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I had some time to spare during my daily walk (usually reserved for work related calls) and I was wondering which actor was most present in the movies to which I own a soundtrack. From the get go, I figured that it would be someone like Sean Connery, Michael Caine... etc., but then it dawned on me: The Godzilla Perfect Collection box sets (all six) and all the other Japanese soundtracks I own. The answer? Why Kenji Sahara, of course. And it was a close contest with directors as well, but Ishiro Honda prevailed over Stephen Spielberg.
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Oh God, now I'm dreading having to go through all of the scores I have, and spot every recurring actor among the respective films. LOL! I may get around to making a list, but that'll have to wait for a while I'm afraid. However, one recurring actor I can immediately think of is Toshiro Mifune. Hahaha! I can see the onset of a headache indeed. In my case, Toshiro Mifune is climbing up the list rapidly.
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John Wayne. From Tiomkin's "The Alamo" and Steiner's "The Searchers" and Rozsa's "Green Berets" through all the many Bernstein western classics, and Victor Young's "The Quiet Man", Alfred Newman's "How the West Was Won", Goldsmith's "In Harm's Way"... to mention just a few examples of the great many. I'm missing several of the western classics, but that gap will close over the next few years. One of the advantages of having the kind of middling, uniform kind of scoring we're getting these days is that there will be no shortages of music from the last eight decades to go through, not to mention the innumerable scores from foreign films.
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Posted: |
Mar 30, 2021 - 6:35 PM
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By: |
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(Member)
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I'm missing several of the western classics, but that gap will close over the next few years. One of the advantages of having the kind of middling, uniform kind of scoring g we're getting these days is that there will no shortages of music from the last eight decades to go through, not to mention the innumerable escort from foreign films. Charlton Heston is associated with plenty of my favorite CDs... Ben-Hur, El Cid, The Omega Man, The Agony and the Ecstasy, The War Lord, The Ten Commandments, Will Penny, The Big Country, Touch of Evil, Major Dundee, Planet of the Apes etc etc.
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I'm missing several of the western classics, but that gap will close over the next few years. One of the advantages of having the kind of middling, uniform kind of scoring g we're getting these days is that there will no shortages of music from the last eight decades to go through, not to mention the innumerable escort from foreign films. Charlton Heston is associated with plenty of my favorite CDs... Ben-Hur, El Cid, The Omega Man, The Agony and the Ecstasy, The War Lord, The Ten Commandments, Will Penny, The Big Country, Touch of Evil, Major Dundee, Planet of the Apes etc etc. Yes. I have the vast majority of those titles and they'll have to pry away The Omega Man away from my cold ... hands before I relinquish that CD, truly a godsend from FSM (no blasphemy intended).
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Probably Sean Connery with scores by: Barry Goldsmith Jarre Morricone Quincy Legrand Addison Herrmann Richard Rodney Bennett Patrick Williams but I don't own Connery scores by J. Williams and Horner
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If I had to take an educated guess, I'd say probably Harrison Ford and Sean Connery are towards the top. But I think the main cast from the original Star Trek takes the cake--several TV scores and all those movies.
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Daniel Radcliffe? (Harry Potter) Arnold Schwarzenegger Do William Shatner / Leonard Nimoy / DeForest Kelley work for all the Star Trek episodes or is that considered 1?
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Sean Connery Roger Moore Pierce Brosnan William Shatner Leonard Nimoy David Tenant Kevin Costner Robert Downey Jr. Charleton Heston Thanks for doing my homework for me. Wait, that Harrison Ford fellow probably gets pretty high up there. And if I've got Downey I've probably got Evans and Hemsworth. I seem to have a fair amount of Tom Cruise. Tom Hanks?
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Wayne, Eastwood, Bronson, Caine, Connery, Kirk Douglas, Gian Maria Volonte, Alain Delon, Lee van cleef, Toshira Mifune, Tomas Milian, Coburn, Marvin, Robert Ryan, McQueen, Bryner...
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Charleton Heston Was that his imposter brother ?
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I would say a lot of those mentioned too. I would also add Christopher Lee. He would be high up. About 74 including individual tracks on those old hammer compilations.
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I don't know, and I'm not sure how I would go about finding out. :-D I would guess out of the blue Sean Connery, because he did lots of movies that had scores by favorite composers of mine, like John Barry, Jerry Goldsmith, Bernard Herrmann, Ennio Morricone, etc... but it's just a guess.
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but I don't own Connery scores by J. Williams and Horner Williams and Horner check out too in my "Connery" collection, there are sure lots of interesting scores for Connery movies. Obviously, there are not a lot of golden age composers like Miklós Rózsa etc. among the list.
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Connery: 39 Ford:29 Caine :48 Heston 49 Cardinals :41
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