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sorry if its been aready posted Its a must for me, I do have the Itunes downoad But hoped for years for this to come on a physical media and expanded and a great movie as well
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I guess he's talking about this ‘District 9' Deluxe Expanded Edition Soundtrack Announced SPACELAB9 and Madison Gate Records have announced a Double LP soundtrack release for the 2009 sci-fi thriller District 9 directed by Neill Blomkamp and starring Sharlto Copley. The deluxe expanded edition includes the eleven tracks from the original 30 minute album from 2009, plus an additional eight bonus tracks comprising 25 minutes of previously unreleased original score composed by Clinton Shorter (Contraband, Pompeii, 2 Guns). The soundtrack will be released on November 25, 2014 and is now available for pre-order on Amazon. District 9 was nominated for four Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Adapted Screenplay, Editing and Visual Effects. The movie is now available on Blu-ray and DVD. Here’s the album track list: Disc: 1 1. A Lot of Secrets 2. Field Officer 3. Heading to District 9 4. Flaunting the Law 5. Hospital Disc: 2 1. Gun Test 2. Harvesting Material 3. Wikus is Still Running 4. Back to District 9 5. You Can Fix This Disc: 3 1. She Calls 2. How Many Moons 3. I Want That Arm 4. Dropship 5. Get Him Talking Disc: 4 1. Exosuit 2. District 9 3. Heading Home 4. Prawnkus
http://filmmusicreporter.com/2014/10/22/district-9-deluxe-expanded-edition-soundtrack-announced/ http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00L1RQ0FA/jwfancom-20
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Posted: |
Oct 27, 2014 - 1:49 PM
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By: |
bobbengan
(Member)
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Seems like a nerdy money vacuum that Mondo would create, I guess they missed the boat on that. A perfect gift for the sci fi nerd still living in mom's basement. What a waste of Vinyl. This is as tepid and generic a score I can think of, "functional" but lacking any personality, invention, distinction, creativity, etc. that a score for a film like D9 SHOULD have had... I don't understand why so many current, acclaimed English-language directors in particular seem to be so opposed to scores that are interesting/involving/have any sort of weight in the film. It's not just freaking wall paper. It can and should work to complement and enhance the images, the sound, the story. So why has such a powerful medium, communicative beyond language borders and the like, been reduced to such an ancillary role in Western filmmaking especially...? *Steps off Soap Box*.
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