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Thunderball

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Download links and information about Thunderball by John Barry. This album was released in 1965 and it belongs to Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:18:57 minutes.

Artist: John Barry
Release date: 1965
Genre: Theatre/Soundtrack
Tracks: 18
Duration: 01:18:57
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Thunderball (Main Title) (featuring Tom Jones) 3:03
2. Chateau Flight 2:31
3. The Spa 2:42
4. Switching the Body 2:48
5. The Bomb 5:45
6. Cafe Martinique 3:45
7. Thunderball 3:57
8. Death of Fiona 2:31
9. Bond Below Disco Volante 4:05
10. Search for the Vulcan 2:24
11. 007 2:27
12. Mr. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (Version 1) 3:18
13. Gunbarrel / Traction Table / Gassing the Plane / Car Chase 4:43
14. Bond Meets Domino / Shark Tank / Lights Out for Paula / For King and Country 8:18
15. Street Chase 3:23
16. Finding the Plane / Underwater Ballet / Bond With Spectre Frogmen / Leiter to the Rescue / Bond Joins Underwater Battle 10:15
17. Underwater Mayhem / Death of Largo / End Titles 10:21
18. Mr. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (Version 2) 2:41

Details

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James Bond goes under the sea to find his man, and composer John Barry obliges with an aquatically cool yet subtly powerful soundtrack. Barry made his first big mark with an equally wonderful backdrop to Bond's earlier From Russia With Love and Goldfinger adventures. It had been Barry's intent to give Shirley Bassey — who'd scored big with "Goldfinger" — a second go-around with a Bond movie song, but the producers' decision to change the song resulted in Tom Jones getting the title song, devised by Barry at the last moment. He lends the "Thunderball" vocal theme a well-gauged mix of pelvic thrust and serious drama. The rest of the set — including another update of the "007" theme and an instrumental take on what was originally to be the vocal feature, "Mr. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang" — is all pure ingenuity and layered drama. To a lot of people, it was all a little too drenched in reverb and a little too much of the same music repeated; this may have been a result of the fact that Barry was so late finishing the score, that only music from the first half of the movie was represented on the soundtrack LP. ~ Bruce Eder & Stephen Cook, Rovi