Apollo 13: Music From The Motion Picture

Apollo 13: Music From The Motion Picture Artist: James Horner
Label: Mca
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Format: Gold CD
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 008811131623
EAN: 0008811131623
ASIN: B000002OXX


Release Date: 1995-08-01

Apollo 13: Music From The Motion Picture


Related Categories:

General General
Categories | Pop | Styles | Music
Pop Rock Pop Rock
Categories | Pop | Styles | Music
Psychedelic Rock Psychedelic Rock
Categories | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
Album-Oriented Rock (AOR) Album-Oriented Rock (AOR)
Categories | Classic Rock | Styles | Music
Movie Soundtracks Movie Soundtracks
Categories | Soundtracks | Styles | Music
General General
Categories | Soundtracks | Styles | Music

Tracks:

  1. Main Title
  2. One Small Step - Neil Armstrong, Walter Cronkite
  3. Night Train - The Young Rascals
  4. Groovin' - Jefferson Airplane
  5. Somebody to Love - The Who
  6. I Can See for Miles - Jimi Hendrix
  7. Purple Haze
  8. Launch Control
  9. All Systems Go- The Launch
  10. Welcome to Apollo 13 - Tom Hanks
  11. Spirit in the Sky - Norman Greenbaum
  12. House Cleaning/Houston We Have a Problem - Kevin Bacon, Brett Cullen, Tom Hanks, Gary Sinise
  13. Master Alarm
  14. What's Going On? - Tom Hanks, Gary Sinise
  15. Into the LEM
  16. Out of Time/Shut Her Down - Kevin Bacon, Brett Cullen, Tom Hanks, Ed Harris, Ed Harris
  17. Dark Side of the Moon
  18. Failure Is Not an Option - Ed Harris, Ed Harris
  19. Honky Tonkin' - Hank Williams
  20. Blue Moon - The Mavericks
  21. Waiting for Disaster/A Privilege - Tom Hanks, Ed Harris, Ed Harris, Gary Sinise
  22. Re-Entry & Splashdown
  23. End Titles - Annie Lennox

Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Beautiful Music, Bad Production.......2003-06-10

Do people who want to listen to a Soundtrack, that want to hear dialogue from the mocie, even exist? I would think if you wanted to hear dialogue you would just watch the movie.

When I asked the guy at the store what was the difference between the gold version and the regular version, he told me that the gold version was higher quality because the CD was gold instead of silver. Being a person who is quite familiar with the concepts of analog and digital, this immediately struck me is not possibly being correct. I ended up buying the regular version not knowing that the real difference lie in the content. I was kind of disappointed with the dialogue on the regular CD, but apprently this problem is much worse on the Gold CD, so I guess I got the better of the 2.

Anyways there are only 7 tracks of James Horner Music on the CD, and some of them have the beginnings cut off. Despite the incompetence of the people who produced this CD, the music really is quite good.

Apparently there was also 2 versions of the braveheart soundtrack...and 1 had dialogue and one didn't. I didn't know that before I bought it and luckily got the right one anyways. ALso a great soundtrack, my favorite actually.

5 out of 5 stars Apollo 13 Soundtrack, Regular and Gold Editions.......2002-07-18

Even if you didn't know this was another James Horner work, it wouldn't be too hard to tell. He again draws upon percussion, synthesized choral voices (ala Titanic), and a lone female vocal at the end (Annie Lennox!). It all adds up to a very good musical score to accomodate man's flight into space and the tragedy that was averted. The horns and percussion denote the military professionalism that encompasses the US space program, while the vocals denote the devine heights of flying in space. I noticed an irony to both of the movies Horner has scored- Titanic was tragic in that there weren't enough lifeboats, and the Apollo 13 crew was saved by a "lifeboat" that wasn't considered for that very purpose: the Lunar Excusion Module. The CDs also contain popular music of the period- also something I enjoyed.
I originally owned the GOLD CD version and was initially disappointed at the spoken dialogue from the movie covering many portions of Horner's score. In essence, it is a sort of short "radio" version of the movie with sound, dialogue and music. If you have never seen the movie, the GOLD CD would certainly tell the tale of what befell the Apollo 13 crew. If all you want is Horner's score, then avoid the GOLD CD as the movie dialogue covers most of those tracks. On the other hand, I now own the regular CD version of this soundtrack and actually miss the "story" as portrayed on the GOLD CD. On the regular version, Horner's score remains mostly intact as seperate tracks, and what little dialogue is available is also on seperate tracks (For the most part that is- there are some places where his score tracks are clipped at the beginning). If all you want is the music, both score and 60's rock mainly intact, then the regular CD version is for you. If you would rather have a 70+ minute audio version of the movie, than go for the GOLD CD version. It is almost like the regular CD version is the "unedited" raw source from which the GOLD CD is mixed into the final story version. I like both versions for what they are, but my favorite would have to be the GOLD CD.

1 out of 5 stars What's the point?.......2002-01-04

Since this had more tracks than the regular release, but appeared to be the same, I figured you could program out the bits of dialogue. Unfortunately, while I've not heard the regular album, I understand that only has dialogue excerpts, this is essentially the entire soundtrack (you know, sound) of the film, or rather, 75 minutes of it. It brags how it's such an incredible aural work, but really, what's the point? Back in the days before home video, this would have been something, now it's just a disappointment for people who wanted the original music. While nothing on the album is inherently bad, it just reminds me of the days when I would put the tape recorder up to the television speaker to capture a part of a favorite film. This is the hi-fidelity version of that. The DVD probably sounds better, so why would anyone want this, given what else is available? This is essentially a less-than, while the score uncovered with dialogue is either a coveted collectible I'm not a big enough Horner fan to want to pay for, or an illegal bootleg. Either way, I never listen to the score from Apollo 13. It just sits on my shelf. "Spirit in the Sky," as the previous reviewer mentioned, is a great song, but there are better ways to get it. On this one, the last part of the song trails onto a track covered with dialogue. I can't possibly recommend a CD that's basically a professional job of an amateurish idea.

5 out of 5 stars

Music Album:

  1. Nakaido "Chabo" Reichi ~ Japanimation
  2. Svegliate e Uccidi/Sacco e Vanzetti ~ Ennio Morricone
  3. Fitzwilly: Original Motion Picture Score
  4. Guys and Dolls (Original National Theatre Cast) ~ Various Artists
  5. Gunslinger Girl ~ Original Game Soundtrack
  6. Counting the Beat ~ Swingers
  7. Mononoke Hime (Princess Mononoke: Symphonic Suite) ~ Joe Hisaishi
  8. The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover ~ Michael Nyman
  9. The Chilling Effect original motion picture score ~ Pelican City
  10. Frankenstein & Bride of Frankenstein

Music Album

Music Album

Music

House Warming, Vol. 1 ~ Various Artists

Take You to the Sky ~ Northern Lights

O God, The Aftermath ~ Norma Jean

Levitation ~ Hawkwind

Nevada Beach ~ Nevada Beach

Pretaluz ~ Waldemar Bastos

Selection of Cornerstones 1995-2004 ~ Chikuzen Sato

Intelectual ~ Ildo Lobo

Stalling From Fear ~ Liza Callahan

Water Boys TV Soundtrack ~ Original TV Soundtrack