DAKoftheOTA
11-08-2012, 05:49 PM
I've never even heard a whisper of this thing existing, so I thought I'd give it a shot here. This is one of my favorite Elfman scores and the OST just isn't enough, and neither is the Burton/Elfman box set. It only included a couple of extra tracks. So if anyone out there has this thing or can point me in the right direction, I'd love to have it. Thanks.

The Dimensioner
11-08-2012, 11:38 PM
Thread 96799 ?

DAKoftheOTA
11-08-2012, 11:53 PM
http://forums.ffshrine.org/f92/sleepy-hollow-complete-score-96799/#post2203256

The Dimensioner
11-09-2012, 01:59 AM
How can you call it a fake? The OP, himself, said he made it. All DVD rips can't be called fakes--and that one, I don't think, is even a full rip.

DAKoftheOTA
11-09-2012, 02:36 AM
Of course when I say fake, I mean not legit. A DVD rip is not a complete score. The Dark Knight Trilogy, Transformers Trilogy, The Avengers, Iron Man and Iron Man 2 - those are complete scores. That's what I'm looking for in Sleepy Hollow

The Dimensioner
11-09-2012, 03:08 AM
But, you CAN agree that it is a legit DVD rip, right?

Ideally, a DVD rip sure can be a complete score. However, a complete score would ideally NOT be a DVD rip. To me, a complete score is one that contains all the music heard in the film. Using logic, one can then assume that a DVD rip that covers ALL of the music heard in a film is thereby a complete score. If some of the DVD audio is left off, then you've just got an expanded score. But there is a gray line between what it means to be a complete score vs. what it means to be recording sessions. I guess, in general, I see the recording sessions to be all of the music written for the entire film--even the unused bits. This is a noob-level reason for why DVD rips CANNOT be labeled as recording sessions. Higher up on the experience tree, one can simply assume that a DVD rip cannot be labeled as the recording sessions because it just f*cking isn't.