| 1. Loppy Octopus | |||
| 2. Little Napoleon | |||
| 3. Sexual Honky | |||
| 4. DJ Clusterfuk | |||
| 5. Dolowite | |||
| 6. Pedro Dildi Experience | |||
| 7. King Latifa | |||
| 8. Mobutu | |||
| 9. Loppy Octupus | |||
| 10. Frohdawg | |||
| 11. Little Napoleon | |||
| 12. DJ Clusterfuk | |||
| 13. Butterfingers | |||
| 14. T-Bologna All Stars | |||
| 15. Dolowite | |||
| 16. DJ Clusterfuk | |||
| 17. Blaklip | |||
| 18. Pedro Dildi Experience | |||
| 19. Mobutu | |||
| 20. Vic Fresh | |||
|
See all 26 tracks on this disc
| |||
War of the Worlds,T-Bone's Records,T-Bone's,Pop,Rap Collections,Rock
Average customer rating:
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Jeff Wayne's Musical Version Of The War Of The Worlds
Jeff Wayne Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0009MAPUO Release Date: 2005-07-05 |
Tracks:
- The Eve Of War
- Horsell Common And The Heat Ray
- The Artilleryman And The Fighting Machine
- Forever Autumn
- Thunder Child
Tracks:
- The Red Weed (Part 1)
- The Spirit Of Man
- The Red Weed (Part 2)
- Artilleryman (Part 2)
- Brave New World
- Dead London
- Epilogue (Part 1)
- Epilogue (Part 2) (Nasa)
Amazon.com
In hindsight, it seems almost incredible: 27 years ago, a young musician named Jeff Wayne (who at the time primarily wrote music for commercials) fell in love with H.G. Wells' much-loved book The War of the Worlds, and decided to make a musical version of it. Star Wars had just put people's minds into outer space, musical theatre was hugely successful, and long, anthemic orchestral prog-rock was all the rage. Wayne was inspired by all these elements and decided to gather together his peers and make a musical-mixed-with-spoken-word album, with the script taken directly from the famous book. This was by no means a soundtrack to a movie; in fact, all of the visuals were to come straight from the listener's minds (hard to imagine in today's video-oriented world.) The two-LP set featured Sir Richard Burton as frontman, along with some of the leaders of the progressive rock world who joined in on the fun. Moody Blues' Justin Hayward, "Rock On" vocalist David Essex and Thin Lizzy lead Philip Lynott each did more than sing on the record, they took a part in the musical play, performing key roles alongside the aforementioned dramatist Burton.Amazingly, the eccentric project was a massive success, selling over 13 million copies and staying on the U.K. charts for over 260 weeks straight. DJs and bands--including the Orbital and Todd Terry--still use WOTW samples to inspire their own works. Unquestionably, the genesis of electronica can (in part) be mapped back to the War of the Worlds' use of sound experimentation and synthesized grooves.
The re-released double CD got a revamping both on an auditory and visual front: on the sonic side, the collection is now a remastered disc, mixed both in stereo and 5.1 surround sound. On the cosmetic side, the collection is now a six-panel digipack, with 48 pages of lyrics, biographies, and a handful of paintings from the original artwork. The music comes as a pair of Super Audio CDs (SACDs), a technology that will play both in standard and SACD players, the latter receiving up to four more times the sonic information for superior sound quality. --Denise Sheppard
Album Description
Original double album re-packaged into deluxe 6 panel digi-pak. Includes:* 2 Hybrid SACDs - The original double album remixed in stereo and multi-channel 5.1 surround sound from the original 48 track master tapes by Jeff Wayne.
* Expanded 48 page full color booklet with new artwork, sleeve notes and content
Customer Reviews:
War Of The Worlds Superb!.......2007-07-26
War of the Worlds.......2007-02-17
Jeff Waynes War of the Worlds.......2007-01-04
One of a kind!.......2006-12-31
Good stuff never fades away.......2006-12-21
Average customer rating:
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War of the Worlds
Orson Welles & the Mercury Theatre Manufacturer: Collectables ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0009HLDB4 Release Date: 2005-06-28 |
Tracks:
- War of the Worlds
Customer Reviews:
a landmark.......2007-06-18
Timeless classic.......2005-08-29
of U.S. citizens, (Kane?) :) It's style (radioplay) is realistic
done, that's why it's a bit boring to start with, (like the movie 2001 of Stanley Kubrick) but it then, gets tense,
in short, it follows the story of Herbert George Wells closely,
Just like Justin Hayward's musical version, (using Richard Burton
as narrator)
So with this cd you can hear the perfect sounding voice of Orson
again...in the play he did in his Mercury Theatre,
The reason why so many people thought this show was "the real thing", is because on a other radio station a very populair comedy show just ended, and those people didn't hear the start
of this radioplay, many people called the station, Orson said
he was sorry but also, that it was Haloween !
Average customer rating:
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The Science Fiction Album
Various Artists Manufacturer: Silva America ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000066HE5 Release Date: 2005-02-08 |
Tracks:
- 2001: A Space Odyssey
- Aliens
- Sound Effect - The Nostromo
- Alien
- A.I.
- Armageddon
- Sound Effect - Apollo 13 Lift-off
- Apollo 13
- Back To The Future
- Battle Beyond The Stars
- Battlestar Galactica
- The Black Hole
- Contact
- Capricorn One
- Close Encounters of the Third Kind
- The Day The Earth Stood Still
- Dune
Tracks:
- Galaxy Quest
- Sound Effect - Dogfight in Space
- Enemy Mine
- Ghostbusters
- Gremlins
- Heavy Metal
- Independence Day
- E.T.
- Judge Dredd
- The Last Starfighter
- Lifeforce
- Sound Effect - Crash Landing
- Lost In Space
- Mars Attacks
- The Matrix
- Predator
- The Right Stuff
Tracks:
- Moonraker
- Robocop
- Silent Running
- Sound Effect - Alien Organism
- Species
- Stargate
- Starship Troopers
- Starman
- Star Trek - TV Theme
- Star Trek: The Motion Picture End Title
- Klingon Attack
- Sound Effect - Warp Drive
- Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
- Star Trek: Generations
- Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home
Tracks:
- Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country
- Sound Effect - Transporter Crew
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine - Main Theme
- Star Trek First Contact
- Star Wars
- The Empire Strikes Back
- The Empire Strikes Back
- Return of the Jedi
- Sound Effect - Battle Stations
- Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace - The Flag Parade
- Anakin's Theme
- The Adventures of Jar Jar
- Duel of the Fates
- The Time Machine
- Things to Come
- The Thing From Another World
- War of the Worlds
- When Worlds Collide
- Total Recall
- You Only Live Twice
- Superman
Customer Reviews:
The penultimate collection ..........2006-12-07
I have always had a weak spot for (good, or maybe even intelligent) science fiction/fantasy and film music, especially its way of evoking mystery, grandure and wide open spaces. Call it a weakness if you want. But it was maybe really kick started off, for as far as I can remember, with Star Trek. But especially Star Trek II, III and IV - essentially a trilogy - because of their very romantic but very warm, human core, set on the broadest canvasses of unlimited and mysterious outer space. But then there was the music for adding that essential extra dimension of emotion and atmosphere. I am happy that much of the music on this album is from the Star Trek series and films, often equaling or sometimes even outclassing the original recordings.
This kind of music (for the movies) should be seen as an art on its own rights with its own merits and qualities. As such, the musical sequences on these CD's are a beautifully played cross section of some of the most evoking orchestral music for science fiction/fantasy film ever created. And I very much like the nicely blended, wide and deep orchestral soundpicture with enough reverberation to evoke a sense of wide open spaces.
I am quite thrilled by tracks like the evocative music from Dune, truly transporting one to the vastly sands of Arrakis (the music is wonderful, but to my great regret I think the movie itself is a flawed masterpiece at best, alas.). And then there is the very different, goofy music for Ghostbusters (memories of childhood), the spoofy but electrifying music from Mars Attacks (lovingly parodist music, this, with not a little touch of irony) and the happily adventurous, forward driving Theme from Galaxy Quest ('Never give up, never surrender!'), now also used for the internet-based fan-series Star Trek: The Hidden Frontier. On the other side of the spectrum we have the atmospheric music for Enemy Mine (an underestimated 'little' movie), the Theme from The Right Stuff (actually science FACT, not fiction, this film, just like Apollo 13, of course), the eerily attractive music for Species, the original End Title for Alien (not used in the theatrical version of the movie, where it was replaced by music from howard Hanson's Second Symphony), the exquisitely exotic music for Stargate, the sweet and warmly sympathetic, beautifully re-orchestrated, theme for Starman, the title cue for Star Trek: TOS (much more melodiously played than the original! If only a series nowadays could continue to be as thought provoking and as original as Star Trek was during its launch, fourty years ago ...) and a truly overpowering End Titles Suite from Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country. I especially like the thrillingly grandiloquent rendition here of the music for Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. And how nice it is to hear the (thematic) similarities between James Horner's music for The Wrath of Khan, his great break-through as a film music composer, and his (two years) earlier music for Battle Beyond the Stars (which did indeed help him earn the job for writing the music for Star Trek II) ...
But on the 'down side', if one is looking for - for example - the gorgeously expansively played End Titles from Cocoon, it is not included here: one has to acquire the album that 'kicked it all off', so to say, namely 'Space and Beyond', also on Silva Screen. I was very pleased also with the inclusion on that album of some of the music from the series Star Trek: The Next Generation, namely where one of the characters, Tasha Yar, in one of the episodes (Skin of Evil) is saying goodbye to her crewmmates: sweetly sentimental and simple music which I have always wanted to own on CD. I guess that a few cues from the other two sequals ('Alien Invasion: Space and Beyond II' and 'Space3: Beyond the Final Frontier') didn't make it onto this 4 CD collection-album as well, but I guess that it would be the 'better part of the bargain' to opt to buy this 'The Science Fiction Album' instead of buying all three albums separately. Well, of course it is for yourself to ultimately decide what you really want ;-)
If I were to nitpick (which is not easy with such a marvellous project as this one), then I would say that while all music is performed with magnificent grandure and with style, some of it is not performed as crisply and as technically 'on the spot' as some of the original recordings: ensemble is a little slack and the playing somewhat stilted sometimes, losing some of the edge and the originality of the writing. ET and Star Wars spring to mind, but then the soundtracks for Star Wars are traditionally recorded with the magnificent London Symphony Orchestra, conducted by maestro John Williams himself, and these superior recordings (especially the ones for Episode I, II and III) can't really be bettered, IMHO. Likewise for the music from Star Trek: The Motion Picture, I believe that in the end one really has to resort to the ultimate reference, namely the original recording (which is true in many other instances of 'original recordings'), and then the 20th anniversay colector's edition of this soundtrack on Columbia/Legacy (truly unmissable, this veritable classic of sci-fi/film music soundtracks!).
But all in all this 4CD-collection amounts to probably being the penultimate high quality sci-fi music album collection (I certainly know of no other project that comes as close quality as well as quantity wise), with some of the most memorable musical moments from classic to modern sci-fi/fantasy film captured in lavish orchestrations.
Collection-wise: five *stars*. Playing: generally four *stars*, sometimes more. The recording quality: five *stars*. The music (qualified on its own merits as film music) and its (re)orchestrations: generally five *stars*. In the end this is all highly recommended, and certainly not to be missed by science fiction and fantasy film music fans. Klaatu barada nikto.
Muisic of the Spheres.......2006-11-06
The Ulllllltimate Sci-Fi Music Collection.......2005-10-23
The moment I ripped off the shrink-wrap and popped it into my cd player was a moment of great trepidation. Believe me when I tell that I've seen my fair share of sub-par orchestral recording in my lifetime. Very often they are in those big super-packs of music, and suffer from poor direction, improper mastering, and sometime even pathetic orchestration (or worse yet have something sounding like a cheap synthesizer and a kazoo in place of a full orchestra). I needn't have worried though. This sucker is fantastic.
Many people who are not audiophiles will probably miss the point of this cd collection. It is not the original versions of the pieces. It is re-orchestrations, mostly by the phenomenal Prague Symphony Orchestra. Many of these themes didn't sound all that hot in there original versions because they were low budget films or were not recorded in high-fidelity. Here they are given the full treatment, mastered with the most loving care imaginable. Often the version found in these cds is SUPERIOR to the original.
Remember the theme from 2001: A Space Odyssey? Of course you do. But how many times have you heard a cheap imitation of the original version from the movie, starting too low in volume and ending too high (and missing the essential pipe-organ that gives it that extra oomph)? Well, this first track in the entire collection is not only everything it should be instrumental and timing-wise, but it also has been oh-so-carefully adjusted during the mastering process so that at no time is the music either too low or too high in volume (surely a benchmark for every other recording ever to be made of the piece).
Or what about the theme from the (at-the-time) uber-creepy The Black Hole? The orchestration of this piece of music goes from tiumphant to terrifying and back again, with a splendor and cleanness that I CERTAINLY don't remember being in the original recording.
Then there's the new version of the theme from Independence Day, complete with a violin solo, a far more electrifying ending climax, and a chorus so thunderous that you feel like applauding at the end. Simply indescribable. Kind of like the MIND-BLOWING rendition of the theme from The Last Star Fighter. This has been one of my favorite themes for a long time now, but I've never heard it played like this. I think the original version of the theme is something like 1 minute long, but this new version doesn't just fade out (HAHAHAHA!!!!) THIS version is THREE minutes long, goes through the main theme THREE times, with the final strains being so triumphant and joyous I could not help but feel an electrifying charge the first dozen or so times (come to think of it, I still feel that way). This is superior to the original in EVERY way. AWESOME.
And let's not forget the incredible new rendition of Stargate with it's heavy use of clarinets (for Egyptian effect!) and a triumphant new ending (completely lacking the chanting from the original version. This version is so different that for the first minute it is very hard to tell that it is in fact Stargate. But then the main theme kicks in, and then you get this incredible flute solo for my favorite part of theme (the whole thing is played slower, but arguably more powerfully than the original). My goodness. At first I found the thing so different I didn't like it. But then I listened to it again. And again. And again.
I could go on and on, talking about the fantastic new rendition of Moon Raker, the ear-popping Battlestar Galactica, the classic Star Trek (First Contact has a minute or two of the theme from Star Trek:The Motion Picture before going into the main theme), or the sweet renditions of music from the Star Wars movies (or the music from E.T.).
I have to mention though that this collection was not picked based merely on what people want, or on what is popular. No, the people who made it obviously thought a GOOD music collection was better than a popular one. That's why you get a heartbreakingly beautiful theme from A.I. instead of the main theme. It's why you get music from movies that you probably never gave a second thought to the music (because the movie was lousy). It's why you get Armageddon, Judge Dredd, and Robocop (who would have guessed their music was so COOL when there was all that crazy action and bad-acting going on on-screen).
I said it before and I'll say it again. This cd-set was mastered with tender-loving-care, and it shows BIG-TIME. High-fidelity the likes of which I have not seen since the days when cds were brand-new in the world. Dolby Surround. Perfectly balanced. BEAUTIUFL orchestrations. About the only thing that makes me scratch my head is the weird sound-effect tracks (Oooookay.....). Other than that, it's PERFECT. Obviously they could not include every sci-fi theme ever (no one can), but this collection is REALLY GOOD. A lot of great themes that got away (forgotten gems :), new versions of old favorites, and under-appreciated classics aplenty, but ALWAYS the full and complete versions with nothing cut-out (the theme from Dune is quite extended).
If you love movie music (and sci-fi movie music in particular) you MUST buy this awesome collection). It is not the original recordings. Almost always the new ones are better (if they aren't better they're just equal). This is what you have been waiting for. I for one am going to be buying quite a few cds from this company in the future. Give your ears the treat they deserve. Buy it NOW.
SciFi Album gift.......2005-07-20
Away From to be a Collectible Peace.......2004-12-16
Average customer rating:
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War of the Worlds
John Williams Manufacturer: Decca ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0009A3ZZI Release Date: 2005-06-28 |
Tracks:
- Prologue (Narration: Morgan Freeman)
- The Ferry Scene
- Reaching The Country
- The Intersection Scene
- Ray And Rachel
- Escape From The City
- Probing The Basement
- Refugee Status
- The Attack On The Car
- The Separation Of The Family
- The Confrontation With Ogilvy
- The Return To Boston
- Escape From The Basket
- The Reunion (Narration: Morgan Freeman)
- Epilogue
Amazon.com
John Williams continues his longtime collaboration with Steven Spielberg in this adaptation of the H.G. Wells novel of the same name (previously filmed in 1953). Considering that the movie depicts a gigantic Martian invasion, you'd think Williams would have fully gone into his familiar bombastic mode, but he's refrained from doing so. While the composer makes full use of the outsize orchestra at his disposal, he prefers juxtaposing layers and building atmosphere rather than hitting you over the head with dramatic arias. "The Intersection Scene," for instance, begins slowly and minimally, then progressively builds into an ominous pounding; Williams then inserts spooky, otherworldly banshee-like effects that escalate into a frenzied pitch before abruptly disappearing as the track begins its descent back towards calm. The sound is genuinely scary and could lead to a spike in blood pressure among impressionable listeners without the help of visuals. "Probing the Basement" is another example of Williams masterfully building anxiety. War of the Worlds culminates with "Escape from the Basket," in which Williams methodically builds tension over close to ten minutes. And refreshingly, even when the action picks up, he mostly avoids the clichéd thundering timpani that often plague this type of score. --Elisabeth Vincentelli
More War of the Worlds
Jeff Wayne's Musical Version Of The War Of The Worlds Box Set SACD |
The Very Best of Orson Welles (Including War of the Worlds) |
H.G. Wells and The War of the Worlds - A Documentary on DVD |
H G Wells' the War of the Worlds on DVD |
The Complete War of The Worlds |
War of the Worlds : Fresh Perspectives on the H. G. Wells Classic |
Customer Reviews:
A score that crawls up inside you and makes you shiver.......2006-06-19
Williams needs to revisit earlier successes!.......2006-03-17
Williams's three-decade association with Steven Spielberg has produced some of the aforementioned as well as other scores that have been the best collaborations between director and composer since the days of Hitchcock and legendary Bernard Herrmann.
While John Williams has made beautiful and awe-inspiring music for Spielberg productions in the past, he's had a couple of subpar (for Williams) compositions; and, sadly, "War of the Worlds" falls into this category.
The measure of a movie score lies in its ability to stand alone apart from the film for which it was composed. This particular work needs the movie's images and action to support its lack of listenability. Like the earlier "Minority Report," the music to Spielberg's adaptation of the Wells' classic does not feature any distinct melodies, little drama, or even thrills that are necessary to tell a story about malevolent aliens attempting to wipe out mankind.
It's as if the composer took the term "incidental music" to heart and just provided little more than something in the background.
Maybe he was attempting to be subtle, but the story deserved something a bit more dynamic and frightening.
We, his fans, all know that he is more than capable to come up to the plate.
Perhaps, on his next pairing with Steven...
Williams Displays Versatility.......2006-03-15
Great album with tense feelings.......2005-11-28
Part of a song?.......2005-11-24
After the ferry scene you see people and them walking in an open field with a battle far away. Theres a calm sad violin part durin that scene, is it in the soundtrack?
Average customer rating:
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The War Of The Worlds (1978 Studio Cast)
Jeff Wayne Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000025CO Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- The Eve Of The War
- Horsell Common And The Heat Ray
- The Artilleryman And The Fighting Machine
- Forever Autumn
- Thunder Child
Tracks:
- The Red Weed (Part 1)
- The Spirit Of Man
- The Red Weed (Part 2)
- Brave New World
- Dead London
- Epilogue (Part 1)
- Epilogue (Part 2)
Customer Reviews:
Forget Fear, let's get up & DANCE!.......2006-11-20
I remembered it better than this.......2006-04-27
Great!!!.......2005-12-16
Martians invade late 19century England shown through the eyes of a journalist.
THE GOOD
This is without a shadow of a doubt the best adaptation of War of the Worlds. It captures the spirit and the letter of the book perfectly, the music sets the mood for each part. And who would've thought it? I mean, if anything WOTW's wouldn't at first come off as something that would lend itself to a musical but as I said, no other adaptation has come this close(especially not that bloated effects, no substance Spielburg film which is more a Tom Cruise movie than a WOTW film). WOTW's is part science fiction, but also part horror as well and this captures it, it's genuinely scary at times. It also improves a couple of areas from the novel,the intro of the artillerman and the journalists first sighting of the tripods, changing the order in which these two happen add more punch.
THE BAD
Just a minor thing, the journalist is basically sidelined for a bulk of disc2. The two longest tracks(Spirit of Man and Brave New World) he's hardly present during. It really isn't until Dead London that he's back front and center again.
THE UGLY
That that scream at the beginning of Red Weed part2 is without a doubt the most disturbing scream I have ever heard.
Timeless Piece of Work!!.......2005-09-11
One of the late 70's greats.......2005-08-26
This album was the key that lead me to the Moody Blues and later Pink Floyd. Some of the sounds effects today to seem a bit corny and The 70's sound technology is plainly evident. The 2nd half is much the weaker. But this was a crossroads between the orchestral rock of the Moody Blues and the pure electronic wonderlands of Tangerine Dream and Enigma.
To me it will always be a 70's classic.
Average customer rating:
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Fantastic Journey
Manufacturer: Telarc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000003CWH Release Date: 1990-01-30 |
Tracks:
- Suite From Batman
- Outer Space From The Day The Earth Stood Still
- Prelude From War Of The Worlds
- End Title From The Black Hole
- Through The Black Hole (Sound Effects)
- End Title From Twilight Zone: The Movie
- End Title From The Boy Who Could Fly
- Main Theme From The Beastmaster
- End Title From Explorers
- End Title (The White Horse: Into The Sunset) From Dragonslayer
- Carol Ann's Theme From Poltergeist
- Suite From Moonwalker
- A Busy Man From Star Trek V: THe Final Frontier
- Escape From Venice From Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade
- The Cantina Band From Star Wars
- Main Title From The Last Starfighter
Customer Reviews:
Excellent Sounding Recordings.......2001-10-16
An interesting collection of obscure s/f-fantasy themes.......2000-10-26
Unfortunately, these movie collections tend to waste too much disk space on sound effects. Often inserted as short introductions to a piece of music, most can be endured quickly and forgotten. But on this CD, a whole track's worth following "The Black Hole" is devoted to the inane cacophony of electronic gibberish, space that would have been much better served by playing, say, the Love Theme from "Superman."
Still, there are more things to like on this album than there are to dislike.
Digital Sound with a so-so collection.......2000-06-25
Average customer rating:
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Jeff Wayne's Musical Version Of The War Of The Worlds
Jeff Wayne Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0009MAPV8 Release Date: 2005-07-05 |
Tracks:
- The Eve Of The War Jeff Wayne featuring Richard Burton and Justin Hayward
- Horsell Common And The Heat Ray Jeff Wayne featuring Richard Burton
- The Artilleryman And The Fighting Machine Jeff Wayne featuring Richard Burton and David Essex
- Forever Autumn Featuring Richard Burton and Justin Hayward
- Thunder Child Featuring Richard Burton and Chris Thompson
Tracks:
- The Red Weed (Part 1) Jeff Wayne featuring Richard Burton
- The Spirit Of Man Featuring Richard Burton, Phil Lynott and Julie Covington
- The Red Weed (Part 2) Jeff Wayne featuring Richard Burton
- Brave New World Featuring Richard Burton and David Essex
- Dead London Jeff Wayne featuring Richard Burton
- Epilogue (Part 1) Featuring Richard Burton
- Epilogue (Part 2) (NASA) Featuring Jerry Wayne
Tracks:
- UlladubUlla: Papa Ootzie Remix
- The Eve Of The War: Hybrids Fire In The Sky Mix
- Forever Autumn: N-Trance Remix
- Horsell Common And The Heat Ray: Max Mondo Remix
- The Spirit Of Man: Spirit Of DubTom Frederikse/Gan Schurrer Remix
- The Eve Of The War: Hani Remix
- The Artilleryman And The Fighting Machine: Max Mondo Remix
- Brave New World: Todd Terry Remix
- Forever Autumn: Dark Autumn Dub Tom Frederikse/Gan Schurrer Remix
- The Red Weed: Mister Joyboy Remix
- The Spirit Of Destiny (The Parson Versus Palene): Cassidy/Langan/Wayne Remix
- The Eve Of The War: 1980 Disco Steve Thompson Remix
- The Spirit Of Man: Max Mondo Remix
- The Eve Of The War: Ben Liebrand Remix
- Brave New World: Dario G Remix
- Dead London: Mister Joyboy Remix
- The Eve Of The War Versus Animal And Man: Forrest/Schurrer/Wayne Remix
Amazon.com
In hindsight, it seems almost incredible: 27 years ago, a young musician named Jeff Wayne (who at the time primarily wrote music for commercials) fell in love with H.G. Wells' much-loved book The War of the Worlds, and decided to make a musical version of it. Star Wars had just put people's minds into outer space, musical theatre was hugely successful, and long, anthemic orchestral prog-rock was all the rage. Wayne was inspired by all these elements and decided to gather together his peers and make a musical-mixed-with-spoken-word album, with the script taken directly from the famous book. This was by no means a soundtrack to a movie; in fact, all of the visuals were to come straight from the listener's minds (hard to imagine in today's video-oriented world.) The two-LP set featured Sir Richard Burton as frontman, along with some of the leaders of the progressive rock world who joined in on the fun. Moody Blues' Justin Hayward, "Rock On" vocalist David Essex and Thin Lizzy lead Philip Lynott each did more than sing on the record, they took a part in the musical play, performing key roles alongside the aforementioned dramatist Burton.Amazingly, the eccentric project was a massive success, selling over 13 million copies and staying on the U.K. charts for over 260 weeks straight. DJs and bands--including the Orbital and Todd Terry--still use WOTW samples to inspire their own works. Unquestionably, the genesis of electronica can (in part) be mapped back to the War of the Worlds' use of sound experimentation and synthesized grooves.
While for many, the War of the Worlds remastered double CD and 48 page booklet set will provide enough prog rock fun, true aficionados will be filled with intergalactic glee when they see how many goodies accompany the collector's edition--a whopping seven CDs that start with the two remastered discs, then disc 3, which contains the best club/DJ remixes sampled from the original recording (including N-Trance's club-y version of the hit "Forever Autumn" and a take on "Brave New World" from famed house producer/DJ Todd Terry. Discs 4 through 6 deserve awards for unprecedented attention to fandom: three full CDs of outtakes, ranging from the original 1975 radio commercial, to acoustic demos of songs, to an additional 37 minutes of previously unheard Richard Burton narrative. Many of the best add-ons, however, exist on disc 7, a 92-minute DVD documentary featuring "The Making of" as well as a full album deconstruction, narrated by Jeff Wayne himself. The whole shebang is packaged in a hardcover 76-page book which features a written history, HG Wells' bio, and a plethora of full-color artwork. --Denise Sheppard
Customer Reviews:
Couldn't be happier!!!!.......2006-03-15
Musical Masterpiece.......2006-02-24
If you don't own it, you're missing out on part of music history the likes of which will never be repeated!
Good Music Lasts Forever.......2006-02-20
At times the music seems a little dated [at one point it is very reminiscent of Logan's Run or the disco scenes from Buck Roger's in the 25th Century], but that feeling quickly disappears as one becomes so engulfed in the music and what it is telling us above and beyond the words of the narration.
Fans of the both the book and films will find this to be a remarkable addition to the entire War of the Worlds experience.
One of the best albums of all time.......2006-02-19
Awesome music in an eloquent package...a million stars!!!.......2006-01-23
The deal with "collector's editions" is that you should get improved production and increased clarity that is noticeable to even the untrained ear; attention to detail in the packaging should then be second only to the digitally remastered sound quality on the CD's. Here, then, is a lavish, carefully assembled
set for those who basically worship the ground Jeff Wayne and his musical collaborators walk on. The 12" hardbound cover is a large size picture book, not some lump of paper wedged into a digipack, with beautiful reproductions of the original illustrations, new illustrations, and updated bios of the artists (some, including Burton and Lynott, have passed away).
If you are unfamiliar with this extremely well-conceived collection of music, you should first understand that this has to be in any serious rock library. As far as renditions (movie, musical, or written) of this H. G. Wells science fiction classic are concerned, I believe this one best conveys the very primitive yet real sense of impending doom for a self-assured species, largely due to Burton's masculine but worried narrative tone. The music is awesome, jaw-dropping, and mind-bending. The description of the spaceship's opening ("2 feet of shining screw projected, when ,suddenly, the lid fell off....a huge rounded bulk, larger than a bear, rose up slowly, glistening like wet leather...the clumsy body heaved and pulsated") set to scorching guitar riffs (before "an invisible ray of heat leapt from man to man") is my own personal highlight.
For those who know the music, this treatment of Jeff Wayne's Musical Version Of The War Of The Worlds is like the "director's cut" of a great film you've already seen. Every fan feature imaginable is here, sounds much better than ever, and includes every alternate take, outtakes, snippets of foreign language adaptations, and even some recording room conversations. The DVD hosted by Jeff Wayne himself is the Holy Grail, and could not have been done better.
This is pure Heaven for those of us who know the music, and worth every penny. I've got to thank my little brother again for turning me on to this so many years ago.
Average customer rating:
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The War of the Worlds - Original Broadcast
Orson Wells Manufacturer: War of the Worlds - Radio Broadcast ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD ASIN: B000LZ5AIG |
Tracks:
- The War Of The Worlds
Customer Reviews:
The Radio Broadcast That Brought Much of America To A Screeching Halt.......2007-05-22
Subsequent studies suggest that only about twenty percent of listeners failed to recognize the broadcast as a radio play--but that twenty percent was sufficient to give rise to the first instance of media-induced mass hysteria in recorded history. Switchboards were jammed and surprisingly large numbers of people attempted to flee cities along the eastern seaboard. This was particularly true in New York, which the play described as under Martian attack via a cloud of deadly gas.
Heard today, it easy to understand how so many people made such a wild mistake. In the late 1930s America was accustomed to receiving news from the radio--and much of that news, particularly relating to Europe and the rise of Nazi Germany, was bad. "War Jitters" were commonplace. And although it had been widely publicized as a radio play, and although the broadcast began with a CBS and Mercury Theatre identification, the first half hour of the program sounded EXACTLY like the sort of news broadcasts the public was used to. Those who tuned in late, turning the dial from channel to channel in search of something interesting, were stunned to find themselves listening to what seemed to be the end of the world.
Following a brief narrative by Orson Wells, the program seques into what seems a commonplace weather report followed by the announcement of a musical program by "Ramon Raquello and his orchestra" at the "Meridian Room at the Hotel Park Plaza in downtown New York"--precisely the sort of radio fare common to the era. But the music is soon interrupted by a "special bulletin." Flashes of light have been seen on Mars. More special bulletins follow: an interview with a noted astronomer (Wells); reports of fallen a meteor near Trenton, New Jersey. And then, of course, the portion of the program that sent people screaming into the streets: a special report from the scene itself, where hideous creatures with savage weapons emerge from the meteor.
Annoucements and news from various officials follow, with perhaps the single most chilling episode the declaration of martial law and an announcement from "The Secretary of the Interior." Air planes attack, but to no avail. The remainder of the program is very obviously a radio play, a narrative performed by Wells with the aid of one two actors as the play winds down to its end. There follows Wells' famous statement--prompted by the mass hysteria of which CBS was suddenly and most unhappily now aware--that this is just "The Mercury Theatre's own radio version of dressing up in a sheet and jumping out of a bush and saying Boo!"
The BN Publishing CD release of the broadcast has not been cleaned up and it shows its age--there are plenty of crackles, particularly in the first few minutes of the recording, and a full restoration seems in order. The packaging is sparse; the CD is issued without liner notes. Still, it is an amazing thing, to listen to THE WAR OF THE WORLDS and think about how easily the public was duped, how ready they were to believe that we were indeed being invaded by creatures from the planet Mars. Strongly recommended.
GFT, Amazon Reviewer
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War of the Worlds: Radio Broadcasts
Various Artists Manufacturer: Delta ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000AQKV9Y Release Date: 2005-09-27 |
Tracks:
- War of the Worlds
Average customer rating:
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War of the Worlds
Bad Astronaut , and Amchair Martian Manufacturer: Owned & Operated ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005O6PQ Release Date: 2001-09-11 |
Tracks:
- 17 Years - Armchair Martian
- Staler 2000 - Armchair Martian
- Crest Fallen - Armchair Martian
- Not a Dull Moment
- Grey Suits - Bad Astronaut
- You Deserve This - Bad Astronaut
- Jessica's Suicide - Bad Astronaut
Customer Reviews:
Can bad astronaut do no wrong?.......2003-07-20
And so we dwell further into outer space........2001-10-19
Dance Music:
- We Still Crunk
- What We Known Fo
- Willie Carter Jr
- Words of a Hustler [Explicit Lyrics]
- Ya-Ya's the Name [Explicit Lyrics]
- Yo! Bum Rush the Show [Explicit Lyrics]
- Young Baby Boy (Don't Cross Me) [Explicit Lyrics]
- Young World: The Future [Explicit Lyrics]
- Young World: The Future [Explicit Lyrics]
- All Money Is Legal [Enhanced] [Explicit Lyrics] [Extra tracks]
Dance Music
Songs from the Lions Cage [Import]