Wojciech Kilar - “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (1992)

  • 13 Jan, 18:31
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Artist:
Title: “Bram Stoker’s Dracula” (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Year Of Release: 1992
Label: Columbia
Genre: Soundtrack, Classical, Pop
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 55:03
Total Size: 259 MB | 125 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist
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01. Wojciech Kilar - Dracula- The Beginning (Album Version)
02. Wojciech Kilar - Vampire Hunters (Album Version)
03. Wojciech Kilar - Mina's Photo (Album Version)
04. Wojciech Kilar - Lucy's Party (Album Version)
05. Wojciech Kilar - The Brides (Album Version)
06. Wojciech Kilar - The Storm (Album Version)
07. Wojciech Kilar - Love Remembered (Album Version)
08. Wojciech Kilar - The Hunt Builds (Album Version)
09. Wojciech Kilar - The Hunters Prelude (Album Version)
10. Wojciech Kilar - The Green Mist (Album Version)
11. Wojciech Kilar - Mina/Dracula (Album Version)
12. Wojciech Kilar - The Ring Of Fire (Album Version)
13. Wojciech Kilar - Love Eternal (Album Version)
14. Wojciech Kilar - Ascension (Album Version)
15. Wojciech Kilar - End Credits (Album Version)
16. Annie Lennox - Love Song for a Vampire (Album Version)

Francis Ford Coppola took an inspired gamble in hiring the Polish composer to realise his Gothic stage production made for the cinema screen. Nothing about Kilar conforms to Hollywood. His classical works and earlier European films for the likes of Polanski and Zanussi, show a style based upon a repetitive form that insinuates itself upon the ear until it becomes unforgettable. "Vampire Hunters" is a superb example, being a cyclic string and brass motif that develops an exciting dynamic by revolving between keys. A pounding drum keeps time and rhythm for a flawlessly edited scene of destroying the vampire's lair. There is also the exquisite theme for Mina and Dracula, which in "Love Remembered" is presented on the composer's favoured instrument, flute. Again, it's through instrumental interchange across repetitions of the theme that the piece achieves its effect. A little sound design ("The Ring Of Fire") offers pause before the tender choral dénouement. Despite the tail-end pop song, this was a blockbuster debut without precedent. --Paul Tonks




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