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Mission: Impossible - Music From The Original Motion Picture Score
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Mission: Impossible - Music From The Original Motion Picture Score

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Mission: Impossible - Music From The Original Motion Picture Score
Music Price: $17.98
As of Jan 2 14:25 EST (details)

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StudioPhilips
Release DateJune 18, 1996
UPC Code028945452524
Buy this item$17.98 at Amazon.com
As of Jan 2 14:25 EST (details)
1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Soundtrack
 

Tracks

  1. Sleeping Beauty
  2. Theme from Mission: Impossible - Danny Elfman, Schifrin, Lalo
  3. Red Handed
  4. Big Trouble
  5. Love Theme?
  6. Mole Hunt
  7. The Disc
  8. Max Found
  9. Looking for Job
  10. Betrayal
  11. The Heist
  12. Uh-Oh!
  13. Biblical Revelation
  14. Phone Home
  15. Train Time
  16. Ménage a Trois
  17. Zoom A
  18. Zoom B

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Mission: Impossible IIIMission Impossible 2: Music From The Motion Picture ScoreMission: Impossible - Music From And Inspired By The Motion PictureSpider-Man: Original Motion Picture ScorePlanet of the Apes

 

User Reviews

Average user review: 4.5 (18 reviews)

rating: 5 Quotebrilliant, genious, amazing, etc Quote
i am an avid movie score fan and danny elfman's mission impossible score is one of the best scores i have ever heard, if not the best. it is so incredibly rich and full of layers. danny elfman is a genious, and this score shows that. he is different than any other composer out there, living or dead. don't believe it? go listen to all of his scores and then come back and see if you don't agree. he use to be in a pretty succesful experimental/rock band called Oingo Boingo, and even to this day, he has never been trained in an instrument. he is 100% self-taught. just that fact alone shows his true genious in composing a score this rich and beautiful, let alone all of his others. i HIGHLY reccomend this. July 12, 2006

rating: 5 QuoteAbsolutely one of Elfman's BestQuote
The 1996 film "Mission: Impossible" is, with the exception of a convoluted plot, far-and-away superior in every respect to it's 2000 sequel. This is due in no small part to Danny Elfman's contribution (compared to the drivel that Hans Zimmer wrote for M:I 2 - and I LIKE Zimmer!). This is one of the first scores in which one begins to hear Danny Elfman in his truly mature style. The entire score is built on a small amount of musical motives or cells from which Elfman develops a seemingly endless amount of musical material that makes this score interesting from both an "I-work-well-for-the-film-I-was-written" film perspective and a composition perspective (I'm a composer, of course I pay attention to these things, too!).

The CD is a first-rate listen and is full of wonderful orchestral/electronic colors (a hallmark of the Elfman technique). Every track is wonderful and the CD never gets old. It is dense and complex and isn't overly melodic. That's not necessarily Elfman's style, though. He'll take a cell of 4 or 5 notes and string them together in different ways to work out his material. Also, what I found so wonderful about both the score in the film and the album is Elfman's decision (probably not entirely his) to limit the usage of Lalo Schifrin's original theme. I think that this lent the film a sense of "we're not trying to rely too heavily on our predecessor" atmosphere and it paid off wonderfully. For much of the score Elfman chooses to rely on his own ideas and several cues where certain bits of music from "The Plot" from the original TV series show up (although not much). That being said there are several standouts on the album. "Sleeping Beauty" starts off with a nice nod to Schifrin's music for the TV series with clipped militaristic percussion. "Red Handed" is simultaneously moody and urgent with a wonderful version of Schifrin's theme interpolated nicely rather than just going for the jugular and quoting it directly (this score is more subtle than that). "Mole Hunt" is a tension-wrought suspense cue in which Hunt and Kittridge begin their game of cat-and-mouse. "Betrayal" is without a doubt the most haunting and beautiful cue on the album with orchestra, women's chorus, and an electric bass providing an insistent, repetitive pattern - a truly beautiful sound. "Train Time", "Menage a Trois", "Zoom A", and "Zoom B" constitute the energetic climax of the film with some great, if bombastic, action writing. "Zoom B" is where Elfman finally let's it all hang out with his version of the "Mission: Impossible Theme". Overall it captures perfectly the sense of the original series and the genre of the '60s spy-thriller in general.

I've had this CD in my collection ever since it came out shortly after the film and I still make time to listen to it on a regular basis. Every time I listen to it I just sit there and, when it's finished playing, wonder where the last 53 minutes went. It always leaves me wanting to hear more. It may take some time to develop a sense of just how complex and dense and wonderfully creative this score is. However, the time spent appreciating it will be time well spent. This score is truly a masterpiece of Elfman's oeuvre. April 6, 2003

rating: 4 QuoteElfman: PossibleQuote
The ever dependable Danny Elfman took over scoring roles after Alan Silvestri's score was rejected by director Brian De Palma. Here, Elfman provides all the tools necessary for a great action/suspense score. Lalo Schifrin's famous Mission Impossible theme is present only 3 times in this score. It is presented in full in "Mission: Impossible Theme", subtly quoted in "Red Handed", and heard in full at the end of "Zoom B". Replacing the famous Mission Impossible theme is Elfman's own suspense/thriller theme that is used in several, if not almost every track. While not as good as Schifrin's theme, Elfman's theme is still good in that it captures the twists and turns of the film's plot. An interesting and unique thing about this score is that all of Elfman's creative orchestrations can be heard. The music is mainly percussive in nature with strings and brass. "Sleeping Beauty" opens the score with a thrilling percussion solo, which leads to Elfman's main theme. "Red Handed" contains flutes that sound like a cuckoo clock (listen to see what i'm talking about before you decide that i'm crazy). "Big Trouble" is a great action cue with chasing strings and plenty of percussion. Elfman saves the real action music till the end. "Train Time" is an explosive brass filled action cue with a 4 note motif played really loud. "Zoom B" is the best action cue by far with plenty of knockout action music that leads into an explosion of Elfman's main theme on brass, which then leads to Schifrin's legendary theme that closes off the album. All in all, a terrific score, which although largely underuses the legendary Mission Impossible theme, still stands as a solid original work. A solid recommendation. February 14, 2003

rating: 5 QuoteFantasticQuote
This is a superb soundtrack. Lots of complex layers, and very melodic. One of my favorites. January 20, 2003

rating: 4 QuoteGood Elfman ScoreQuote
Come on, you know the M:I theme. If you don't, you have to be a cave dweller or have been stuck in a closet. The famous theme is performed here, with plenty of jazz. It's a good action score, but for any other type of film it's just a bunch of noise.

If you want a fantastic action score, try "Crimson Tide" or such -- but this one's great, too. December 23, 2001

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