King Kong: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Facts
| Studio | Decca |
| Release Date | December 13, 2005 |
| UPC Code | 028947652243 |
| Buy this item | $18.98 at Amazon.com As of Jul 20 22:44 EDT (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Soundtrack |
Tracks
- King Kong
- A Fateful Meeting
- Defeat Is Always Momentary
- It's In The Subtext
- Two Grand
- The Venture Departs
- Last Blank Space On The Map
- It's Deserted
- Something Monsterous... Neither Beast Nor Man
- Head Towards The Animals
- Beautiful
- Tooth And Claw
- That's All There Is...
- Captured
- Central Park
- The Empire State Building
- Beauty Killed The Beast I
- Beauty Killed The Beast II
- Beauty Killed The Beast III
- Beauty Killed The Beast IV
- Beauty Killed The Beast V
Similar CDs
| Batman Begins | King Kong [HD DVD] | Pirates Of The Caribbean: At World's End | The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe | The Da Vinci Code |
User Reviews
Average user review:| Too Much Pulse-Pounding Action For Restful Listening |
| Hail to the KING |
| Beat Your Chest to Get This One |
King Kong has an established theme throughout the score, represented by a 7-note motif that is both ominous and bold. It is featured whenever the big ape is on screen, as well as when he is somewhere lurking about on the island. Since the film takes place in the 1930s, Howard wrote some period music in many cues of the first half of the score, which feature appropriate pianos and jazzy woodwinds.
As the crew makes their way to the island, the music shifts into a more ominous and more action-oriented approach, as they try to survive and capture the beast. The music throughout the majority of the second half of the album is awe-inspiring, resilient, and frankly breath-taking. The orchestra is strident, the chorus is bold, and the percussion is propulsive. "Tooth and Claw" is a very impressive action-oriented track with plenty of fast-paced, heavy brass lines, whirling strings, and racing percussion. The "awe-factor" is present in most of the cues, such as "It's Deserted", where you can only imagine viewing the island for the first time as the ship nears its destination.
The grand finale consists of "The Empire State Building" as well as "Beauty Killed the Beast" (not how the Disney film ended as you may recall...). Here the orchestra and chorus give everything they've got, building and building to an emotional and powerful climax as the great beast falls to his demise.
This is one of James Newton Howard's finest works, which proves that he is one of the best composers out there. A highly recommended score with 74 minutes of outstanding music. You would be a fool to pass this one up!! February 28, 2007
| To be honest... |
| Individual Songs are Good, but Overall Flow of the CD Soundtrack Seems Slow and Sluggish. |
Some Soundtracks are great with just the music, this one really needs the movie visuals for the best enjoyment.
This CD seems to follow the chronological order of the events in the film, but this is one CD Soundtrack where they might have been better off changing the song order for a better flow, on CD only (which is a common practise on other soundtrack CDs, like for the STAR WARS films, for example). The early songs are too slow to get moving into the action, and later songs have slow and fast parts, so it becomes a little frustrating, waiting for action, then getting a little excitement, then crashing into stillness again.
Individually each song seems good, but when I try to listen to the whole CD, I get restless waiting for something interesting. I think I will resequence the songs and burn my own CD in a more appealing song sequence (that's legal since I own the CD, of course). April 5, 2006
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