The Red Violin: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
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The Red Violin: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

 The Red Violin: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
from: Sony

 : The Red Violin: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

List Price: $9.99
Amazon.com's Price: $9.98
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Binding: Audio CD
Brand: Sony
EAN: 0074646301029
Format: Soundtrack
Item Dimensions:23
Label: Sony
Manufacturer: Sony
MPN: 63010
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Sony
Release Date: May 18, 1999
Studio: Sony




Disc 1:
  1. Anna's Theme
  2. Cremona: Main Title
  3. Cremona: Death of Anna
  4. Cremona: Birth of the Red Violin
  5. Cremona: The Red Violin
  6. Vienna: The Monastery
  7. Vienna: Kaspar's Audition/Journey to Vienna
  8. Vienna: Etudes/Deat of Kaspar
  9. Oxford: The Gypsies/Journey Across Europe
  10. Oxford: Pope's Gypsy Cadenza
  11. Oxford: Cotius Musicalis/Victoria's Departure
  12. Oxford: Pope's Concert
  13. Oxford: Pope's Betrayal
  14. Shaghai: Journey to China
  15. Shanghai: People's Revolution/Death of Chou Yuan
  16. Montreal: Morritz Discovers the Red Violin
  17. Montreal: Morritz's Theme
  18. Montreal: The Theft
  19. Montreal: End Titles
  20. Red Violin: Chaconne for Violin and Orchestra
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Editorial Review:

Amazon.com's Best of 1999:
Leave it to composer John Corigliano and violinist Joshua Bell--two of biggest names in classical music--to team up and create one of 1999's best soundtracks. For many, the soundtrack to The Red Violin was just as impressive as the film, a moving blend of gypsy, folk, and classical compositions. --Jason Verlinde

Amazon.com essential recording:
Normally we think of a musical instrument as a passive object in the service of a performing artist. But what if that instrument is itself a work of art, containing the secrets of the various owners through whose hands it has passed over the centuries? That's the premise behind this intriguing film by François Girard (director of 32 Short Films About Glenn Gould). It traces the story of a legendary violin (thought to be possessed by an immortal soul) from its birth in 17th-century Italy through Mozart's Vienna, Victorian England, and revolutionary China to its present-day fate on the auction block. The score, in suggesting the violin's unique aura, therefore carries much of the burden of the story, and it brings together some of the most outstanding talents in contemporary classical music. Composer John Corigliano's richly eclectic and poetic score--encompassing classical elegance, gypsy passion, and angst-ridden harmonies--etches vivid portraits of the film's various epochs but also gives an overarching sense of unity to the episodic character of the script. It's essentially a set of remarkably imaginative variations for violin and orchestra on a theme of haunting pathos and is a substantial work of music in its own right. As the soloist, Joshua Bell saturates the eponymous instrument with personality. His combination of virtuoso bravura and soulful phrasing almost seems to lead the violin to the brink of human speech. Conductor Esa-Pekka Salonen shapes the exchange between orchestra and violin into tautly dramatic dialogue. The disc also includes a powerful related work on the theme used in the score, the Chaconne for Violin and Orchestra, which confirms Corigliano's status as one of today's leading and most personally communicative American composers. --Thomas May



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Before It Became an Industry
This is not your typical soundtrack. First, it was written by a contemporary "classical" composer who is not usually associated with film music. Second, it contains not just music from the film, but also a "serious" concert orchestral piece written using some of the themes from the soundtrack music (this piece, which is titled "The Red Violin": Chaconne for Violin and Orchestra, is the 17-minute track that closes this CD in spectacular fashion.) Third, the film itself (which I have not seen) is itself based on a tale involving music, so the music that Corigliano wrote was conceived as integral to the film itself, not just something to supply the proper mood for certain scenes.

The music is quite able to stand on its own; even the "soundtrack" sections of the program are musically interesting, and the sounds that Corigliano's scoring are colorful but never merely splashy. Probably because this is a soundtrack , there are some bass effects that will put your woofers--or better yet, your subwoofer--to the test (but some really low, loud notes occur in the concert piece, not just the soundtrack sections themselves), so be forewarned. The music is colorful and enjoyable; for my money, this is the best thing that Corigliano has yet done.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - The true weeping violin.
The violin in this is very lovely but also very sad and is profound. Those who play the violin or have a great care for music itself will enjoy. For those who do not they will not be so graced by the journey that the music brings. Although the music very sad in most part's it is very compelling. So to conclude buy it if you enjoy the movie or enjoy the classical music.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - The Red Violin
To hear it is to love it. If you like the sound of the violin you will love Joshua Bell playing it.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Love the soundtrack and the movie!
I have five copies of this soundtrack for various places I spend most of my time at. It's beautiful and haunting. Number 16 makes my heart ache.



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Music is best along with the movie
There are soundtracks that are wonderful to listen to without the movie, such as Ladies in Lavender, and there are soundtracks that go very well while watching the movie. The Red Violin is not as pleasing without the film. With having said that, Joshua Bell does deserve compliments for his excellent skill.






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