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Raleigh
So, I've decided I really like soundtracks and felt that there needs to be a place to recommend/upload/discuss/denounce these types of releases. I've only recently started to delve into soundtracks and there are so many of them I'm not really sure where to start. Personally, i'm looking for original scores and am less interested in compiled albums of previously released songs but everything is welcome. I'm hoping some film score connoisseurs step up in this thread

I'll start off with music from one of my favorites, Jon Brion


Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind OST (Jon Brion)
CODE
http://rapidshare.com/files/70125374/Eternal_Sunshine_Of_The_Spotless_Mind_-_OST.rar.html
pw: labutacadelpalomo



(I wanted to up all of the Brion soundtracks but I just realized all of mine are at 128 kbps and this was the only working link I could find on the internets. Sorry. If anybody wants my shoddy quality versions, let me know. Hopefully there will be many many many more to come.)
Ent
Heard some good stuff last night on the radio on a local indie/alterna/punk show.

I am very interested in hearing more from the Juno soundtrack http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00104W8T6/ and the I'm Not There soundtrack http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000VS6P9Q/

I'm Not There soundtrack has:
Karon O (from the Yeah Yeah Yeahs) doing an amazing cover of Dylan's "Highway 61 Revisited"
Also Sonic Youth, Yo La Tengo, the Black Keys and more.

Juno soundtrack has:
Kimya Dawson (from the Moldy Peaches), Sonic Youth, The Velvet Underground, Belle & Sebastian, the Kinks.

I love Kimya Dawson.
Saskadelphia
I'm really surprised at just how good the I'm Not There soundtrack is.
Raleigh
I'm Not There OST

CODE
http://rapidshare.com/files/66315882/intOST.part1.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/66486250/intOST.part2.rar
http://rapidshare.com/files/66211958/intOST.part3.rar



Juno OST

CODE
http://www.mediafire.com/?fojwmf0zem1
pw: L4T
Raleigh
There Will Be Blood OST (Jonny Greenwood)


CODE
http://link-protector.com/381459/

caley

I picked up the Gattaca soundtrack at a book sale for fifty cents. It's soooo good. Michael Nyman is always good, though.


After seeing Atonement yesterday, I really wanted a nice sweeping symphonic score, and A Very Long Engagement fits the bill. Angelo Badalamenti is tremendous.
Ent
Good thread. thanks.
throughsilver
Get loads of Mancini from the 60s.
RadioHitchcock
"Death Proof" soundtrack is good.
Saskadelphia
QUOTE(RadioHitchcock @ Jan 20 2008, 03:36 PM) [snapback]557484[/snapback]
"Death Proof" soundtrack is good.

Easily my favourite soundtrack in ages, probably since Wonder Boys.

Ennio Morricone's Crime & Dissonance soundtrack compilation from a couple years ago is incredible.
Complain
Anyone wanna upload the Some Kind of Wonderful soundtrack for me? Can't find it anywhere.
nobodies
QUOTE(Complain @ Jan 21 2008, 09:06 AM) [snapback]557765[/snapback]
Anyone wanna upload the Some Kind of Wonderful soundtrack for me? Can't find it anywhere.


Lick The Tins cover of "I can't help falling in love with you" is ridiculously good. Other great sound tracks:





bunk



This is the best soundtrack ever created in my opinion. If you could only have 2 albums that capsulized the 90's Alternative & Grunge Rock era then you would need this and the No Alternative compilation.

Download Here

AMG says:

"The romantic comedy Singles, in part a homage to director Cameron Crowe's hometown of Seattle, was released at exactly the right time (summer 1992). Nirvana's Nevermind had symbolically knocked Michael Jackson off the top of the album charts at the beginning of the year, and the underground buzz about Seattle bands like Alice in Chains, Soundgarden, and Pearl Jam was beginning to find its way past circles of indie aficionados and open-minded hard rock fans and into the mainstream. Singles helped crystallize the idea of the "Seattle scene" in the mainstream public's mind, and it was also one of the first big-selling '90s movie soundtracks (it went platinum and reached the Top Ten) to feature largely new work from contemporary artists. The soundtrack's strength was the way it was so firmly rooted in place — where future soundtrack extravaganzas simply contrived to gather as many big-name acts as possible, Singles focused specifically on Seattle-area music (quite logically, given the film's plot and setting), which gave the album the feel of a cohesive document. It didn't hurt that nearly all the bands involved contributed high-quality material — although Nirvana is absent, scene stalwarts Soundgarden, their lead singer Chris Cornell (the haunting acoustic ballad "Seasons"), Alice in Chains ("Would?," which showed up on their subsequent album, Dirt), Mudhoney, Pearl Jam (two tracks), and Screaming Trees all weigh in with strong new cuts, as well as stylistic compatriots Smashing Pumpkins (Chicago) and Minneapolis alt-rock god Paul Westerberg (his first two charmingly playful solo songs). The vaults are mined for chestnuts by Mother Love Bone (the epic "Chloe Dancer/Crown of Thorns," perhaps their strongest moment) and Seattle native Jimi Hendrix (the shimmering "May This Be Love," which fits the mood of the album perfectly), and Seattle sisters Ann and Nancy Wilson, leaders of Heart, appear as the Lovemongers on a stellar acoustic cover of Led Zeppelin's "The Battle of Evermore." Despite Mudhoney's gripe that the whole early-'90s Seattle scene was "Overblown," Singles illustrates through its marvelous consistency the richness and wealth of the city's musical talent, as well as the alternative scene in general; meanwhile, the Lovemongers and Hendrix cuts demonstrate the city's past musical heritage, and along with the Westerberg numbers, provide a handy template of several major (albeit more mainstream) grunge-scene influences — Hendrix's guitar-heavy psychedelia, Led Zeppelin's epic hard rock, the Replacements' post-hardcore power pop — that sit very well next to their followers. So Singles isn't just an entertaining sampler of Seattle grunge in its prime; it's a milestone in the breakthrough of alternative rock into mainstream popular culture, neatly and effectively packaging the Seattle phenomenon for the wider national consciousness. "

Agrimorfee
QUOTE(caley @ Jan 20 2008, 04:05 PM) [snapback]557443[/snapback]
I picked up the Gattaca soundtrack at a book sale for fifty cents. It's soooo good. Michael Nyman is always good, though.


Oh, he did that, too? I'm aware of him through his work for Peter Greenaway. Here's the definitive comp. on that end...

http://www.amazon.com/Essential-Michael-Ny...d/dp/B000004CVW

For those who don't know, it's mimimalist chamber music with just a touch of rock and roll sensibility. I usually HATE this style of music, but something about Nyman's work that is nice and not-so-easy listening for me.

Another composer I have enjoyed is Thomas Newman ("Finding Nemo", "American Beauty", etc.). He creates otherworldly tones, often with unconventional percussion instruments.
Seamus
QUOTE(Saskadelphia @ Jan 20 2008, 12:40 PM) [snapback]557384[/snapback]
I'm really surprised at just how good the I'm Not There soundtrack is.


Indeed. It was gifted to me last Christmas and is really a pleasant surprise.

Anyone mention Rumble Fish yet? Stewart Copeland does a great job with that score.
Duff.
I recall really enjoying the Waking Life soundtrack. Lotsa slightly out of tune strings and wierd time signatures. Can't say I'd enjoy listening to it too much out of context, but it certainly worked as the soundtrack to a dream.
Seamus
And, I was pleased to receive a CD copy of Peter Gabriel's Passion recently. I criss-crossed the lower forty-eight in my trusty Ford Ranger XLT in the 90s (on various road trips) and that tape came with me on every trip.
velocity
I've only seen the second half of the movie so far, but really liked what I heard of the Stranger than Fiction soundtrack.
Northern Voice
QUOTE(velocity @ May 28 2008, 04:15 PM) [snapback]657474[/snapback]
I've only seen the second half of the movie so far, but really liked what I heard of the Stranger than Fiction soundtrack.


Spoon/Britt Daniel = awesomeness guaranteed.
championkid
all wes anderson soundtracks are worthy, especially rushmore.
mouthbreather
QUOTE(Saskadelphia @ Jan 20 2008, 01:40 PM) [snapback]557384[/snapback]
I'm really surprised at just how good the I'm Not There soundtrack is.


It's great - and two heaping discs worth.
Enjoyed it much more than the film.
Legrand
I find myself a huge fan of the old "giallo" italian score masters. Ennio Morricone is mostly famous for his western scores (which some of these composers did too, notably Bruno Nicolai) but my favorites are the sexy thrillers or spy scores he and these others did. Well I think they are those kinds of films, I've actually only seen 3 of the movies on this list (American Astronaut is not from this genre, but a modern musical, and Les Demoiselles de Rochefort is likewise a french musical, and not a thriller but candy fun)
My Top 10 soundtracks are

Bruno Nicolai - Femmine Insaziabili hxxp://www.megaupload.com/?d=BVY8LTDF
Piero Piccioni - La Decima Vittima
Ennio Morricone - Vergogna Schifosi
Michel Legrand - Les Demoiselles de Rochefort
Francis Lai et Pierre Barouh - 13 Jours En France
François de Roubaix - Dernier Domicile Connu/Le Rapace
Krzysztof Komeda - Fearless Vampire Killers
Piero Umiliani - 5 Bambole Per La Luna D'Agosto
Ennio Morricone - Scusi, Facciamo l'Amore?
Billy Nayer Show - American Astronaut
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