The Thin Red Line - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Download links and information about The Thin Red Line - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack by Hans Zimmer. This album was released in 1999 and it belongs to Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 58:49 minutes.
Artist: | Hans Zimmer |
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Release date: | 1999 |
Genre: | Theatre/Soundtrack |
Tracks: | 11 |
Duration: | 58:49 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | The Coral Atoll (featuring Gavin Greenaway) | 8:00 |
2. | The Lagoon (featuring Gavin Greenaway) | 8:36 |
3. | Journey to the Line (featuring Gavin Greenaway) | 9:21 |
4. | Light (featuring Gavin Greenaway) | 7:19 |
5. | Beam (featuring Francesco Lupica) | 3:43 |
6. | Air (featuring Gavin Greenaway) | 2:21 |
7. | Stone In My Heart (featuring Gavin Greenaway) | 4:28 |
8. | The Village (featuring Gavin Greenaway) | 5:52 |
9. | Silence (featuring Gavin Greenaway) | 5:05 |
10. | God Yu Tekem Laef Blong Mi (featuring Gavin Greenaway) | 1:58 |
11. | Sit Back & Relax (featuring Gavin Greenaway) | 2:06 |
Details
[Edit]Hans Zimmer's Oscar-nominated score for reclusive director Terrence Malick's ambitious James Jones adaptation — only the director's third film in 25 years — is one of his most subtle and sophisticated yet. Then again, it's not as if the German-born composer has ever been known as a master of bombast or overstatement — Max Steiner he is not (among other works, he penned the award-winning soundtracks for Rain Man and The Lion King). Unlike the scores for most other war movies (The Thin Red Line is set during World War II), the action in Malick's elegiac epic is driven mostly by the action itself (heated exchanges between characters, sudden eruptions of devastating violence) and not the music. The soundtrack, which consists primarily of long, string-laden pieces, also includes one of the film's mesmerizing chants, which were so popular that a separate recording, Chants From The Thin Red Line, consisting entirely of chants by the Melanesian Brotherhood and the Choir of All Saints, was released in conjunction with this recording. ~ Kathleen C. Fennessy, Rovi