Isaias Caetano
02-11-2013, 02:00 AM
11 September 1683 (Soundtrack by Roberto Cacciapaglia) 2013
http://i1065.photobucket.com/albums/u387/icsilva/11September1683SoundtrackbyRobertoCacciapaglia2013 CoverFrontPeq_zps4d804496.jpg
Dedicated to Doctor Go

~ A nice soundtrack as well ... It contains all the elements of an epic movie.
Attention to tracks 25 and 27 with a plaintive elegiac cello ~

Titolo: 11 September 1683
Title in Polish: Bitwa pod wiedniem
Compositore: Roberto Cacciapaglia
Etichetta: Carosello
Cover Frontal
mp3 ~ 320 kbp/s


Reviews


~ IBS
Roberto Cacciapaglia, considerato uno dei pi� innovativi compositori della scena musicale internazionale, ha realizzato la colonna sonora di 11 September 1683. Cacciapaglia ha composto con grande maestria 28 tracce per esaltare i momenti pi� salienti del film, in cui si narra la storia di Marco D'aviano, eroe reso beato dalla Chiesa Cattolica.

~ Intermezzomedia
Roberto Cacciapaglia is considered one of the most innovative musicians and composer in the international music scene. He decided to devote himself to the soundtrack of "11 September 1683, "a film produced by Rai, from January in Italian theathres. Maestro Cacciapaglia graduated in composition and orchestra director in Milan, has a respectable career, he has played in the most prestigious theaters around the world and has worked with great artists, one of the many Battiato. Cacciapaglia composed with great skill 28 tracks to enhance the highlights of the movie "11 September 1683" by Renzo Martinelli, acclaimed director, winner of several international awards such as the David di Donatello. To create and produce "11 September 1683" Rai has decided to invest a big budget. The movie tells the story of Marco d'Aviano, a hero made ??blessed by the Chatolic Church. D'Aviano was called by Pope Innocent XI to rebuild the Holy League of Christian nations to counter the expansion of the Ottoman Empire which proceeded in Europe without brakes. The movie, which will be distributed abroad, it boasts a cast of such relief like Murray Abraham and Enrico Lo Verso. This soundtrack is destined to be a great success not only for the high visibility of the movie, but also for the majesty of each disk's track.


original title: 11 SETTEMBRE 1683
directed by: Renzo Martinelli
cast:F. Murray Abraham, Enrico Lo Verso, Antonio Cupo, Giorgio Lupano, Yorgo Voyagis, Hal Yamanouchi, Cristina Serafini, Alicja Bachleda, Jerzy Skolimowski, Piotr Adamczyk, Marius Chivu, Daniel Olbrychski, Wojciech Mecwaldowski, Borys Szyc, Marcin Walewski
screenplay: Renzo Martinelli, Valerio Massimo Manfredi
cinematography: Fabio Cianchetti
editing: Tommaso Feraboli
set design: Rossella Guarna
costume design: Massimo Cantini Parrini
music: Roberto Cacciapaglia
producer: Alessandro Leone
production: Martinelli Film Company International, supported by MiBAC, Agresywna Banda
distributor: MICROCINEMA
world sales:RAI TRADE DEPARTMENT
country: Italy, Poland
year: 2012
film run: 120'
status: Ready (09/10/2012)
festival & awards: FIPA - INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL OF BIARRITZ 2013: Fipatel

Plot

In the collective anxiety resulting from September 11, 2001, there is, all too human and widespread, the impulse to scour through the pages of History for a handle on such a cataclysmic event.
September 11 is a watershed date: in fact as Bernard Lewis, the contemporary world's foremost Islamic scholar never tires to remind us, that date coincides with Islam's deepest thrust into the very heart of the West.
On September 11, 1683, three hundred thousand warriors hailing from every corner of the Empire are laying siege to Vienna. They are commanded by the Grand Vizier Kara Mustafa, to whom the Sultan of Istanbul has entrusted the Prophet's banner: the green oriflamme with the golden crescent which tradition claims as once belonging to the Prophet Mohammad himself. The objective of their aggression is to hoist that flag over all the capitals of Europe, last among which Rome, the cradle of Christianity.
The apparition of a luminous comet in the heavens is interpreted as a sign from Allah promising the glorious victory of Islam and the subjugation of Christian Europe. Arabian horses will soon be watering at the fountains of St. Peter's Square.
Despite two months of heroic resistance, the fate of Vienna appears to be sealed: cannonballs of the Turkish Army have breached the walls in several places opening the way for rapid incursions by the Tartar Cavalry and the Bosnian foot soldiers flanking the Vizier's Janissaries. The sallies are ever more fierce and frequent.
On September 11, by the first light of dawn, a Capuchin monk says Mass at the top of the hill overlooking the city. Then, with a last fiery sermon, he incites the Christian troops.
His name is Marco of Aviano, born in Friuli, 1631 of noble lineage. He is counselor and spiritual guide of the Hasburg Emperor Leopold I.
The battle between the opposing armies drags on until sunset, with mixed results for both sides in a strategic play of thrusts and retreats, until Eugene of Savoy, at the head of six thousand Po Valley Lancers finally emerges en masse, breaking through the circle of besiegers while a diversionary move on the part of Carl of Lorraine enfilades the Turkish Janissaries.
At this juncture, by the waning light of the setting sun, the decisive attack is led by the Polish King Janos III Sobieski, who, despite his wounds, leads the final assault that overwhelms the Ottoman troops and routs the last holdouts at the enemy encampment: twenty-five thousand tents, among which the towering green pavilion of Kara Mustafa himself. Victory!
Throughout the entire battle, the figure of Marco of Aviano stands out against the sky at the top of the hill. Wooden crucifix in hand, held to the heavens, he incites the Christian troops and prays for their well-being. A few days later, the selfsame Marco will deliver Mohammad's banner to Rome and consign it into the hands of Pope Innocent XI.
For Islamic minded historians the rout of Vienna was an epochal "catastrophe", one that generated a sentiment of collective shame for being so soundly vanquished by the "infidel".
And for Islam as a collective whole, that defeat was a harbinger of a slow and inexorable decline.
The deeply imbedded origin of the Islamic rage which the West must now daily confront is to be found therefore on what transpired on September 11, 1683.



http://i1065.photobucket.com/albums/u387/icsilva/TrackList2.gif

01. Eclipse (03:05)
02. The Wolf and the Sword (02:49)
03. Aviano (02:20)
04. Abul the Turk (02:10)
05. The Great Tournament (02:13)
06. Kara Mustafa (01:48)
07. Coronation of the Grand Vizier (03:21)
08. Topkapi (03:18)
09. Attraction (03:51)
10. Wild Side - Lena's Theme (03:37)
11. The Prophecy (03:31)
12. The Golden Apple (01:38)
13. Duchess of Lorena (02:02)
14. The Sultan (01:58)
15. Declaration of War (02:18)
16. Murad Giray the Tartar (01:28)
17. The Emperor Abandons Wien (01:23)
18. The Fallen (01:16)
19. Lena Is Captured (01:19)
20. The Great Explosion (01:34)
21. Rainbows in the Dark (04:58)
22. Drums of War (03:10)
23. The Sense of Dawn - Battlefield (02:49)
24. The Future (02:15)
25. The King (04:00)
26. Father and Son (01:47)
27. Temple - Death of the Grand Vizier (04:02)
28. The Future - The End (03:48



http://i1065.photobucket.com/albums/u387/icsilva/downloadherer.gif

11September.zip (169,64 MB) - uploaded.to (http://uploaded.net/file/00a8s4s9)

WildwoodPark
02-11-2013, 02:09 AM
Great post my friend.

G
02-11-2013, 07:05 AM
Thank, Isaias Caetano.

Yannis
02-11-2013, 10:08 AM
Thank Isaia !!!

wimpel69
02-11-2013, 10:21 AM
Thanks!

Petros
02-11-2013, 12:17 PM
Thank you very much, Isaia!

airbender1990
02-12-2013, 03:35 AM
Thanks!

Heynow
02-12-2013, 05:40 AM
Thank you.

Lhurgoyf
02-15-2013, 09:24 PM
Is this music composed by italian pianist & composer Roberto Cacciapaglia (he has similar composition as my favourite Ludovico Einaudi), or this is another Caccapaglia? Because this sounds rather awful, it was recorded with synth orchestra, and all-round not enjoyable experience. And I was so excited to hear some sweet piano tunes.... Thanks to uploader, though!

hatti75
02-16-2013, 01:59 AM
Thanks, great post!

Isaias Caetano
02-16-2013, 04:09 PM
Is this music composed by italian pianist & composer Roberto Cacciapaglia (he has similar composition as my favourite Ludovico Einaudi), or this is another Caccapaglia?
Yes! It's the same person ...

lordtalien
02-26-2013, 07:59 AM
Thanks!

k27
05-04-2013, 10:18 AM
Thanks a lot!

replicante182
07-21-2016, 11:12 PM
Thanks so much a great composer and musician