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Watchmen: the music
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<blockquote data-quote="Dannyalcatraz" data-source="post: 4677081" data-attributes="member: 19675"><p>Hilariously, despite being a music junkie, the only one of those clips whose music I recognized* was Orff's <em>O Fortuna</em>, which technically doesn't meet the criteria I was asking about it was written in the 1930's, and not for a specific film.</p><p></p><p>Also amusing to me is that by checking out this thread and listening to the clips, I realized that you can get them all to play at once...</p><p></p><p>* I have seen all of the Alien and LoTR movies, but the music didn't make a huge impression on me- at least not enough for it to be recognizable to me. Oh well!</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>The most famous example of this that I know of is Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. The music we think of as the movie's score was just a placeholder, and was sent to the composer Alex North to inspire him.</p><p></p><p>By the time Alex North delivered the score he was commissioned to write, Kubrick had decided that his temporary score with <em>Also Sprach Zarathustra</em> and <em>The Blue Danube</em></p><p></p><p>Another unusual score comes from the movie Dead Man: Neil Young recorded it by improvising on his electric guitar (and other instruments) as he watched the newly edited film alone in a recording studio.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dannyalcatraz, post: 4677081, member: 19675"] Hilariously, despite being a music junkie, the only one of those clips whose music I recognized* was Orff's [I]O Fortuna[/I], which technically doesn't meet the criteria I was asking about it was written in the 1930's, and not for a specific film. Also amusing to me is that by checking out this thread and listening to the clips, I realized that you can get them all to play at once... * I have seen all of the Alien and LoTR movies, but the music didn't make a huge impression on me- at least not enough for it to be recognizable to me. Oh well! The most famous example of this that I know of is Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey. The music we think of as the movie's score was just a placeholder, and was sent to the composer Alex North to inspire him. By the time Alex North delivered the score he was commissioned to write, Kubrick had decided that his temporary score with [I]Also Sprach Zarathustra[/I] and [I]The Blue Danube[/I] Another unusual score comes from the movie Dead Man: Neil Young recorded it by improvising on his electric guitar (and other instruments) as he watched the newly edited film alone in a recording studio. [/QUOTE]
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