Showing posts with label James Newton Howard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Newton Howard. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

Vertical Limit


Vertical Limit
(Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Music by
James Newton Howard

Renovatio Records proudly presents a new, expanded and thoughtfully restructured edition of Vertical Limit, featuring James Newton Howard’s powerful and emotionally charged score.

Released at the turn of the millennium, Vertical Limit stands as one of the last major mountaineering epics of its era: an intense, physically grounded survival story set against the unforgiving heights of K2. Directed by Martin Campbell (GoldenEye, The Mask of Zorro, Casino Royale), the film blends large-scale spectacle with a more intimate narrative centered on guilt, redemption, and fractured family bonds.

The story follows Peter Garrett (Chris O'Donnell), a photographer haunted by a past tragedy that cost the life of his father. When his estranged sister Annie (Robin Tunney), now a determined climber, becomes trapped near the summit of K2 following a disastrous expedition, Peter joins a high-risk rescue mission that pushes human endurance to its absolute limits. Supporting performances from Bill Paxton, Scott Glenn, Izabella Scorupco, Temuera Morrison, Robert Taylor, Ben Mendelsohn, Alexander Siddig, and Stuart Wilson further ground the film’s emotional stakes, lending weight to a story that balances high-octane action with personal reckoning.

While Vertical Limit received mixed critical responses upon release (some praising its visceral set pieces and others questioning its plausibility) it has endured as a gripping example of survival cinema, remembered for its relentless pacing, outstanding cinematography and its ability to convey both the majesty and the indifference of nature.

By the time he approached Vertical Limit, James Newton Howard was already working at an extraordinary pace, scoring multiple films per year while continuing to refine his voice. Yet this project offered something distinct: the opportunity to write what he himself described as a full-scale, “balls-to-the-wall” orchestral action score.

From the outset, Howard was clear: this music required size, weight, and physical presence. “There’s only one way to do that,” he noted, “with a lot of bodies.” What emerged is one of the most fully realized large-scale adventure scores of his career, built around a strong thematic core and an expansive orchestral palette.

Central to that design is the score’s main theme, arguably one of Howard’s finest. Conceived early in the process and tested against key scenes before full composition began, the theme became the structural backbone of the score. As Howard himself emphasized, Vertical Limit was always intended to be “a thematically driven score,” with the architecture growing outward from this central idea.

The result is a theme of remarkable clarity and adaptability: grounded, serious, and emotionally weighty, yet immediately memorable. It drives the score’s sense of scale and adventure in “Three Years Later,” shifts into more introspective and tragic variation in tracks like “I Need One More”, “You Did The Right Thing” and “Maybe You Should Turn Back”, and takes on a solemn, almost reflective quality in moments like the closing passages of “The Rescue” and “It’s a Good Song.” Each appearance feels purposeful, anchoring the score across its shifting dramatic contexts.

A more intimate motif for Peter and Annie, introduced in the first half of “You Wanna Do This?,” offers a warmer emotional counterpoint. Developed further in “Annie and Peter” and “It’s a Good Song,” it reflects the siblings’ strained bond and gradual reconciliation. In contrast to the main theme’s broader emotional scope, this material feels more personal and immediate. Howard underscores this intimacy through delicate orchestration, favoring gently layered strings, harp figures, and soft woodwind colors that lend the motif a sense of fragility and sincerity. The writing often avoids overt sentimentality, instead allowing small shifts in harmony and texture to carry the emotional weight, mirroring the characters’ unspoken feelings and gradual emotional thaw.

Howard also avoids over-reliance on exotic color, despite the Himalayan setting. While subtle touches (gongs, bells, percussion, and occasional flute textures) suggest the environment, he deliberately restrains these elements to avoid cliché. The mountain is not exoticized; instead, it is treated as something vast, indifferent, and quietly overwhelming. This perspective is beautifully captured in the second half of “You Wanna Do This?,” where the music opens into a lyrical ascent passage of striking clarity: bold, uplifting, and quietly awe-inspiring, it conveys both the majesty of the climb and the emotional resolve driving the characters forward, without ever losing its grounded and dramatic tone.

A distinctive motif associated with Montgomery Wick (Scott Glenn) adds another layer of identity to the score. Wick, a hardened, solitary climber haunted by past loss, is musically defined through a wailing whistle timbre that feels at once human and ghostlike. This instrumental color appears throughout the score in a restrained but meaningful way, subtly accentuating cues like “You Did the Right Thing.” It becomes more pronounced in “Don’t Touch Her” and sections of “The Rescue,” where the musical idea gains emotional weight and presence, ultimately finding a form of resolution that mirrors Wick’s own arc within the story.

In contrast, Elliott Vaughn (Bill Paxton), the film’s antagonist, is characterized through a very different musical language. Howard often employs serpentine high string writing for the character; uneasy, slithering figures that suggest calculation, arrogance, and moral ambiguity. At times, this material veers into deliberately sleazy territory, subtly undercutting the nobility of the surrounding music. One of the clearest examples occurs in the second half of “Annie and Peter,” where the cue briefly shifts into something closer to psychological horror, echoing the composer’s own work in that genre.

If the thematic writing provides emotional coherence, the action music delivers the score’s visceral impact, and it is here that Howard’s approach becomes especially striking.

He has described action scoring as a kind of “physical or athletic event,” requiring endurance, discipline, and sheer intensity. That philosophy is evident throughout Vertical Limit, where extended action sequences unfold as tightly constructed orchestral set pieces.

These cues are driven by layered percussion, aggressive brass writing, frenetic strings, and propulsive rhythmic structures, often containing dozens of individual elements and recurring motifs. Yet despite their scale and intensity, they remain harmonically coherent and musically engaging, echoing, at times, the influence of Jerry Goldsmith in their balance between complexity and accessibility.

Impressive tracks like “Spindrift,” “Avalanche,” “Rescuers Arrive,” “Use Your Ax!,” “Nitro,” “Peter’s Jump,” and “The Rescue” perfectly exemplify this approach, where music and image move in near-perfect synchronization, creating a sense of physical immediacy, danger, and adrenaline. Yet what gives these sequences their lasting impact is not just their sheer intensity, but the way Howard anchors them within a broader emotional and thematic framework, allowing the score to shift seamlessly from visceral action to moments of reflection, connection, and humanity.

For years, Vertical Limit was represented solely by its original Varèse Sarabande 2000 release, which offered a concise limited overview of the score. While effective as an album, it captured only part of Howard’s broader musical architecture.

This new Renovatio Records edition expands that foundation with additional material and a revised, largely chronological presentation. Previously unreleased cues are reintegrated into the narrative flow, allowing the score’s thematic development and structural pacing to emerge more clearly. The result is a more faithful reflection of Howard’s original conception: one in which theme, action, and emotional progression are fully aligned.

With Vertical Limit, James Newton Howard delivered a score of remarkable scale, discipline, and emotional clarity, anchored by one of the strongest themes of his career and elevated by some of his most accomplished action writing. This new edition allows that achievement to be experienced as it was intended: not in fragments, but as a complete ascent.

Press play and hold on.



Track listing:

1. Utah (1:34)
2. Three Years Later (4:32)
3. Base Camp (1:36)
4. You Wanna Do This? (4:40)
5. Spindrift (3:24)
6. Avalanche (1:28)
7. Your Father Was A Smart Man (2:13)
8. I Need One More (1:43)
9. Rescue Preparations (1:50)
10. Rescuers Arrive (4:39)
11. You Did The Right Thing (2:59)
12. Use Your Ax! (4:25)
13. Question Marks (1:52)
14. Maybe You Should Turn Back (1:57)
15. Nitro (4:15)
16. Don't Touch Her (2:48)
17. Annie and Peter (4:21)
18. Peter's Jump (5:56)
19. The Rescue (5:56)
20. It's A Good Song (3:07)

Total Running Time: 65:15







Size: 352.4 MB
Files type: FLAC Audio File [.flac]
Channels: 2 (stereo)
Sample Rate: 44.1 KHz
Sample Size: 16 bit
Bit Rate: 1,411 kbps




Cover Artwork:






Credits:

Music by James Newton Howard
Produced by James Newton Howard and Jim Weidman
Executive Producer for Renovatio Records: John M. Angier

Electronic Score Produced by James T. Hill
Score Recorded and Mixed by Shawn Murphy
Conducted by Pete Anthony
Orchestrations by Brad Dechter, Jeff Atmajian, Pete Anthony and James Newton Howard
Supervising Music Editor: Jim Weidman
Music Editor: David Olson
Music Contractor: Sandy DeCrescent
Auricle Control Systems: Richard Grant
Music Preparation: JoAnn Kane Music Services
Recordist: Peter Doell
Scoring Crew: Mark Eshelman, Pat Weber, Grant Schmitz and Amanda Thompson
Mix Assistant: Tim Lauber
Mastered by Patricia Sullivan Fourstar at Bernie Grundman Mastering
Album Sequencing: John M. Angier
Album Art Direction: Mira B. Ellis

Music published by New Columbia Pictures Music, Inc. admin. by Sony/ATV Tunes LLC (ASCAP)

Special Thanks to: Martin Campbell, Gareth Wigan, Lloyd Phillips, Thom Noble, Tristan Brighty, Lia Vollack, Burt Berman, Raul Perez, Dana Berez, Sam Schwartz, Mike Gorfaine, Sofie, Jackson and Hayden Howard




Cue Assembly:

Track Title

Slate Number and Cue Title

1. Utah

1m0v1 Opening (Edited)

2. Three Years Later

1m2 Three Years Later

1m3v5 The Hospital (Edited)

3. Base Camp

2m1v3 Base Camp

4. You Wanna Do This?

3m2v3 Annie And Peter

4m1v6 Team Takes Off

5. Spindrift

4m2 Peter's Fear of Storm (Edited)

6. Avalanche

5m1Av2 First Avalanche

7. Your Father Was a Smart Man

5m2v2 Morse Code

8. I Need One More

6m2v2 I Need One More (Edited)

9. Rescue Preparations

6m3v2 Rescue Preparations

10. Rescuers Arrive

7m2v8 Rescuers Arrive (Edited)

11. You Did The Right Thing

8m2v3 Peter And Wick Argue (Edited)

8m3v4 Ice Wall (Edited)

7m1v2 Wick Agrees (Edited)

12. Use Your Ax!

9m1 Cyril Slips

9m2 Annie Tries For Pack (Edited)

9m3v4 Cyril Hangs/Annie & Pack (Edited)

9m2 Annie Tries For Pack (Edited)

9m3v4 Cyril Hangs/Annie & Pack (Edited)

13. Question Marks

9m5v4 Avalanche

14. Maybe You Should Turn Back

10m3v2 Malcolm & Kareem

15. Nitro

1m1v2 Royce's Sacrifice (Edited)

6m1v4 Skip's Boot (Edited)

10m4v3 Nitro Reacts To Sun

16. Don’t Touch Her

11m1v3 Don't Touch Her

17. Annie and Peter

11m2v4 Annie...What Is It?

12m1v2 Vaughn Kills Tom

18. Peter’s Jump

12m2v2 Peter Sets Out

12m3v4 Tom's Heart (Edited)

5m1v5 The Storm (Edited)

19. The Rescue

12m4v5 Finding Annie & Vaughn

13m1v6 The Rescue (Edited)

20. It’s a Good Song

13m2Alt v.3 It's A Good Song (Coma sopra)



Motion picture artwork and photography © 2000 Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. This compilation and cover artwork © 2026 Renovatio Records. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable laws. For promotional use only.

Renovatio Records [0-01702-19082]

Friday, May 16, 2025

The Interpreter


The Interpreter
(Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Music by
James Newton Howard

Two decades after its original release, Renovatio Records presents James Newton Howard’s The Interpreter, a score of remarkable restraint and emotional intelligence. Directed by the acclaimed Sydney Pollack, The Interpreter marked the filmmaker’s return to the political thriller genre — and his final feature. It stars Nicole Kidman as Silvia Broome, a United Nations interpreter who inadvertently overhears a plot to assassinate an African leader, and Sean Penn as the emotionally bruised Secret Service agent assigned to protect her. The film combines high-stakes international intrigue with introspective character drama. Set within the halls of the United Nations — famously becoming the first film to be granted permission to shoot inside the actual UN General Assembly — The Interpreter was seen as a mature, intelligent entry in Pollack’s storied career. While not a runaway critical darling, it received solid praise for its performances, direction, and atmosphere, and went on to gross over $160 million worldwide — a respectable box office success for a talky thriller steeped in moral ambiguity.

To score such a nuanced film, Pollack turned to James Newton Howard, a composer uniquely suited to its demands. By 2005, Howard had firmly established himself as a master of emotional subtlety, textural richness, and genre versatility. For The Interpreter, he crafted a score that eschews overt melodicism in favor of atmosphere, ambiguity, and slow-burning tension. Much of the music unfolds in a restrained, ambient mode — perfectly aligned with the film’s espionage-laced narrative. Low harmonic drones, tentative piano and clarinet motifs, and sparse instrumental textures evoke a world fraught with suspicion and unspoken emotion.

Yet what distinguishes this score is its careful infusion of cultural identity. Drawing inspiration from the fictional African country of Matobo — a clear parallel to Zimbabwe — Howard integrates African elements through percussion, vocal timbres, and a poignant adaptation of the traditional hymn Atolago, performed by Kirsten Bråten Berg and Kouame Sereba. Far from being a superficial flourish, this material grounds the score in the film’s political and emotional stakes. The Atolago theme, first heard in “Drowning Man Trail,” recurs in cues like “Simon’s Journals” and “Standoff and Resolution,” culminating in the extraordinary “Naming of the Dead.” There, it blossoms into a full orchestral and vocal statement — one of the score’s most moving passages — offering a moment of catharsis and spiritual grace.

Howard also introduces a sorrowful piano motif associated with Penn’s character, a man who is grieving the death of his wife. First appearing in “The Phone Call,” it returns in “Naming of the Dead,” this time arranged for guitar and strings, reaching a moving conclusion that finally gathers the score’s drifting elements into a moment of emotional resolution.

While much of the score leans toward moody understatement, Howard also delivers standout moments of suspense and orchestral drive. “Guy Forgot His Lunch” and “Zuwanie’s Arrival at U.N.” are highlights, unleashing swelling harmonies, polyrhythmic percussion, and tense crescendos that recall Howard’s more muscular writing from The Devil’s Advocate or The Fugitive. Elsewhere, cues like “Matobo,” “Hearing Voices,” “Silvia Is Followed,” “Bus Meeting,” and the second half of “Simon’s Journals” tingle with suspense, using African-style percussion in hushed, predatory rhythms that evoke the feeling of a silent hunt.

Despite its largely understated palette, The Interpreter is never static. Its use of ambient design, ethnic instrumentation, and thematic fragments results in a compelling, slow-blooming narrative arc. By the time the end credits roll, Howard has quietly gathered all the score’s emotional strands into a satisfying and resonant conclusion. It may not be the most attention-grabbing work in his filmography, but it’s undoubtedly one of the most refined.

Originally released by Varèse Sarabande in a truncated 45-minute edition, The Interpreter now receives the deluxe treatment from Renovatio Records. This expanded presentation runs over 60 minutes, remastered from the original recording sessions and presented in chronological film order. This new album not only restores key cues previously unreleased on the original album, but also shines a light on a more meditative and underappreciated side of Howard’s craft.

For longtime fans of James Newton Howard, this is a vital restoration of an overlooked gem. For collectors of politically-tinged thrillers and atmospheric dramatic scores, it’s a must-own. And for anyone who values the art of subtle storytelling through music, The Interpreter now speaks more clearly than ever before.


Track listing:

1. Matobo (8:03)
2. Silvia's Background (2:01)
3. Tobin Comes Home (2:21)
4. Hearing Voices (1:49)
5. Silvia Is Followed (1:22)
6. Drowning Man Trial (Atolago) (1:45)
7. I Knew He Was Dead (5:26)
8. The Phone Call (3:21)
9. Bus Meeting (4:54)
10. Guy Forgot His Lunch (3:03)
11. Simon's Journals (9:28)
12. Zuwanie's Arrival at U.N. (5:59)
13. Assassin (4:37)
14. Standoff and Resolution (5:52)
15. Naming of the Dead (Atolago) (4:53)

Total Running Time: 64:54




Size: 299.7 MB
Files type: FLAC Audio File [.flac]
Channels: 2 (stereo)
Sample Rate: 44.1 KHz
Sample Size: 16 bit
Bit Rate: 1,411 kbps


Cover Artwork:






Credits:

Music by James Newton Howard

Produced by James Newton Howard and Jim Weidman
Executive Producers: Sydney Pollack, Kevin Misher and Nick Angel
Executive In Charge of Music for Universal Pictures: Kathy Nelson
Executive Producer for Renovatio Records: John M. Angier

Score Recorded and Mixed by Shawn Murphy
Electronic Score Produced by James T. Hill
Percussion Recorded and Mixed by Eddy DeLena
Programming & Sound Design by Mel Wesson and Clay Duncan
Orchestrations by Jeff Atmajian, Brad Dechter, Pete Anthony and James Newton Howard
Conductor: Pete Anthony
Music Contractor: Sandy De Crescent
Performed by The Hollywood Studio Symphony
Supervising Music Editor: Jim Weidman
Assistant Music Editor: David Olson
Auricle Control Systems: Richard Grant
Music Preparation: JoAnn Kane Music Service
Score Recorded and Mixed at Barbra Streisand Scoring Stage, Sony Studios
Score and Mixing Crew: Bob Wolff, Mike Ging, Adam Michalak, Mark Eshelman, Brian Clement, Craig Loskorn
Mastered by Patricia Sullivan-Fourstar at Bernie Grundman Mastering
Assistant to Mr. Howard: Annica Ackerman
Album Sequencing: John M. Angier
Art Direction: Mira Ellis

"Atolago (Traditional)"
Performed by Kirsten Bråten Berg and Kouame Sereba
Courtesy of Grappa Musikkforlag and Six Degrees Records, Ltd.
by arrangement with Ocean Park Music Group


Cue Assembly:

Track Title

Slate Number and Cue Title

1. Matobo

1m1 Matobo (Edited)

2. Silvia’s Background
2m5 Lud & Tobin Discuss Silvia
2m9 Tobin Briefs The Agents

3. Tobin Comes Home

2m6 Tobin Comes Home

4. Hearing Voices

1m2 Silvia Hears Voice And Runs

2m7 Silvia Sees Lud
3m4 Missing Mask

5. Silvia Is Followed

2m5 Lud & Tobin Discuss Silvia

6. Drowning Man Trail (Atolago)

3m2 Drowning Man Trial

7. I Knew He Was Dead

3m3 Silvia Plays Flute

3m9 Philippe Wants To Meet Silvia (Edited)
4m0A Philippe In The Park
4m1 King Watches Philippe
4m0B Philippe And Silvia Talk

8. The Phone Call

2m6Alt Tobin Comes Home (Alternate)

9. Bus Meeting

4m3 The Bus

10. Guy Forgot His Lunch

4m4 Bus Blows Up

11. Simon’s Journals

5m2Alt Philippe's Suicide (Alternate)

5m2 Philippe's Suicide
5m4 Simon's Journals
5m5 Tobin Watches Silvia

12. Zuwanie’s Arrival at UN

6m2 Zuwanie Arrival

13. Arrival

6m3 Assassin

6m4Alt Lud (Alternate) (Edited)

14. Standoff and Resolution

7m1Alt Silvia & Zuwanie - Part 2 (Alternate) (Edited)

15. Naming of the Dead (Atolago)

7m3 Naming Of The Dead (Edited)

7m4A End Credits (Edited)

Motion picture artwork and artwork title © 2005 Universal Studios. This compilation and cover artwork © 2025 Renovatio Records. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable laws. For promotional use only.

Renovatio Records [0-01702-19092]

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Collateral

 

Collateral
(Original Motion Picture Score)

Music Composed by
James Newton Howard

Renovatio Records’ next release celebrates the music of Collateral (2004), the acclaimed action thriller directed by Michael Mann and starring Jamie Foxx, Tom Cruise, Jada Pinkett Smith, Mark Ruffalo, Peter Berg, Javier Bardem, and Bruce McGill.

Widely regarded as one of the most compelling thrillers of its time, Collateral blends a gripping narrative with standout performances and the atmospheric allure of nighttime Los Angeles. Foxx plays Max, a Los Angeles cab driver, who is offered a high fare by Vincent (Cruise) to drive to several locations throughout the city. Max agrees but soon finds himself taken hostage by Vincent, who turns out to be a cold-blooded hitman hired to eliminate a number of targets. With Mann’s signature attention to detail, Collateral not only achieved critical acclaim but also performed strongly at the box office, earning $220 million worldwide. Its exploration of themes like morality, chance, and human connection struck a chord with audiences, while the visually striking cinematography and tightly woven narrative solidified its place as a modern classic.

Integral to the film’s immersive experience is its music—a compelling blend of original score and carefully curated songs that enhance its emotional and thematic depth. The music of Collateral exemplifies the challenges and artistry of scoring a Michael Mann film, marked by his unorthodox and collaborative approach. Although James Newton Howard is the primary credited composer, the score is a mosaic that also includes contributions from Antonio Pinto and Tom Rothrock, as well as various temp tracks Mann retained in the final cut. This fragmented methodology reflects the director’s penchant for experimenting with musical textures, sometimes at the expense of a unified score.

Howard, aware of Mann’s exacting standards, approached the project with tempered expectations, even humorously noting he would be pleased if half of his compositions were used. In the end, only 15 minutes of his 50-minute score made it into the film. Meanwhile, Mann simultaneously tasked Pinto and Rothrock with composing for overlapping scenes, creating a rich but eclectic musical landscape. Despite its patchwork nature, the resulting score captures the film's haunting and nocturnal ambiance, contributing significantly to its mood.

Pinto’s compositions bring an emotional resonance to Collateral, reflecting cab driver Max’s journey through trauma and catharsis. His standout tracks, such as "Night Shift" and "Requiem," blend noir-inspired string melodies with electronic and orchestral textures, encapsulating the film’s delicate interplay of tension and fleeting beauty. Rothrock, on the other hand, provides hard-edged rock cues for a few of the film’s more kinetic sequences, particularly those involving law enforcement, adding a raw, energetic layer to the score.

In contrast, Howard’s work emphasizes rhythmic suspense and introspection, skillfully blending orchestral and synthetic elements. Tracks like "Island Limos" introduce intriguing motifs, while "Felix" and "Surveillance" showcase Howard’s innovative use of layered guitar textures. The mournful vocal lament in "Daniel Is Killed" and the pulse-pounding brass and percussion of “Max Steals Briefcase”, "The Final Target", and "Metro" deliver thrilling intensity in the film’s climactic moments, and will surely satisfy the avid fans of the composer. Howard himself described the score as “less note-y, much less orchestral” than his typical work, reflecting the minimalist yet impactful tone Mann sought.

Over the years, Collateral has seen a number of soundtrack releases, each with its strengths and shortcomings. The original 2004 album by Hip-O Records featured a mix of songs and score, offering a broader overview of the film’s music but limiting the depth of its score presentation. In 2016, Intrada Records focused exclusively on Howard’s work, offering a comprehensive collection of the score, though it leaned heavily into its darker, more subdued elements, which proved to be overwhelming for casual listeners. Renovatio Records’ new release seeks to deliver the definitive listening experience, curating a balanced selection of tracks from Howard, Pinto, and Rothrock. This album captures the essence of the film’s musical identity while standing as an engaging standalone experience.


Track listing:

1. Briefcase - Tom Rothrock (2:06)
2. Night Shift - Antonio Pinto (1:47)
3. Stalk - James Newton Howard (3:10)
4. The Second Hit - James Newton Howard (2:09)
5. You Like Jazz? - James Newton Howard (2:51)
6. Daniel Is Killed - James Newton Howard (2:52)
7. Max Panics - Antonio Pinto (2:30)
8. Max Steals Briefcase - James Newton Howard (1:47)
9. Island Limos - James Newton Howard (1:32)
10. Crime Scene - Antonio Pinto (1:35)
11. Felix - James Newton Howard (1:52)
12. Surveillance - James Newton Howard (3:44)
13. Club Fever - Antonio Pinto (2:58)
14. Last Stop - Antonio Pinto (1:15)
15. The Final Target - James Newton Howard (6:53)
16. Metro - James Newton Howard (5:13)
17. Would Anyone Notice? - James Newton Howard (3:46)
18. Requiem - Antonio Pinto (2:01)

Total Running Time: 50:01



Size: 243.8 MB
Files type: FLAC Audio File [.flac]
Channels: 2 (stereo)
Sample Rate: 44.1 KHz
Sample Size: 16 bit
Bit Rate: 1,411 kbps


Cover Artwork:





Credits:

Music Composed by James Newton Howard
Additional Music by Antonio Pinto

Music Produced by James Newton Howard
Additional Score Produced by Antonio Pinto
Executive in Charge of Music for Paramount Pictures: Randy Spendlove
Executive Music Supervisor: Kathy Nelson
Music Supervisor: Vicki Hiatt

Orchestra Conducted by Pete Anthony and Bruce Fowler
Orchestrations by Pete Anthony, Jeff Atmajian, Brad Dechter, Ed Cortês, Michael G. Fisher and Bruce Fowler
Orchestra Recorded at 20th Century Fox Newman Scoring Stage, Los Angeles, and Todd-AO, Studio City, CA
Orchestra Recorded and Mixed by Shawn Murphy
Additional Score Recorded by Michael Farrow
Scoring Crew: Jason Lloyd, Tom Steel
Stage Engineer: Bill Talbott
Electronic Score Recorded and Mixed by James T. Hill
Score Recordists: Tim Lauber, Mike Ging, Thomas Graham
Music Editors: Jim Weidman, Todd Kasow, Philip Tallman, James Flamberg
Additional Music Editors: Del Spiva, David Olson, Mike Boustead
Additional Programming by Charlie Clouser
Score Coordinators: Gui Amabis, Annica Ackerman
Music Contractor: Sandy De Crescent
Music Preparation: Jo Ann Kane Music Service

Soloists:
Oboe: Tom Boyd
French Horn: James Thatcher
Guitar: George Doering
Rabeca Violin, Tenor Violin, Hurdy-gurdy: Siba and Craig Eastman

"Briefcase"
Written by Tom Rothrock
Produced and Mixed by Tom Rothrock
Engineered and Edited by Mike Tarantino and John Paterno

Music Published by SKG Songs (ASCAP)


Cue Assembly:

Track Title

Slate & Cue Title

1. Briefcase - Tom Rothrock

Briefcase

2. Night Shift - Antonio Pinto

Night Shift

3. Stalk - James Newton Howard

1m2 Vincent Stalks Building

2m1 Vincent Reveals ID (Edited)

2m2 Vincent and Max Talk (Edited)

4. The Second Hit - James Newton Howard

2m1 Vincent Reveals ID (Edited)

2m3 Cops/Arriving at Second Hit (Edited)

2m4 Sylvester Clarke

5. You Like Jazz? - James Newton Howard

3m1 You Like Jazz? Part 1 (Edited)

2m3 Cops/Arriving at Second Hit (Edited)

3m3 Daniel

6. Daniel Is Killed - James Newton Howard

3m2 Fanning at Crime Scene

3m4 Daniel is Killed (with VOX)

7. Max Panics - Antonio Pinto

Max’s Panic

8. Max Steals Briefcase - James Newton Howard

3m8 Max Steals Briefcase

9. Island Limos - James Newton Howard

4m2 Island Limos

10. Crime Scene - Antonio Pinto

LAPD Crime Scene

11. Felix - James Newton Howard

4m5 Max Meets Felix

12. Surveillance - James Newton Howard

4m3A I’m Vincent

5m1 Cops Pursue

4m4 Surveillance at El Rodeo (Edited)

13. Club Fever - Antonio Pinto

Club Fever

Untitled (Edited)

14. Last Stop - Antonio Pinto

Last Stop

15. The Final Target - James Newton Howard

6m3 Race to Annie (Edited)

6m4 Vincent Cuts Power

16. Metro - James Newton Howard

6m5 Cat and Mouse (Edited)

7m1 Race to the Metro (Edited)

7m2 Vincent Hops on Train (Edited)

17. Would Anyone Notice? - James Newton Howard

7m3 Finale

18. Requiem - Antonio Pinto

Requiem


Motion picture artwork, logos and photos © 2004 DW Studios L.L.C. This compilation and cover artwork © 2024 Renovatio Records.
All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable laws. For promotional use only.

Renovatio Records [0-01702-19069]