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The Spielberg/Williams Collaboration, Pt. III

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Download links and information about The Spielberg/Williams Collaboration, Pt. III by John Williams. This album was released in 1990 and it belongs to Theatre/Soundtrack, Classical genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:14:17 minutes.

Artist: John Williams
Release date: 1990
Genre: Theatre/Soundtrack, Classical
Tracks: 16
Duration: 01:14:17
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. The Adventures of Mutt from "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles) 3:34
2. Dry Your Tears, Afrika from "Amistad" (featuring Los Angeles, The Children'S Chorus, The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles, California State University Fullerton University Singers) 3:39
3. The BFG (featuring Heather Clark, The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles) 7:28
4. With Malice Toward None from "Lincoln" (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles, Thomas Hooten) 4:42
5. The Duel from "the Adventures of Tintin" (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles) 3:10
6. A New Beginning from "Minority Report" (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles) 3:37
7. Escapades for Alto Saxophone and Orchestra from "Catch Me If You Can": I. Closing In (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles, Dan Higgins, Martin Grubinger, Michael Valerio) 3:01
8. Escapades for Alto Saxophone and Orchestra from "Catch Me If You Can": II. Reflections (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles, Dan Higgins, Martin Grubinger, Michael Valerio) 7:38
9. Escapades for Alto Saxophone and Orchestra from "Catch Me If You Can": III. Joy Ride (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles, Dan Higgins, Martin Grubinger, Michael Valerio) 5:32
10. Marion's Theme from "Raiders of the Lost Ark" (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles) 3:58
11. Hymn to the Fallen from "Saving Private Ryan" (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles, California State University Fullerton University Singers) 4:19
12. Dartmoor, 1912 from "War Horse" (featuring Heather Clark, The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles) 6:54
13. Viktor's Tale from "the Terminal" (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles, Don Foster) 4:32
14. Prayer for Peace from "Munich" (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles) 3:32
15. Immigration and Building from "the Unfinished Journey" (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles) 5:21
16. With Malice Toward None from "Lincoln" (Alternate Version) (featuring The Recording Arts Orchestra Of Los Angeles, Stephen Erdody) 3:20

Details

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Composer John Williams and director Steven Spielberg have long had one of the most symbiotic relationships in Hollywood. They've helped each other become the best known, most successful, and most powerful men in their respective fields. Spielberg has hired Williams to score nearly every movie he's ever made. Meanwhile, at the end of the 20th century, Williams had earned three of his five Academy Awards and ten of his staggering 38 Oscar nominations for Spielberg films. The Spielberg/Williams Collaboration was a 1991 attempt to encapsulate the fruits of their alliance. It contains some of the best work ever done by Williams and his Boston Pops Orchestra. Particularly noteworthy are his famous themes for Raiders of the Lost Ark, Jaws, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial. Spielberg has expressed the opinion that E.T. is Williams' finest effort, and it's hard to disagree with his assessment. The magical piano solo "Over the Moon" provides a much needed respite from the bombastic Sousa-esque marches of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and 1941. Bombast and saccharine sentimentality are common occupational hazards for Williams and Spielberg, and this CD is laced with occasional overdoses of both. Moreover, it is less satisfying as a retrospective of Williams' career than some of the other compilations on the market, because its focus on the Spielberg scores precludes the inclusion of landmark works like Star Wars, Superman, and Home Alone. It is also out of date, having been released too early to include some of the very finest Spielberg scores, like Saving Private Ryan, Amistad, Jurassic Park, Hook, and the Oscar-winning Schindler's List. Consumers interested in a true greatest-hits compilation would be better served by one of the more recent discs.