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The Iron Giant Original Motion Picture Soundtrack - Vinyl, CD & Digital Download - Perfect for Movie Nights & Nostalgic Listening
The Iron Giant Original Motion Picture Soundtrack - Vinyl, CD & Digital Download - Perfect for Movie Nights & Nostalgic Listening
The Iron Giant Original Motion Picture Soundtrack - Vinyl, CD & Digital Download - Perfect for Movie Nights & Nostalgic Listening

The Iron Giant Original Motion Picture Soundtrack - Vinyl, CD & Digital Download - Perfect for Movie Nights & Nostalgic Listening

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Description

Product Description Soundtrack with music by Michael Kamen, for this 1999animated film directed by Brad Bird. Eastwest. Amazon.com English poet laureate Ted Hughes originally conceived The Iron Giant as an instructive diversion for his and wife Sylvia Plath's children. In the 80's, the Who's Pete Townshend adapted it as a rock-oriented album and stage musical. But in transforming it into a feature-length animated film, director Brad Bird (The Simpsons, King of the Hill) added a hipster retro-'50s sensibility that colorfully evokes the era's various obsessions with cold war angst, flying saucers, space travel, and hi-fi. The film's soundtrack captures those often-anxious preoccupations with loopy delight, offering up a smart sampling of exotic eclectica that ranges from the cocktail jazz cum proto hipster rap of Edd "Kookie" Byrnes' "Kookie's Mad Pad" to the smooth pop harmonies of the Ames Brothers ("Destination Moon") and the Space Age roots R&B of the Tyrones ("Blast Off") and Jimmy Lloyd ("I Got a Rocket in My Pocket"). And those who appreciated the trash/outre musical sensibilities of Pecker should love Jimmie Haskell's "Rockin' in the Orbit," the Nutty Squirrels' Chipmunk-ish "Salt Peanuts," and the late great Mel Torme's hilariously earnest "Comin' Home Baby." Composer Michael Kamen's suitably dramatic underscore is also represented by a brief orchestral suite that manages to be both wistful and sprightly. --Jerry McCulley

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
Let me start by saying that this was an amazing movie. It is and will always be one of my favorites. Warner Brothers did a horrible job marketing this when it came out in 1999. For reasons that I supposed had to do with the cost of production, WB chose to focus on the release of Wild, Wild West. This wonderful movie got lost in the shuffle. If you haven't seen it, you MUST.There are two soundtrack releases for this film; one is the great score by Michael Kamen (may he Rest is Peace); the second is this one, which includes all of the space-themed 1950s music used in the film. I bought a copy of both soundtracks when the movie was first release, but someone misplaced my copy of this one, so I had to replace it.They are both wonderful.