King of California (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Download links and information about King of California (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) by David Robbins. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Latin, Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 39:28 minutes.
Artist: | David Robbins |
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Release date: | 2007 |
Genre: | Latin, Theatre/Soundtrack |
Tracks: | 19 |
Duration: | 39:28 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | The Map | 1:48 |
2. | Charlie Comes Home | 2:06 |
3. | Miranda's Theme | 1:29 |
4. | Charlie Digs / Eureka! | 1:28 |
5. | Miranda Dreams | 1:17 |
6. | Parlor Piece | 1:34 |
7. | Doubloons | 2:04 |
8. | Charlie's Lament | 2:10 |
9. | Flood of Dreams (featuring Jolie Holland) | 2:34 |
10. | X Marks the Spot | 1:28 |
11. | Prospecting | 1:40 |
12. | Tesoro Enterrado | 2:11 |
13. | Costco! | 0:49 |
14. | Malambo No. 1 (featuring Yma Sumac) | 2:57 |
15. | Pepper Gets Busted | 2:47 |
16. | Pitch Pine Torches | 0:49 |
17. | Going Back | 1:18 |
18. | Swimming Away | 5:12 |
19. | Zari Ritual Lamentation (featuring Lileh Choir Of Dmanisi) | 3:47 |
Details
[Edit]Composer David Robbins has come up with an offbeat score for director Mike Cahill's offbeat comedy King of California, about a released mental patient (Michael Douglas) digging for Spanish gold under a suburban Costco store with the help of his teenage daughter (Evan Rachel Wood). For Robbins, the chief means of finding a musical equivalent of the goings-on lies in instrumentation. "Quite often when I start a new project," he writes in his liner notes, "I find that I gravitate toward a particular instrument that helps to inspire me and hopefully lends itself to the style I'm after." In this case, that instrument was the ukulele, that humble, child's version of a guitar, and Robbins has also made extensive use of the banjo, as well as the musical saw, to create a set of weird, folky cues. There are also some changes of pace mixed in, including a song by Jolie Holland, some mariachi horns, an old track by Yma Sumac, and the a cappella "Zari Ritual Lamentation" by the Lileh Choir of Dmanisi. The result is as entertaining as it is odd.