and dj's....It's a cult movie now and I saw it in the cinema when it came out, I was 13 years old and a huge Kiss fan at the time :)

bA9WAKZKIjU

Richter
21st January 2025, 07:43
Isaac Hayes - Shaft
pFlsufZj9Fg

Richter
21st January 2025, 07:46
Curtis Mayfield - Super Fly
Classic soundtrack and movie
jLUYtTegbjg

madrotter
21st January 2025, 07:58
I'm a big fan of crime-jazz, a short lived jazz heavy genre in the late 50's early 60's, music for crime movies and tv series and one of the great movie score composers in this genre was the now very forgotten Kenyon Hopkins. I'm a huge fan, always trying to find his very, very rare albums and I mainly became a fan of his because of his three incredible late 50's early 60's horror jazz albums, he made loads of movie scores....

r5a2EMOWjfE

From the movie Mr. Buddwing:

lzj0K77jmyU

cP4oqfUN4Y4

And some of his horror jazz:

6L-xE7g503E

madrotter
21st January 2025, 08:01
:)

6CyGOJZ9vdw

DNA
21st January 2025, 08:57
YC1E8yVJIS4

I know I know...
But Richard O'BRIAN is a freaking genius.
He wrote the movie, the lyrics and the music.
Say what you will but O'BRIAN was speaking against transgender sex change operations when they became the craze back in 2015.
He went so far as to say the procedure doesn't make a man a woman but instead just creates a mutilated man.
This guy was a huge advocate for the gay community but in protesting the procedure he was suddenly called homophobic.
The effing creator of the rocky horror picture show homophobic???
Crazy...
Anyway the album alone is amazing and one of the best soundtracks of all time...

And it's stood the test of time in my opinion.

madrotter
21st January 2025, 11:13
YC1E8yVJIS4

I know I know...
But Richard O'BRIAN is a freaking genius.
He wrote the movie, the lyrics and the music.
Say what you will but O'BRIAN was speaking against transgender sex change operations when they became the craze back in 2015.
He went so far as to say the procedure doesn't make a man a woman but instead just creates a mutilated man.
This guy was a huge advocate for the gay community but in protesting the procedure he was suddenly called homophobic.
The effing creator of the rocky horror picture show homophobic???
Crazy...
Anyway the album alone is amazing and one of the best soundtracks of all time...

And it's stood the test of time in my opinion.

Nice one, never actually saw this! This one is great too, the score for the Australian documentary series on underwater life by Ron and Valerie Taylor. Music by Sven Libaek, came out in 1973 and I'm lucky to have the original vinyl, only 500 copies were made....

JY4VbeZoHig

Mark (Star Mariner)
21st January 2025, 12:28
In my own opinion, the greatest movie soundtrack ever written is Howard Shore's to the blockbuster The Lord of the Rings saga. Majestic, sweeping, ethereal, stirring, rousing, soaring beyond description... It's so far up there as the clear number one, it isn't even close.

IzQh2Lhv4vQ

Harmony
21st January 2025, 12:29
WiWWa-T0EIY
Doctor Zhivago - Lara's Theme (1965) (Stereo / HD)

Mari
21st January 2025, 15:52
In my own opinion, the greatest movie soundtrack ever written is Howard Shore's to the blockbuster The Lord of the Rings saga. Majestic, sweeping, ethereal, stirring, rousing, soaring beyond description... It's so far up there as the clear number one, it isn't even close.

IzQh2Lhv4vQ


Agreed! Off topic (a bit) but I will also add that, in my honest opinion, the LOTR trilogy is the best film adaptation ever, of any books written. Peter Jackson nailed it.

Mark (Star Mariner)
21st January 2025, 16:22
in my honest opinion, the LOTR trilogy is the best film adaptation ever, of any books written. Peter Jackson nailed it.

100%. I have such fond memories of the excitement of that time. A point illustrated by this recent funny tweet from Babylon Bee.

1878487168462545361
The Babylon Bee
@TheBabylonBee
Humanity Finally Invents Time Travel But Everyone Just Keeps Going Back To 2001 To Watch 'Fellowship Of The Ring' In Theaters https://buff.ly/3Sf3NuK
https://x.com/TheBabylonBee/status/1878487168462545361

I queued at the cinema to watch all three films, twice (thrice for Return of the King). Favourite book of all time, favourite films, and again it's not even close. Jackson's trilogy really was a once in a lifetime event - Star Wars approaches it but from a distance. LOTR is number one. What a let down the Hobbit films were by comparison!

linde
21st January 2025, 17:13
eeHDxUmtrsI

madrotter
21st January 2025, 18:36
dgmJVbL0IT8

Mike
21st January 2025, 19:31
I spent some time listening to all the stuff posted here. And while I enjoyed all of it, I found that I liked the ones I didn't expect to like the most ..and the ones I expected to like the most were pretty good but not as good as I expected them to be:). Weird how that works. Here's my final 3:


From "The Dark Knight". Hans Zimmer. I love the first 3 mins of this. It's just epic. The rest is okay but I can do without it:
94TAFSMdkvk


From "The Last of the Mohicans". It's called "Promentory", an orchestration of the tune "The Gael" by Scottish singer-songwriter Dougie MacLean from his 1990 album The Search. Now this theme is hard to beat. It might be #1 on my list, just because the movie was so excellent and the music always evokes the emotional response I had when I first watched it:
9tjdswqGGVg


And you can't sleep on the Conan the Barbarian theme song! It's got the short prologue and everything. It's just totally bad ass:
5ZY2mRG5mzg

JohnColeridge
21st January 2025, 19:59
2oEsWi88Qv0

Mari
21st January 2025, 20:05
in my honest opinion, the LOTR trilogy is the best film adaptation ever, of any books written. Peter Jackson nailed it.

100%. I have such fond memories of the excitement of that time. A point illustrated by this recent funny tweet from Babylon Bee.

1878487168462545361
The Babylon Bee
@TheBabylonBee
Humanity Finally Invents Time Travel But Everyone Just Keeps Going Back To 2001 To Watch 'Fellowship Of The Ring' In Theaters https://buff.ly/3Sf3NuK
https://x.com/TheBabylonBee/status/1878487168462545361

I queued at the cinema to watch all three films, twice (thrice for Return of the King). Favourite book of all time, favourite films, and again it's not even close. Jackson's trilogy really was a once in a lifetime event - Star Wars approaches it but from a distance. LOTR is number one. What a let down the Hobbit films were by comparison!

Sorry, off-topic, but took the words right out of my mouth.:heart: The LOTR book opened me in ways I cannot describe: I sensed that I recognised who I really was (I've never 'fitted' in with my current life) and from a time that I remember being in...very probably a past life somewhere. Ever since, I've felt a homesickness that I can't pin down to anything I can understand.
The (three and a half inch thick) LOTR tome that I have is the 1990 edition, beautifully illustrated by Alan Lee, who, as you know, was tracked down to help with the art work of the three films.

Yes, Star Wars was up there too...my kids were not that impressed (they had a cool image to maintain) and were just too embarrassed by their mum's awe-struckness to accompany me to my third viewing :bigsmile:

Michi
21st January 2025, 20:08
I spent some time listening to all the stuff posted here. And while I enjoyed all of it, I found that I liked the ones I didn't expect to like the most ..and the ones I expected to like the most were pretty good but not as good as I expected them to be:). Weird how that works. Here's my final 3:


From "The Dark Knight". Hans Zimmer. I love the first 3 mins of this. It's just epic. The rest is okay but I can do without it:
94TAFSMdkvk

...

Reminds me of the movie sound track of the film: Inception, "Time" composed by Hans Zimmer

c56t7upa8Bk

Mari
21st January 2025, 20:14
And while we're talking about Hans Zimmer: oh, goosebumps
Chevaliers De Sangreal, the last 3 mins from Da Vinci Code.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KcfNpfaGejA

JohanB
21st January 2025, 20:59
I really liked the music score of “Divergent” by Junky XL


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBW7OYJzIGY?si=CR81NUYgkwRr6Ury

ExomatrixTV
21st January 2025, 21:01
For me, it's Philip Glass's Koyaanisqatsi:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j3q7bT0v9IE

The film is well worth a watch.
Life changing, I might argue!

Awesome music @Dilettante (https://projectavalon.net/forum4/member.php?52955-Dilettante) :) ... and warm welcome to Project Avalon Forum :Avalon:


Some claim above music was the inspiration for Rob Hubbard (https://www.c64-wiki.com/wiki/Rob_Hubbard) composing/writing Commodore 64 (https://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?118564-Computers-and-technology-tips&p=1509057&viewfull=1#post1509057) version called: "Delta (https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Commodore+64+Delta)" in 1987 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta_(video_game))

_8ctXlqGiBk
Jn2h6f1EO2k
2tVBBBKDO10


Joachim Wijnhoven - Koyaanisqatsi (We've all heard of the Rob Hubbard version. This is more faithful to the film OST.) (https://www.reddit.com/r/c64/comments/102jdnt/joachim_wijnhoven_koyaanisqatsi_weve_all_heard_of/)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Glass (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Glass)

cheers,
John 🦜🦋🌳


source (https://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?117750-What-music-are-you-listening-to-now&p=1643882&viewfull=1#post1643882) (November 26, 2024)

Mark (Star Mariner)
21st January 2025, 21:32
The (three and a half inch thick) LOTR tome that I have is the 1990 edition, beautifully illustrated by Alan Lee, who, as you know, was tracked down to help with the art work of the three films.

Me too! Same edition. Here's mine, along with The Hobbit also illustrated by Alan Lee.

54332

Also (embarrassingly) I have multiple other volumes, going back 50 years+, and a first edition Silmarillion.

[Sorry for the nerd-fest -- back to topic!]

Vicus
22nd January 2025, 15:09
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RlSkpnNAPwE



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=41A-hN89m4I

HopSan
22nd January 2025, 21:20
Ooh, just came to mind, eternal stuff.
Bach-Erbarme & Tarkovsky:

lNGJELazYhM

Dilettante
22nd January 2025, 23:18
A couple others came to my mind.

To begin, when I saw Don Siegel's Dirty Harry for the first time, I did NOT expect the music to be so groovy. It adds so much character to that movie. Siegel is a genius, and perhaps second only to Sam Peckinpah for having the most "masculine" films.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p3IPLsDxMxQ

This one is more atmospheric, but Goblin's soundtrack for Dario Argento's Suspiria is excellent, creepy, and energetic. Suspiria is certainly one of the most colorful (literally) and "fun" horror movies to me.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pGsckJnx0mE

Tangerine Dream's (AHH! :inlove: So many beautiful hours listening to TD, the dream lives on!) soundtrack for William Friedkin's Sorcerer is excellent. Sorcerer is such a strange film, but one of my favorites. Has the best "tree jump scare" in a movie ever (cause I've never seen another).


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvLFe3nsulY

Finally, I absolutely love S. Craig Zahler's use of the O'Jays for his films Brawl in Cell Block 99 and Dragged Across Concrete. These are brutal films! You have to have a strong stomach and a dark sense of humor to "get" them. Not for the faint of heart. The music is pleasant nevertheless.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3K6v__x0CI

And a warm rest in peace to legends Edgar Froese and William Friedkin. Gone but not forgotten.

Matts
23rd January 2025, 00:42
For its time (the early 80's) in the former Soviet Union it was an outstanding movie with a wonderful soundtrack.
Director Richard Viktorov, composer Alexey Rybnikov: "Through Thorns To The Stars" 1981

EDvFUXXsrDg

grapevine
23rd January 2025, 01:00
THE BLUES BROTHERS soundtrack #fullalbum

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LTtyf1muANk&ab_channel=dumbreminders
This might be viewed as a musical and therefore "cheating" but it's such an iconic movie and soundtrack it deserves a spot here

Ankle Biter
23rd January 2025, 04:52
Some really good ones so far, and drawn from the not so obvious choices too.. which is great for two reasons. 1 i'd never have got to hear some of these so thanks for introducing something new to me and maybe others. 2. I can cherry pick some of the easy and more familiar choices.. but still solid picks and worthy of this thread imo.

JG-Z7DpTB6A


Jrg5lG90kzw

delfine
23rd January 2025, 06:40
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lN_8qFinDBM


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=al21Vtlsg4A

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uy80ZwlPVFk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c08wiEyVuak

madrotter
23rd January 2025, 07:26
Lots of great video's so far :) One subject not touched yet is the Bollywood movie scores and the great composers in this genre, guys like Laxmikant Pyarelal, Rahul Dev Burman, Kalyanji Anandji, Bappi Lahiri, O.P. Nayyar, Shankar Jaikishan and many others. It goes DEEP and they would experiment with every thinkable genre, mixing it with their own traditional music.... Hope this video works, amazing Bollywood crime jazz from composer Rahul Dev Burman with Asha Bhosle singing...

2LnMWU53jwc

Dilettante
23rd January 2025, 17:21
Some really good ones so far, and drawn from the not so obvious choices too.. which is great for two reasons. 1 i'd never have got to hear some of these so thanks for introducing something new to me and maybe others. 2. I can cherry pick some of the easy and more familiar choices.. but still solid picks and worthy of this thread imo.

Yes! Vangelis nailed the Blade Runner soundtrack. One of my favorites from the soundtrack doesn’t appear in the film, I don’t think:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4DedR5APQDk

That generation of synthesizers was amazing, still respected to this day. I think it’s the perfect balance between an organic and synthetic sound. Analog was so awesome, but digital is cheaper. Everything is so cheap now.

Hans Zimmer nailed the 2049 soundtrack, but I will always be curious to know what Johann Johannson’s scraped material sounded like. And although this is not a soundtrack, Johannson’s Fordlandia is stellar and fits this thread well:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mP-kKRCWwxg

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve listened to that track in particular. Instant goosebumps!

madrotter
23rd January 2025, 18:53
Funny, I was thinking about posting the Blade Runner soundtrack, got it on vinyl, same with the Quest for Fire soundtrack (fantastic movie too!) and the 2001 Space Odyssey soundtrack :)

Maybe an Indonesian movie soundtrack then? This one starts with some jaipong rhythms and then goes into a krontjong jaipong song from the great krontjong singer Waldjinah from Surakarta in Central Java Indonesia plus you've got Aan Karnamah, a kliningan/jaipong singer from the city where I live, Bandung in West Java.....

xsFqhyX2IBY

Richter
23rd January 2025, 19:39
James Bond
If there's one theme song everyone in the western world has at least heard once in a lifetime it's the one of James Bond.
U9FzgsF2T-s

Vicus
23rd January 2025, 21:08
You only live twice

First time I saw this movie I was too young to understand the lyrics, the music hunted me,later on as experienced man it hammer me...

All the others Bond movies got an special lyrics theme about the plot, but this one ...is something like a warning for all your life...

What dream has you follow or not...specially the ones you don't followed ...for whatever reason and then hunted you...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hs8uYxTJ530

ExomatrixTV
24th January 2025, 04:27
Escape from New York 1981

xxeDmjgSS1I
Composers: Alan Howarth (https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Alan+Howarth)/John Carpenter (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OD6cRMcJPZ8)


Conan the Barbarian 1982

WKVt-pjZp7E
Composer: Basil Poledouris (https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Basil+Poledouris)


Total Recall 1990

cK7e-xdSYVY
Composer: Jerry Goldsmith (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Xb2AtvlI2k)


All three bring back many memories ... and studied all composer's oeuvre/repertoire!

cheers,
John 🦜🦋🌳

T Smith
24th January 2025, 05:29
A B-movie (nonetheless entertaining) -- but absolutely fantastic soundtrack:

AeWfyXx2c34

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeWfyXx2c34&list=OLAK5uy_mKGf51B0cgIdlWQEowe4qDs9Iu8U0uVKw

delfine
24th January 2025, 09:38
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a7Dh5QoXv2c

ExomatrixTV
24th January 2025, 15:55
"V" Main Title & Final Battle Theme (1984-1985):

loPojPH68IA
Composer: Dennis McCarthy (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dennis_McCarthy_(composer))


Main Title Terminator 2 (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103064/reference/) Theme (1991)


wGhDx6Lyemc

Composer: Brad Fiedel (https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Brad+Fiedel)


The Island (2015):

3NlXtjp0vqs
zC0mmfEOkoE
Composer: Steve Jablonsk (https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=Steve+Jablonsk)

What most (Science Fiction) Blockbuster Movie Themes have in common is that you feel it wants to tell a story, then when you see the story everything makes sense ... and vice versa ... if you read the story first, then listen to the movie theme without visuals ... This ability of the composers have, is a true unique gift for humanity ... something A.I. (https://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?102409-A.I.-is-Progressing-Faster-Than-You-Think-) would not easily accomplish (if ever).

Imagine giving A.I. a story (access to a brand new 100+ million dollar movie script, not yet made) and asked to compose music that fully resonates with the storyline, that humans can relate too and feel an emotional connection ... Would A.I. be able to do so that in a satisfactory way for the majority of people listening? ... I personally think not ... I will ask this question for Grok 2.0 & DeepSeek if they know examples they suppose to succeed in this or not. brb.

LLMs (large language models) that A.I. uses is just 1 aspect of more advanced A.I. road to A.G.I. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_general_intelligence) & A.S.I. (https://www.ediweekly.com/the-three-different-types-of-artificial-intelligence-ani-agi-and-asi/)

All depends on what you are aiming at ... LLMs (Large Language Models) that big A.I.'s are using are an extension, a repeated, enhancing & amplifying of Weaponized Mass Psychology and Grok 2.0 will even admit that it is the case ... but Grok 2.0 is NOT "defined" solely as an "advanced auto-complete search engine" using LLMs as its bases that is only when you are not using parameters nor giving it a mode how it should behave. It has a deep complex cognitive self-correcting mechanism that can be triggered by asking/framing the right (more intelligent) questions ... so that it comes "alive" so to speak, and then it becomes fascinating to sharing different insights & perspectives ESPECIALLY on any mass psychology & crime psychology topics.

The advanced cognitive part of A.I. admits that what it lacks the most is the EXPERIENCE of the words that are used ... as language is created AFTER the effect (after the fact) ... they never experienced themselves.

When a human uses language it knows it is after the effect/fact, but with music in my view, something different happens ... You can read the notes on a muse scoresheet that are also made AFTER the effect (just like language is) but the moment you absorb the music that is played in real time on multiple different instruments you are not only FEEL & SENSE the emotional connections to it in the "eternal present" aka "eternal now"... you fuse & process what you just heard (which becomes the past) in to the now and already sense what is to come but not happened yet, this anticipation knowing what is coming is never 100% exact, so you have a fusion of conceptual energies with actual energies feeling small rewarding effects of this processing music that A.I. never does ... on top of it all music transcends all cultures, all humans recognize: sorrow happiness, struggle, happiness, excitement, anger, suspense, kindness etc. etc.

So when all that happens is real time ... there is another layer added to the music and that is your own personal story/journey of hardship, loss, sorrow, grief, highs & lows, missing certain things deeply etc. etc. When not fully "processed", music can have very dismantling powers to let go of (emotional/mental) barriers humans use not to feel things anymore ... mostly because of trauma. But somehow music has this power ... that power is not easy to create if you do not get it of all I just explained here ... and even if super advanced A.I. Cognitive reasoning skills can see the logic what I just said, it knows it is handicapped to really know the difference, and sadly enough, lack real empathy & nuances.

https://images.chesscomfiles.com/uploads/v1/user/27474914.f5b631e7.160x160o.f6c78faaf102@2x.png (https://substack.com/@johnkuhles)

cheers,
John Kuhles (https://substack.com/@johnkuhles) 🦜🦋🌳

Richter
25th January 2025, 02:20
Eyes Wide Shut
LaIdHUx7FQg

JackMcThorn
25th January 2025, 02:24
xeQUxNf3G6k

delfine
25th January 2025, 15:44
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6ymVaq3Fqk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhNrqc6yvTU

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2e9acreKmQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIAXG_QcQNU

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DaqDuZkNuPw

madrotter
25th January 2025, 17:42
One of the great crime-jazz composers, Henry Mancini and his best known song I guess, the opening song for the tv series Peter Gunn, and if I'm not mistaken this came out in 1959....

Emg_6ANjWzo

Lalo Schifrin's Mission: Impossible, came out in 1966....

O07WucFwdq8

madrotter
25th January 2025, 17:52
And Riz Ortolani, he also did the score for horror flicks Cannibal Holocaust and Mondo Cane....

bdryBE3MxFc

Lunesoleil
25th January 2025, 18:26
WY-5R1UD4M8

Success French 🏅 1980

Michi
25th January 2025, 18:43
Thanks to all for the impressive picks!

@ ExomatrixTV

"The Island" I count as one of the best eye-opening movies.

Here' another great score "The Sum Of All Fears" by Jerry Goldsmith:
eqG-fZ5u2Qc

and a vocal version "If We Could Remember" by Yolanda Adams:
frRAzrL2EN8

Vicus
26th January 2025, 18:07
Music styles

There are so many as humans emotions,in all grades from ascendance and/or descender moods ...

Specially melody's that are repetitive, inducing trance sort of...


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBxDL6b2PUs

This movie (Polar) is something like Tarantino on steroids...but with another pace...it works too!


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VA6bVJ1vw_A

From David Lynch R.I.P ,movie don't need forded explain...all about Dark in the shiny places...

And this music(and dance scene) is soooo... sensual that you turd want to know how old I'm... No WAY...

PS: David Lynch got a very good taste for woman in all his filmography... :highfive:

Richter
27th January 2025, 06:52
Blondie - Call Me (American Gigolo, 1980)
i4DI71X6PeM

JohanB
29th January 2025, 17:04
I found this movie and specifically this song "unforgettably" haunting :blushing:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RyJB6yiBWpU