Discussion on new albums, developing listening skills, critical listening to others' work, as well as TOMB members' MP3 links, online recording critiques
Moderator: cgarges
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Knights Who Say Neve
- buyin' a studio
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by Knights Who Say Neve » Thu Mar 30, 2006 12:23 pm
myphx wrote:Apocalypse Now....
And not just the reworking of "The End", but all the atmospheric ethereal stuff, too. Wow....gotta dig that out, now.
Rhythm Devils- Apocalypse Now Sessions- (Rykodisc)
All the Mickey Hart/Bill Kreutzmann & Co. atmospheric stuff, at full length.
Tasty.
"What you're saying is, unlike all the other writers, if it was really new, you'd know it was new when you heard it, and you'd love it. <b>That's a hell of an assumption</b>". -B. Marsalis
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Ivon
- steve albini likes it
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by Ivon » Thu Apr 06, 2006 10:09 pm
Logun's Run. The Andromeda Strain. Harold and Maude. ...Off the top of my head.
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Michael.E
- gettin' sounds
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by Michael.E » Tue Sep 26, 2006 6:40 am
joeysimms wrote:In no particular order..
Ennio Morricone
Nino Rota
Henry Mancini
Bernard Hermann
John Barry
Jack Nitzsche
and.. the Bollywood heavies:
R.D. Burman
S.D. Burman
Kaljanji Anandji
I agree with everyone on your list.
PLUS, I'll add these to boot:
- Max Steiner
- Alfred Newman
- Dimitri Tiomkin
- Georges Delerue
other bollywood heavies:
- Naushad Ali
- Shankar-Jaikishen (Duo)
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Calvin
- audio school
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by Calvin » Sun Oct 15, 2006 11:08 pm
Another plug for Badalamenti, Morricone, Elfman, etc. (so many great talents).
However, I'm a complete sucker for anything from Thomas Newman. As mentioned by others previously: American Beauty, Shawshank Redemtion, Road to Perdition. I also love his score for the Horse Whisperer. The list goes on.
I also really dug the way Spike Lee used Aaron Copeland for "He Got Game."
Calvin
"They have ears to hear, but hear not"
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Monkeyfist
- re-cappin' neve
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by Monkeyfist » Mon Oct 16, 2006 10:45 pm
True Romance Soundtrack. Awesome Stuff!
Also Where the Buffalo Roam is pretty Yardcore...
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Monkeyfist
- re-cappin' neve
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by Monkeyfist » Mon Oct 16, 2006 10:47 pm
iwokojance wrote:Logun's Run. The Andromeda Strain. Harold and Maude. ...Off the top of my head.
And Harold and Maude I must Second as well.
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CabreeToe
- alignin' 24-trk
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by CabreeToe » Tue Oct 17, 2006 1:31 am
Jerry Goldsmith- Poltergeist- (somewhat cheesy with the "la la la" girls choir but everything else was rockin') just saw it last night
El Maquinista (the Machinist) - composed by Roque Ba?os "lots of theremin"
just like PSYCHO, and The Day the Earth Stood Still!
ditto Requiem for a Dream, Clint Mansell
Elmer Bernstein - responsible for the classics like Animal House and Ghostbusters!
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phillyphife
- audio school
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by phillyphife » Thu Oct 19, 2006 12:12 pm
Toru Takemitsu - Kurosawa's fave
and Nathan Johnson and China Kent "Brick"
www.myspace.com/bricksoundtrack
mixed feelings about the movie but the soundtrack was fun
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high five
- gettin' sounds
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by high five » Sat Oct 21, 2006 7:59 pm
Jon Brion's work is always great (Hard Eight, Eternal Sunshine, I Heart Huckabees, Punch-Drunk Love, Magnolia) and the soundtracks to Wes Anderson's films are always great (Mark Mothersbaugh and a good selection of pop/rock music). Air's music on Virgin Suicides is great too. That Bjork musical "Dancer in the Dark" was interesting, but I guess it's not exactly a film score.
Last edited by
high five on Mon Oct 23, 2006 7:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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spectralgrey
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by spectralgrey » Sun Oct 22, 2006 2:31 pm
I dig a lot of what's been mentioned already (Morricone, Goblin, Wendy Carlos, Jon Brion, Mark Mothersbaugh, Danny Elfman, Air, Kevin Shields, The Holy Mountain...), but one that nobody's mentioned so far is Tobe Hooper's score for the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre. There's barely a single melody in the whole thing and it's totally effective. Another one I like is the original Night Of The Living Dead. As the situation in the film gets worse and worse, the score degenerates into primitive synth madness.
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GooberNumber9
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by GooberNumber9 » Mon Oct 30, 2006 7:50 pm
Good stuff all around, I really love all the Stanley Kubrick ones.
I got an unusual one for ya'll:
The Akira soundtrack.
Track 1: HUGE taiko drum orchestra and chorus
Track 4: Incredible sampled/sequenced balinese gamelon orchestra, chorus, and organ thing!?!?
Track 6: Buddist chanting somehow made musical through the miracles of modern technology
Track 9: Traditional Japanese Noh theatre?!?!?
Somehow it all works and sounds awesome, although it does have a very digital 80's grainy converters kinda sound.
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lachiehawk
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by lachiehawk » Mon Oct 30, 2006 10:08 pm
Lynch/Badalamenti - Fire Walk with Me, Twin Peaks, Elephant Man, Dune(toto), Lost Highway, Wild at Heart!! etc.
Jim Jarmusch - Deadman!, Ghostdog(RZA), Mystery Train, etc.
Ill second Jojimbo, the last fight scene that just comes in on the highhat is so fukn good. Infact all the Kurosawa movies Ive seen have great soundtracks.
Wes Anderson movie sountracks are like really cool mixtapes.
tis all I can think of.
Lachie
PS. If anyone has vinyl copies of said sountracks Id love to trade/buy from you!
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Mudcloth
- steve albini likes it
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by Mudcloth » Mon Oct 30, 2006 11:07 pm
"The Hot Spot". Dennis Hopper film with a young Jennifer Connelly and Don Johnson. Jack Nitzsche score with Miles Davis, John Lee Hooker, Taj Mahal, Earl Palmer, and more. So low down. I lost my copy but just found one on the ebay. The cuts with Miles and Hooker are bad ass. The movie is pretty good, too.
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Veej007
- gimme a little kick & snare
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by Veej007 » Tue Oct 31, 2006 9:58 pm
i went in skeptical, but i must say that rza really pulled some shit out on kill bill. i've never heard anything quite like it, whether in a soundtrack or elsewhere.
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