Williams: Close Encounters of the Third Kind Original Soundtrack [SOUNDTRACK]
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Opening
- Let There Be Light
- Navy Planes
- Lost Squadron
- Roy's First Encounter
- Encounter At Crescendo Summit
- Chasing UFO's
- False Alarm
- Barry's Kidnapping
- Cover Up
- Stars And Trucks
- Forming The Mountain
- TV Reveals
- Roy And Gillian On The Road
- Mountain
- Who Are The People
- Escape
- Trucking
- Climbing The Mountain
- Outstretch Hands
- Lightshow
- Barnstorming
- Mothership
- Returnees
- Visitors/Bye/End Titles
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #172041 in Music
- Released on: 1999-10-01
- Number of discs: 1
- Original language: English, French, Hindi, Spanish
- Running time: 77 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
With its vast, star-filled skies and pervading sense of imminence, Steven Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977) still ranks as one of the director's finest achievements. Longtime Spielberg advocates will remember this enchanting story about a series of UFO appearances that climaxes with a confrontation between man and an alien species. John Williams's music score, in tandem with his work on George Lucas's Star Wars, singlehandedly revived popular interest in symphonic film music in the 1970s. Released concurrently with Spielberg's 1998 "Collector's Edition" edit, this expanded, 77-minute release (from a brand new 20-bit digital master) offers 35 minutes of previously unreleased material, including cues not used in the film. In Close Encounters, Williams discarded the leitmotif approach of Star Wars in favour of a developmental score progressing from pure atonality to a breathtakingly romantic conclusion. In between, the composer offers a myriad of textures, motifs and themes that illuminate Spielberg's visionary magic and childlike spirit. Whether it be several moments of orchestral turbulence, a sprightly eight-note "travel" motif, or the haunting secondary themes, Williams's tone poem is both mysterious and inspiring. When the aliens and mankind finally converge, the composer allows the disparate cultures to communicate through the universal language of music, resulting in one of the most famous instances of "overlapping dialogue" in film history. Spielberg structured the final act of the film to fit the composer's score, a rare case where the editing was dictated by the music. Williams's dramatic submersion is so complete that the finished score stands on its own as a substantial, self-contained symphonic work, one of the finest written in the 1970s. --Kevin Mulhall
Customer Reviews
A very good overall package that some will find too long.
This re-release of Williams' memorable score to Close Encounters has finally been given the expansion a score of this scale deserves. Here you will find every note composed for the film in chronological order. The only setback is that compared to the first release where we were presented suites and themes, here we are given the real "avant-garde" experience which some listeners may find hard to get through.
A Absolute Classic
Sorry, but I'm not sure what on earth the previous reviewer is talking about - or indeed what they was expecting from this album. Not the Synth album?? This is the film's original soundtrack as the music appears in the film, albeit in extended form from versions previously released - and it's an absolute classic of film scoring by John Williams, one of the greatest film composers in the history of film. There is little else I can say really, other than sheer brilliance.
Not the excellent synth album, just orchestral
I owned this album when I was a kid (it was a gift) and it had some really wonderful synth work on it. Weird and unusual New Age soundscapes at a time when New Age had yet to be invented, plus some great funky drum tracks at the beginning and end.
If you are looking for that album, you will be disappointed with this. It only has the naff orchestral stuff on it. All those sweeping bass guitar lines, not to mention that beautiful piano piece on side two, have been removed and left with John Williams run-of-the-mill fim score.
I'm gutted. If anyone knows where I can get a CD of the album with that fantastic experimental synth stuff on it then please, please let me know!
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