tapoktro
03-28-2014, 11:49 AM
(http://s1272.photobucket.com/user/relworp3/media/cover_zps6bfa7ece.jpg.html)

The 3 Worlds Of Gulliver (1960) (2001) Soundtrack Score
Composed by: Bernard Herrmann


Link 320kbps: http://forums.ffshrine.org/private.php?do=newpm&u=765906

Tracklist:
1. Overture (01:52)
2. Minuetto (01:39)
3. The Lovers (00:48)
4. Trio Refrain (00:26)
5. The Old House (00:55)
6. The Ship (00:48)
7. The Storm (00:46)
8. The Lilliputians (01:31)
9. The Duel (01:17)
10. The King's March (01:32)
11. The Clouds (00:36)
12. The Trees (01:36)
13. A Hatful of Fish (01:10)
14. The Oath (00:56)
15. The Castle (00:47)
16. The Tightrope (02:40)
17. The Prison (01:02)
18. The Fight (00:43)
19. War March (01:05)
20. Naval Battle (01:28)
21. The Fire (01:33)
22. Escape (00:45)
23. The Beach (01:16)
24. The Shadow (01:52)
25. Reunion (01:27)
26. Duo (02:21)
27. The Wedding (00:18)
28. Nocturne (01:18)
29. The Woodland (01:12)
30. The Squirrel (01:48)
31. The Chess Game (01:59)
32. Alchemy (01:23)
33. The Girls (00:43)
34. The Crocodile (01:52)
35. Pursuit (04:48)
36. Happiness (00:37)
37. Finale (00:50)

HPLFreak
03-31-2014, 06:45 AM
Link received.
Much appreciated...

tapoktro
04-18-2015, 10:35 AM
UPDATED

scorecrazy69
05-07-2015, 09:17 PM
Thanks!

screenthemes123
05-07-2015, 09:24 PM
Outstanding up-date Tapoktro - Classic, wonderful score.

TeddyV
09-02-2015, 02:17 AM
Thank you, Tapoktro! I've been a big Herrmann fan for many years and I don't know how I managed never to hear this before. It's a surprise, and I really don't know why it should be - Herrmann's music often had a signature sound but just as often sounded as unlike anything else he'd ever done. I was looking at my Herrmann collection the other day and realized that I had no idea of exactly what else he might have written that I didn't know. Printed off a movie discography that, single-spaced, came to one page plus five lines on a second. My Goldsmith movie list comes in at five and a half single-spaced pages. Herrmann wrote so shockingly little, was so under-utilized, during his career. I'm willing to agree with critic David Thompson, that he was the very best, my love of Goldsmith notwithstanding. Hermann's music is just so good, so necessary, that it just seems like there was so much more of it. Possibly because such a high proportion of his scores are genuine classics, compared to Goldsmith or anyone else.
Again, thanks for the opportunity of hearing this one. Much appreciated!