Showing posts with label - Soundtracks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label - Soundtracks. Show all posts

November 03, 2019

Published November 03, 2019 by ad-vinylrecords with 0 comment

Soundtrack - All This And World War II (1976) - €9,99




Side A
A1.  Ambrosia - Magical Mystery Tour - 3:52
A2.  Elton John - Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds - 6:11
A3.  Bee Gees - Golden Slumbers / Carry That Weight - 3:12
A4.  Leo Sayer - I Am The Walrus - 3:49
A5.  Bryan Ferry - She's Leaving Home - 3:07
A6.  Roy Wood - Lovely Rita - 1:13
A7.  Keith Moon - When I'm Sixty-Four - 2:36

Side B
B1.  Rod Stewart - Get Back - 4:24
B2.  Leo Sayer - Let It Be - 3:43
B3.  David Essex - Yesterday - 2:44
B4.  Jeff Lynne - With A Little Help From My Friends / Nowhere Man - 6:56
B5.  Lynsey De Paul - Because - 3:24
B6.  Bee Gees - She Came In Through The Bathroom Window - 1:54
B7.  Richard Cocciante - Michelle - 4:00

Side C
C1.  The Four Seasons - We Can Work It Out - 2:39
C2.  Helen Reddy - The Fool On The Hill - 3:37
C3.  Frankie Laine - Maxwell's Silver Hammer - 3:27
C4.  Brothers Johnson - Hey Jude (Vocals – The Watts Line) - 4:58
C5.  Roy Wood - Polythene Pam - 1:30
C6.  Bee Gees - Sun King - 2:03
C7.  Status Quo - Getting Better - 2:19

Side D
D1.  Leo Sayer - The Long And Winding Road - 4:45
D2.  Henry Gross - Help - 3:07
D3.  Peter Gabriel - Strawberry Fields Forever - 2:30
D4.  Frankie Valli - A Day In The Life - 4:04
D5.  Tina Turner - Come Together - 4:08
D6.  Wil Malone & Lou Reizner - You Never Give Me Your Money - 3:04
D7.  The London Symphony Orchestra - The End - 2:26

Released:  1976
Format:  2 × Vinyl, LP, Album
Genre:  Rock, Pop
Label:  Warner Bros. Records ‎
Catalog#  WB 66 049

Vinyl:  Goed
Cover:  Goed

Prijs: €9,99

      edit

September 03, 2018

Published September 03, 2018 by ad-vinylrecords with 0 comment

Soundtrack - The Sting (1974) - Lp
















Release:  1974
Genre:  Soundtrack / Ragtime
Format:   LP
Label:   MCA Records
Catalog#  5C 062-95096
Prijs:  €10,00


The soundtrack to the film The Sting made a huge impact on the public at large, and brought with it a resurgence of interest in Ragtime music in general. The Soundtrack album has cover notes by the director George Roy Hill which tell the background story.
Hill had become hooked on Ragtime from hearing his son and nephew play rags by Scott Joplin on the piano and at round about the same time as he was putting thoughts together for The Sting movie.

A connection formed in his mind that these rags would be an ideal accompaniment to the movie, with their assured sense of humour. Initially Hill was going to provide the soundtrack himself before he abandoned that idea and called in Marvin Hamlisch.
Hamlisch took Hill's ideas and developed them into the soundtrack we all know and love. The finished movie sports a number of straightforward tracks of Hamlisch playing Scott Joplin originals at the piano.

There are also a number of orchestral arrangements of Joplin rags, some custom built tracks by Hamlisch himself (including a truly raunchy "Hooker's Hooker"), a jaunty jazz violin piece called "Little Girl" and some Merry-go-round music.
It is the Ragtime which everyone remembers and in particular the title track based on Joplin's The Entertainer.
So closely associated has this piece become to the film that the music is often called simply "The Sting".

Among other Joplin rags featured are The Easy Winners (appropriate to the film's conman philosophy), the Pineapple Rag, Gladiolus Rag, Rag Time Dance and special mention must go to Solace which features in both piano and orchestral versions.
The mood of this haunting melody seems to capture the real hardships present during the Depression and acts as a poignant counterbalance to the jaunty confidence of the other rags.


Side A
A1. Solace (Orchestra Version)  – 3:35
A2.  The Entertainer (Orchestra Version)  – 2:30
A3.  Easy Winners  – 2:44
A4.  Hooker’s Hooker  – 2:48
A5.  Luther  – 3:08
A6.  Pineapple Rag / Gladiolus Rag  – 2:32

Side B
B1.  The Entertainer (Piano Version)  – 2:32
B2.  The Glove  – 1:46
B3.  Little Girl  – 2:00
B4.  Pineapple Rag  – 2:35
B5.  Merry-Go-Round Music (Listen To The Mocking Bird / Darling Nellie Grey / Turkey In The Straw)  – 2:44
B6.  Solace (Piano Version)  – 3:35
B7.  The Entertainer / Ragtime Dance  – 3:45

Album:  Goed
Cover:  Goed
      edit

September 27, 2015

Published September 27, 2015 by ad-vinylrecords with 0 comment

Soundtrack - The Wiz (2LP)
























Side A
A1.  Main Title (Overture, Part One)  (2:34) 
A2.  Overture (Part Two)  (2:03) 
A3.  The Feeling That We Have   (3:30)  
A4.  Can I Go On ?   (1:56)  
A5.  Glinda's Theme   (1:09)  
A6.  He's The Wizard   (2:52)  
A7.  Soon As I Get Home/Home   (4:01) 

Side B
B1.  You Can't Win  (3:14)  
B2.  Ease On Down The Road  (3:19)  
B3.  What Would I Do If I Could Feel?  (2:18)  
B4.  Slide Some Oil To Me  (2:19)  
B5.  Ease On Down The Road  (1:30)  
B6.  (I'm A) Mean One Lion  (2:23)  
B7.  Ease On Down The Road  (1:24)  
B8.  Poppy Girls  (3:27) 

Side C
C1.  Be A Lion  (4:04)  
C2.  End Of The Yellow Brick Road  (1:01)  
C3.  Emerald City Sequence  (6:41)
C4.  So You Wanted To See The Wizard  (2:48) 
C5.  Is This What Feeling Gets (Dorothy's Theme)   (3:13) 

Side D
D1.  Don't Nobody Bring Me Bad News  (3:01)  
D2.  A Brand New Day  (7:51)
       (a) Liberation Agitato  (0:54)  
       (b) A Brand New Day (Everybody Rejoice)(Part One)  (2:29)  
       (c) Liberation Ballet / A Brand New Day (Everybody Rejoice)(Part Two)   (4:23)  
D3.  Believe In Yourself (Dorothy)  (2:54) 
D4.  The Good Witch Glinda  (1:10)  
D5.  Believe In Yourself (Reprise)  (2:13)  
D6.  Home  (3:27) 

Release:  1978
Label:  MCA Records (2LP)
Catalog#  0082.064-2

order / bestellen € 20,00
      edit

August 04, 2015

Published August 04, 2015 by ad-vinylrecords with 0 comment

Soundtrack - Moonraker (1979)













Artist:  Soundtrack (by John Barry)
Title:  Moonraker
Release:  1979
Format:  LP
Label:  United Artist Records
Catalog#  5C 062-82696

“Moonraker” is the soundtrack for the 11th James Bond film of the same name.
It was also the third of the three Bond films for which the theme song was performed by Shirley Bassey. Kate Bush and Frank Sinatra were both considered for the vocals, before Johnny Mathis was approached and offered the opportunity. Mathis was unhappy about the song and withdrew from the project, leaving the producers to offer the song to Bassey within just weeks of the release date. As a result Bassey made the recordings with very short notice and as a result, she never regarded the song ‘as her own’ as she had never had the chance to perform it or promote it first. The film uses two versions of the title theme song, a ballad version heard over the main titles, and a disco version for the end titles. Confusingly, the United Artists single release labelled the tracks on the 7? single as “Moonraker (Main Title)” for the version used to close the film and “Moonraker (End Title)” for the track that opened the film. The song failed to make any real impact on the charts, which may partly be attributed to Bassey’s failure to promote the single, given the last minute decision and the way in which it was quickly recorded to meet the schedule.


Side one
1.  Shirley Bassey – Moonraker (Main Title)  (3:07)
2.  Space Lazer Battle  (2:43)
3.  Miss Goodhead Meets Bond  (2:44)
4.  Cable Car and Snake Fight  (3:04)
5.  Bond Lured to Pyramid  (2:02)

Side two
1.  Flight into Space  (6:26)
2.  Bond Arrives in Rio and Boat Chase  (2:34)
3.  Centrifuge and Corrine Put Down  (2:32)
4.  Bond Smells a Rat  (2:21)
5.  Shirley Bassey – Moonraker (End Title)  (2:28)

http://www.ad-vinylrecords.com/component/virtuemart/?page=shop.product_details&flypage=flypage.tpl&category_id=3&product_id=1401
      edit

July 27, 2015

Published July 27, 2015 by ad-vinylrecords with 0 comment

Soundtrack - Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence (1983)













Artist:  Soundtrack
Title:  Merry Christmas Mr. Lawrence
Release:  1983
Format:  LP
Label:  Virgin Records
Catalog#  205494

The film is notable for its soundtrack, by Ryuichi Sakamoto. The main score, which bears the same title as the movie, ranks among Sakamoto’s most well-known songs and made him known to a broader public. The soundtrack also contains the vocal version of this title track, better known as “Forbidden Colours” with lyrics sung and composed by David Sylvian.
“Forbidden Colours” was the single released to promote the movie. It sounds as if Sakomoto and Seigen Ono created the entire instrumental soundtrack in Tokyo, but then the western producer decided a vocal-based track was needed for the single. I would guess that the opening instrumental track was sent to David Sylvian (singer from the band ‘Japan’!), who then pasted his vocals over the top.


Side one
01.  Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence  (4:36)
02.  Batavia  (1:18)
03.  Germination  (1:49)
04.  A Hearty Breakfast  (1:22)
05.  Before the War  (2:15)
06.  The Seed and the Sower  (5:01)
07.  A Brief Encounter  (2:22)
08.  Ride, Ride, Ride (Celliers’ Brother’s Song)  (1:04)
09.  The Fight  (1:29)

Side two
01.  Father Christmas  (2:07)
02.  Dismissed  (0:09)
03.  Assembly  (2:17)
04.  Beyond Reason  (2:01)
05.  Sowing the Seed  (1:54)
06.  23rd Psalm  (2:02)
07.  Last Regrets  (1:43)
08.  Ride, Ride, Ride (Reprise)  (1:05)
09.  The Seed  (1:03)
10.  Forbidden Colours (Vocals by: David Sylvian)  (4:42)

available at: http://www.ad-vinylrecords.com
      edit

March 24, 2015

Published March 24, 2015 by ad-vinylrecords with 0 comment

Soundtrack - American Gigolo (1980)














Artist:  Soundtrack
Title:  American Gigolo
Release:  1980
Format:  LP
Label:  Polydor Records
Catalog#  2391447

“American Gigolo” is the soundtrack album to the 1980 movie of the same name, starring Richard Gere and Lauren Hutton. The music was composed and performed by Giorgio Moroder and was released worldwide on the Polydor label.
While this soundtrack is arguably most notable for introducing Middle America to Blondie, there is also some interesting incidental music written by legendary producer Giorgio Moroder and performed by Harold Faltermeyer and Keith Forsey.
The album’s pervading heavily manufactured and synthetically generated atmosphere is convincing in its aural depiction of the shallow decadence portrayed on the screen. The primary impetus for the release was the “extended version” of Blondie’s “Call Me,” which was unavailable on any Blondie album and was too long at over eight minutes to fit onto a single. The song was co-composed by Debbie Harry and Moroder specifically for this project, becoming the second chart-topper for the band, ultimately staying at number one for six weeks in March of 1980.
The film’s writer/director Paul Schrader is credited on the soundtrack as Moroder’s collaborator on the up-tempo “Love and Passion.” actress/vocalist Cheryl Barnes contributes vocals to the mostly forgettable track. The other six instrumentals blend a noir ambience with the utility of background music. The most notable is “Hello Mr. W.A.M” whose initials stand for Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart which contains some interesting observations on his Concerto for Clarinet in A Major. Each work contains strong themes that take on lives of their own. This is not surprising given the heady talent behind the compositions and performances.


Side one
1.  Call Me (Theme From American Gigolo) (Vocals: Blondie)  (8:04)
2.  Love And Passion (Vocals: Cheryl Barnes)  (6:34)
3.  Night Drive  (3:52)

Side two
1.  Hello Mr. W.A.M. (Finale)  (4:30)
2.  The Apartment  (4:27)
3.  Palm Springs Drive  (3:22)
4.  Night Drive (Reprise)  (2:50)
5.  The Seduction (Love Theme)  (3:14)

available at: http://www.ad-vinylrecords.com
      edit

February 16, 2015

Published February 16, 2015 by ad-vinylrecords with 0 comment

Soundtrack - E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1983)














Artist:  Soundtrack
Title:  E.T.
Release:  1983
Format:  LP
Label:  MCA Records
Catalog#  204889

“E.T”. the Extra-Terrestrial: Music from the Original Soundtrack is an album containing John Williams' score for the 1982 Steven Spielberg film of the same name.
The original soundtrack issue was a recording of concert arrangements based on the film's music. The score was recorded in Los Angeles, and thus not using the London Symphony Orchestra.
On the track "The Magic of Halloween," when E.T. sees a child wearing a Yoda costume, John Williams included a portion of Yoda's theme, which he had composed for The Empire Strikes Back in 1980.


Side one
1. Three Million Light Years From Earth   (2:57)  
2. Abandoned And Pursued   (2:58)  
3. E.T. And Me   (4:49)  
4. E.T.'s Halloween   (4:07)  
5. Flying   (3:20) 

Side two
1. E.T. Phone Home   (4:18)  
2. Over The Moon   (2:06)  
3. Adventure On Earth   (15:06)

available at: http://www.ad-vinylrecords.com
      edit

January 14, 2014

Published January 14, 2014 by ad-vinylrecords with 0 comment

Soundtrack - Thank God It´s Friday (1978) - 2Lp














Artist:  Soundtrack
Title:  Thank God It´s Friday
Release:  1978
Format:  2 LP
Label:  Casablanca Records
Catalog#  TGIF 100-1

The soundtrack album “Thank God It´s Friday” is originally issued as a 3 record set in 1978, of which the 3rd record was a single side, 12 inch single of the 15:47 minutes Donna Summer, “Je T’aime track”. Cameo’s “Find My Way” was originally issued as a 7? single in 1975. Giorgio Moroder and Donna Summer’s cover version of Serge Gainsbourg and Jane Birkin’s 1969 hit single “Je t’aime… moi non plus” was also recorded a few years earlier, had its debut on the soundtrack and was subsequently issued as an edited 7? single in a few countries in 1978. “Too Hot Ta Trot” was from The Commodores’ 1977 album Commodores Live! – on certain editions of the Thank God It’s Friday album replaced by a studio recording. Other titles on the soundtrack, including “Last Dance”, were especially recorded for the film. Among the songs heard in the movie but not issued on the soundtrack album are Alec R. Costandinos’ “Romeo and Juliet”, Giorgio Moroder’s “From Here to Eternity”, The Originals’ “Down to Love Town”, D.C. LaRue’s “You Can Always Tell a Lady (By the Company She Keeps)” and The Commodores’ “Brick House”. Diana Ross’ “Lovin’ Livin’ and Givin’” was remixed after the release of the soundtrack and used as the opening track on her 1978 album Ross. It was also released as a single in certain territories and has since been remixed and re-edited a number of times for inclusion on various hits packages issued by Motown/Universal Music.
The final part of Donna Summer’s “Last Dance” is later re-included as a separate track called ‘Reprise’ towards the end of the soundtrack album.

Side one
1.   Love And Kisses – Thank God It’s Friday   (4:16)
2.   Pattie Brooks – After Dark   (7:55)
3.   Donna Summer – With Your Love   (4:00)
4.   Donna Summer – Last Dance   (7:10)

Side two
1.   Paul Jabara – Disco Queen   (3:46)
2.   Cameo – Find My Way   (4:57)
3.   Commodores – Too Hot Ta Trot   (3:309
4.   Wright Bros. Flying Machine – Leatherman’s Theme   (3:25)
5.   Marathon – I Wanna Dance   (6:00)

Side Three
1.   Sunshine – Take It To The Zoo   (8:00)
2.   Santa Esmeralda – Sevilla Nights   (6:08)
3.   Love And Kisses – You’re The Most Precious Thing In My Life   (8:02)

Side four
1.   D. C. La Rue – Do You Want The Real Thing   (4:42)
2.   Paul Jabara – Trapped In A Stairway   (3:30)
3.   Natural Juices – Floyd’s Theme   (2:58)
4.   Diana Ross – Livin’, Lovin’, Givin’   (3:30)
5.   Thelma Houston – Love Masterpiece   (4:03)
6.   Donna Summer – Last Dance (Reprise)   (3:17)

Special Bonus 12inch Single
1.   Donna Summer – Je T’Aime (Moi Non Plus)   (15:51)

available at: http://www.ad-vinylrecords.com
      edit
Published January 14, 2014 by ad-vinylrecords with 0 comment

Soundtrack - Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (1978) - 2Lp

















Artist:  Soundtrack
Title:  Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band
Release:  1978
Format:  2 LP
Label:  RSO Records
Catalog#  RS 2-4100

“Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” was a multi-platinum double album produced by George Martin, featuring covers of songs by The Beatles. It was released in July 1978, as the soundtrack to the film Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, which starred the Bee Gees, Peter Frampton and Steve Martin. The project was managed by The Robert Stigwood Organisation.
 Like the album itself, the soundtrack to the 1978 film “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” is a legend in its own right. Where the Beatles’ album was a groundbreaking moment in pop music, the Robert Stigwood film was an unmitigated disaster, an embarrassment not only to the Beatles, but to everyone involved in the production. Nevertheless, as the years passed and ’70s nostalgia grew, certain kitsch fanatics revealed an affection for the debacle. A few performers try to give their best, witness Earth, Wind & Fire’s “Got to Get You into My Life,” Aerosmith’s “Come Together,” and Billy Preston’s “Get Back”, but there’s no erasing the fact that this is an absolutely atrocious record, one that was simply beyond saving. There’s really no excuse for such mind-boggling mismatches as George Burns’ “Fixing a Hole,” Alice Cooper’s “Because,” Steve Martin’s “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer,” or all the endless, awkward numbers from the Bee Gees, Peter Frampton, and Frankie Howard. It’s so bad that it’s not even camp, and only those with truly twisted senses of humor, or who need every ’70s artifact, will find it tolerable.

Side one
1.   Introducing Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band   (4:42)
      Bee Gees and Paul Nicholas – Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band   (1:56)
      Peter Frampton and The Bee Gees – With a Little Help from My Friends   (2:46)
2.   Sandy Farina – Here Comes The Sun   (3:45)
3.   Peter Frampton, The Bee Gees – Getting Better   (2:46)
4.   Dianne Steinberg and Stargard – Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds   (3:41)
5.   George Martin, Peter Frampton, Donald Pleasence, Dianne Steinberg, Paul Nicholas, Bee Gees,
      Stargard – I Want You (She’s So Heavy)   (6:31)

Side two
1.   Paul Nicholas, Peter Frampton and The Bee Gees – Good Morning Good Morning   (1:58)
2.   Steven Tyler, The Bee Gees, Jay MacIntosh and John Wheeler – She’s Leaving Home   (2:41)
3.   Paul Nicholas and Dianne Steinberg – You Never Give Me Your Money   (3:07)
4.   Robin Gibb – Oh! Darling   (3:21)
5.   Steve Martin and The Vocal Chorus – Maxwell’s Silver Hammer   (4:31)
6.   Rise To Stardom Suite   (5:11)
      (a) Bee Gees – Polythene Pam   (0:38)
      (b) Peter Frampton and The Bee Gees – She Came in Through the Bathroom Window   (1:46)
      (c) Bee Gees – Nowhere Man (1:14)
      (d) Peter Frampton and The Bee Gees – Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band (Reprise)   (1:33)

Side three
1.   Earth, Wind & Fire – Got To Get You Into My Life   (3:36)
2.   Sandy Farina – Strawberry Fields Forever   (3:31)
3.   Frankie Howerd and Sandy Farina – When I’m Sixty-Four   (2:40)
4.   Frankie Howerd, Steven Tyler, Bee Gees – Mean Mr. Mustard   (2:46)
5.   George Burns – Fixing A Hole   (2:25)
6.   Alice Cooper and The Bee Gees – Because   (2:45)
7.   The Death Of Strawberry   (3:24)
      (a) Peter Frampton – Golden Slumbers   (1:39)
      (b) Bee Gees – Carry That Weight   (1:45)

Side four
1.   Aerosmith – Come Together   (3:46)
2.   Maurice Gibb, Peter Frampton, Bee Gees, George Burns – Being for the Benefit of Mr. Kite!   
      (3:12)
3.   Peter Frampton – The Long and Winding Road   (3:40)
4.   Barry Gibb and The Bee Gees – A Day in the Life   (5:11)
5.   Billy Preston – Get Back   (2:56)
6.   The Cast – Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band [Finale]   (2:13)

available at: http://www.ad-vinylrecords.com
      edit

August 14, 2012

Published August 14, 2012 by ad-vinylrecords with 0 comment

Soundtrack - Roadie (1980) - 2Lp

Artist:   Soundtrack
Title:   Roadie
Year:   1980
Format:   2 LP
Label:   Warner Bros.
Genre:  Country, Pop, Rock, Soul
Catalog#   WB 66093

Marvin Lee Aday, (aka Meat Loaf) accelerated the descent of his '70s constellation by starring in the drive-in dissipation Roadie at the dawn of the (then) new decade. Somebody from everywhere on the musical map pops up on this delectable double soundtrack, representing a confounding cross-section of (then) contemporary commercialism, though Meat himself doesn't do a number (apparently, he keeps his acting and rocking separate). Most of the songs (Alice Cooper's "Road Rats," " "Brainlock" by Joe Ely) on side one even concern the negligible script of the picture. Cheap Trick's killer opener shotguns the protagonist's motto "Everything Works If You Let It" into an unholy marriage of "Spirit of Radio" and "Hey Jude." This George Martin-ated miracle alone blows away side two, where Teddy Pendergrass, Jay Ferguson, Steven Bishop, and Yvonne Elliman appear out of nowhere. At least Eddie Rabbitt's dandy "Driving My Life Away" picks up the slack. As for side three, Blondie's rippin' read of "Ring of Fire" used to be rare, and Sue Sadd and the Next remain rare. The only artist with two cuts, Coop's cool "Pain" leads to the grand finale featuring Roy Orbison, Emmylou Harris, Jerry Lee Lewis, Hank Williams, Jr., and (whew) Asleep at the Wheel. Slip in some classic corporate rock from Styx and Pat Benatar and the result is a sampler of sizzling insanity.


Side one
1.   Cheap Trick - Everything Works If You Let It   (3:27)
2.   Pat Benatar - You Better Run   (3:04)
3.   Joe Ely Band - Brainlock   (2:54)
4.   Alice Cooper - Road Rats   (2:44)

Side two
1.   Teddy Pendergrass - Can't We Try   (5:03)
2.   Eddie Rabbitt - Drivin' My Life Away   (3:14)
3.   Stephen Bishop and Yvonne Elliman - Your Precious Love   (4:18)
4.   Jay Ferguson - A Man Needs A Woman   (3:48)

Side three
1.  Styx - Crystal Ball   (5:55)
2.  Sue Saad And The Next - Double Yellow Line   (2:49)
3.  Blondie - Ring Of Fire   (3:34)
4.  Alice Cooper - Pain   (4:01)

Side four
1.   Roy Orbison and Emmylou Harris - That Lovin' You Feelin' Again   (4:09)
2.   Jerry Lee Lewis - (Hot Damn) I'm A One Woman Man   (2:46)
3.   Hank Williams, Jr. - The American Way   (3:04)
4.   Asleep At The Wheel - Texas, Me And You   (3:50)
      edit