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Elizabeth Taylor In London

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Download links and information about Elizabeth Taylor In London by John Barry. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to World Music, Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 21 tracks with total duration of 01:06:00 minutes.

Artist: John Barry
Release date: 2005
Genre: World Music, Theatre/Soundtrack
Tracks: 21
Duration: 01:06:00
Buy on iTunes $6.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Elizabeth (featuring Johnnie Spence) 3:29
2. London At Dawn (Including Westminster Bridge By William Wordsworth) (featuring Johnnie Spence, Elizabeth Taylor) 1:36
3. The London Theme (featuring Johnnie Spence) 3:20
4. Lovers And Browning (Including Portuguese Sonnets By Elizabeth Barrett Browning) (featuring Johnnie Spence, Elizabeth Taylor) 3:29
5. Pitt's Speech (featuring Johnnie Spence, Elizabeth Taylor) 1:39
6. London Theme - Jazz Waltz (featuring Johnnie Spence) 2:56
7. Elizabeth Waltz (featuring Johnnie Spence) 4:33
8. Queen Elizabeth At Tilbury (featuring Johnnie Spence, Elizabeth Taylor) 1:59
9. English Garden (featuring Johnnie Spence) 4:55
10. Queen Victoria (featuring Johnnie Spence, Elizabeth Taylor) 1:32
11. The Fire Of London (featuring Johnnie Spence) 4:10
12. Churchill Speech (featuring Johnnie Spence, Elizabeth Taylor) 1:55
13. Elizabeth [Stereo] (featuring Johnnie Spence) 3:28
14. The London Theme [Stereo] (featuring Johnnie Spence) 3:20
15. Lovers [Stereo] (featuring Johnnie Spence) 1:37
16. London Theme - Jazz Waltz [Stereo] (featuring Johnnie Spence) 2:55
17. Elizabeth Waltz [Stereo] (featuring Johnnie Spence) 4:33
18. English Garden [Stereo] (featuring Johnnie Spence) 4:57
19. The Fire Of London [Stereo] (featuring Johnnie Spence) 4:06
20. Elizabeth [Single Version] (featuring John Barry Seven, The Orchestra) 2:50
21. The London Theme [Single Version] (featuring John Barry Seven, The Orchestra) 2:41

Details

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You might find this filed under Elizabeth Taylor in stores, so large is her name in the title on the front cover. However, it's not an Elizabeth Taylor album, although her voice is occasionally heard reciting historical prose. Rather, it's a largely instrumental soundtrack to a 1963 television special in which she took viewers on a tour through London, the score composed by John Barry. It's not one of Barry's major works, but if you do enjoy his music, especially from this period, you'll be pleased to hear it. It's richly orchestrated without being overly lush, with the sweeping dramatic grandeur typical of much of his output from the era. A bit of the spy/suspense flavor for which he was often known surfaces at times (especially "The Fire of London"), but it's not too close to James Bond territory. While it's usually in a vividly cinematic style that can be languid or tense, there are also occasional echoes of jazz and waltz tempos, with the melody of "Greensleeves" reappearing at various points as a kind of recurring motif.