Horror movie soundtracks in TV & Movie Soundtracks

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"Drew's Famous: A Tribute To Stephen King Horror Movie Themes" (04/22/2003) Soundtracks Drew's Famous, Turn Up The Music, Inc.

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"Horror Movie Hits" (07/2005) Soundtracks 101 Strings, Madacy Distribution

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"The Rocky Horror Picture Show: Sing It!" (09/05/1995) Soundtracks Original Soundtrack, Rhino Records (USA)Full title: Rocky Horror Picture Show: Sing It! Producers: ODE Sounds & Visuals, Lou Adler. All songs written by Richard O'Brien. THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW: SING IT! includes a 12-page lyric booklet. Ode Records and its manufacturer/marketer Rhino Records celebrated the 20th anniversary of The Rocky Horror Picture Show in 1995 by releasing this version of the original soundtrack album, on which the lead vocals had been wiped, allowing fans to perform their own karaoke renditions of the songs. The CD booklet contained a complete set of lyrics, and, freed of the LP time restrictions that encumbered the original release 20 years earlier, Rocky Horror Picture Show: Sing It! contained a much more complete version of the score: "Planet, Schmanet, Janet" and "The Sword of Damocles," as well as a longer version of "Over at the Frankenstein Place," all heard in the movie but not on the soundtrack, and "Once in a While," which had been left on the cutting room floor, adding up to eight-and-a-half extra minutes. A few backup vocals remained, and now and then you could hear a ghost of the lead vocal in the quieter sections, but for the most part the music was all that remained. Of course, that meant that only die-hard fans needed to care about the album, but then Ode/Rhino had been catering to them with a series of releases for years, of which this was just another one. ~ William Ruhlmann

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"Little Shop of Horrors [2003 Original Cast]" (11/04/2003) Soundtracks Original Cast, DRG (USA)Music composed by Alan Menken. Lyrics written by Howard Ashman. Principal Cast: Kerry Butler (Audrey); Hunter Foster (Seymour); Rob Bartlett (Mushnik); Michael-Leon Wooley (Voice Of Audrey II); Dequina Moore (Chiffon); Trisha Jeffrey (Crystal); Carla J. Hargrove (Ronette); Douglas Sills (Orin, Bernstein, Snip, Luce & Everyone Else). Recorded at Clinton Recording Studios, New York, New York on September 15, 2003. Includes liner notes & plot synopsis by Jack Viertel. Personnel: John Benthal (guitar, mandolin); Tom Murray, Matt Hong (woodwinds); Dave Spier, Tony Kadleck (trumpet); John Samorian, Henry Aronson (keyboards); Rich Mercurio (drums); David Yee, Joe Passaro (percussion). Audio Mixer: Cynthia Daniels. Liner Note Author: Jack Viertel. Recording information: Clinton Recording Studios, New York, NY (09/15/2003). Photographer: Paul Kolnik. Arranger: Michael Kosarin. The original cast recording of the 2003 revival of Howard Ashman and Alan Menken's campy classic musical Little Shop of Horrors is the most lavish package yet of the show's funny, scary, and sweet songs. Collecting all 22 songs that appear in the musical as well as five demos of songs that didn't make it into the show or the 1986 film, the album is equally worthwhile for fans of the entire Little Shop of Horrors phenomenon as well as fans of this particular cast. As Seymour, Hunter Foster's voice is nebbishy but surprisingly powerful, especially on "Grow for Me," "The Meek Shall Inherit," and "Now (It's Just the Gas)," a duet with Douglas Sills' sadistic dentist, Orin. Sills' Orin -- and, for that matter, Kerry Butler's Audrey and Michael-Leon Wooley's Audrey II -- are good, but their performances seem indebted to Steve Martin, Ellen Greene, and Levi Stubbs' characterizations in the film. Nevertheless, "Dentist!," "Somewhere That's Green," and "Feed Me" sound great. The less show-stopping songs like "Da-Doo," "The Meek Shall Inherit," and "Prologue/Little Shop of Horrors" work well too, and show off DeQuina Moore, Trisha Jeffrey, and Carla J. Hargrove as Chiffon, Crystal, and Ronnette, the musical's cross hybrid of a girl group and a Greek chorus. The demos at the end of the album are also worthwhile, expanding on character development and plot twists while underlining what a potent team Ashman and Menken were. Of particular interest are the two Orin-oriented tracks: "A Little Dental Music" is a clever homage to the Muzak played in dentists' offices and the pain that those songs try to mask, while "I Found a Hobby" plays a little bit like a prequel to "Dentist!," and was probably removed for that reason -- but it's so funny in its depiction of young Orin as a budding sadist that it's a shame that Ashman and Menken couldn't fit it into the show. "The Worse He Treats Me," meanwhile, delves deeper into Audrey and Orin's dysfunctional relationship, recalling the Crystals' "He Hit Me (It Felt Like Kiss)." "We'll Have Tomorrow," a hopeful duet between Audrey and Seymour, may be the best of the demos. A poignant love song with an aching melody, it may have been too serious to fit with the rest of the musical's dark humor and innocent romance. On the other hand, "Bad," which was written for the film of Little Shop of Horrors, doesn't live up to its title, but it does sound like a rough draft of "Mean Green Mother from Outer Space," which did appear in the film and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song. This album is a lovingly crafted homage to Little Shop of Horrors' staying power; like The Rocky Horror Picture Show, it's a classic because it's still outrageously good fun. ~ Heather Phares

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"Rocky Horror Picture Show: 25 Years of Absolute Pleasure" (10/03/2000) Soundtracks Original Soundtrack, Ode Sounds & VisualsMusic and lyrics by Richard O'Brien. Principal Cast: Tim Curry (Frank N Furter); Susan Sarandon (Janet Weiss); Barry Bostwick (Brad Majors); Richard O'Brien (Riff-Raff); Patricia Quinn (Magenta); Little Nell (Columbia); Jonathan Adams (Dr. Everett Scott); Peter Hinwood (Rocky); Meatloaf (Eddie); Charles Gray (Narrator). Recorded at Olympic Studios, London, England in 1974. Digitally remastered by Bob Fisher (Pacific Multimedia Corp). The Rocky Horror Show changed substantially in the two and a quarter years between its opening in a tiny theater in London on June 19, 1973, and its movie premiere as The Rocky Horror Picture Show on September 24, 1975. Richard O'Brien's humorous mixture of British glam rock with old horror movie clich?s was a trashy, low-rent success on-stage in Great Britain due to its irreverent attitude, its catchy pop/rock score, and its cast, led by Tim Curry. American producer Lou Adler took Curry to Los Angeles for a 1974 American version that lost some of the original's subversive appeal in a broadly played Hollywood satire; it did well at the Roxy nightclub, but flopped on Broadway in 1975. For the film version, Adler wisely mixed the best of the London and Los Angeles versions, shooting the movie in England with Curry and several of the other original cast members, including Patricia Quinn, Little Nell, and O'Brien himself, plus Meatloaf (years before the rock stardom he achieved with Bat Out of Hell), who had made a favorable impression in the L.A. version, and Americans Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon as the innocent couple Brad and Janet. Adler also brought back original London stage musicians like guitarist Count Ian Blair in place of the slick L.A. studio musicians whose professional approach had marred the L.A. studio cast album. The film version rearranged the story somewhat, resequencing the songs and reassigning some of the vocals, with Brad's song "Once in a While" dropped. But it all worked out fine. The strings that were added to ballads like "Science Fiction/Double Feature" only improved them; the rockers rocked out; Bostwick and Sarandon proved to be the best Brad and Janet ever; the original cast members, especially Curry, reveled in the opportunity to immortalize their portrayals; and Rocky Horror's potential as a witty parody of cheap movies, rock & roll, and sexual mores was fully realized. The soundtrack album was the definitive version of the score, despite lacking the songs "Planet Shmanet Janet" and "The Sword of Damocles," which were heard in the film. The Rocky Horror Picture Show 15th Anniversary, a four-CD box set released in 1990, included the three missing songs "Once in a While," "Planet Shmanet Janet," and "The Sword of Damocles" on a separate disc. Finally, The Rocky Horror Picture Show: 25 Years of Absolute Pleasure expands the original soundtrack album, which ran under 45 minutes, to a 64-minute version that features the three missing songs along with nine minutes of dialogue excerpts. Those who would prefer an all-music album can still purchase the original version, but the 2000 reissue is a CD-era release that gives a fuller sense of the film. ~ William Ruhlmann

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"The Amityville Horror" (10/22/2002) Soundtracks Original Soundtrack, AlephOriginal score composed and conducted by Lalo Schifrin. Audio Mixer: Peter Granet. Liner Note Author: Jon Burlingame. Recording information: Studio ICN, Polyart, Prague, Czech Republic (04/2002).

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"Lucio Fulci's Horror & Thriller" (08/01/1995) Soundtracks Original Soundtrack, Beat/Butterfly Music

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"Cinema Chillers: Music from Classsic Horror Films" (04/05/2004) Soundtracks Original Soundtrack, Golden Stars (Netherlands)Cinema Chillers: Music from Classic Horror Films Then & Now is a Dutch import triple-CD anthology of mostly instrumental themes and incidental movements from soundtracks scored for 39 assorted scary movies. Most of this stuff was cooked up using synthesizers and electronic keyboards, causing some of it to register as little more than vaguely penumbral mood music. The inverted chronology begins in 2002 with music from The Ring (by far the longest track at eight minutes in length), and rolls backwards through such gross and wickedly unsettling blockbusters as Red Dragon, Hannibal, Blair Witch 2, Scream 3, and the nasty Child's Play 4: Bride of Chucky, in the form of "Living Dead Girl" from Rob Zombie's Hellbilly Deluxe, which as a trashy metal rap routine contrasts rudely with the rest of the tracks. The temporal regression continues through "Silence of the Lambs," "Nightmare on Elm Street," "Friday the 13th," "Halloween," "The Shining," "Alien" (one of the few sci fi flicks represented here), "The Amityville Horror," "The Omen," and "Suspiria," which at nearly seven minutes is the collection's second longest track. Settling back into earlier strata, one is struck by the minimalistic tubular bells used to usher in "The Exorcist," and the relatively subtle, un-scary, inverted melodies from "Carrie" and "Rosemary's Baby," which come across like easy listening when filtered through the synthesizer. The familiar episodic passages from Hitchcock's Psycho seem bracingly authentic by comparison. By the time we get down to the real "classics" -- and this is a most unpleasant example of how the word "classic" has come to be misapplied to anything that has increased profits -- there's no room for anything more than "Dracula," "Bride of Frankenstein," and "Nosferatu"; the two vampire scores were designed for theater organ and therefore almost hold water in a hackneyed sort of way, but the synthesizer makes the theme meant for Frankenstein's monster's bride sound almost like carousel music. To sum up: this is largely an extended recital for subdued synthesizer, and the repertoire focuses so broadly upon recent movie themes (the un-classics, if you will) that those who are at all aware of the historic tradition of music created in order to enhance frightening films are bound to come away feeling shortchanged. Dozens of truly interesting vintage scary film scores that predate the 1970s have been thrust aside in favor of themes from contemporary, often misogynistic gory slasher flicks designed to titillate and amuse bored, over-stimulated teenagers. The grand time-honored genre of music devised for horror and suspense films deserves something classier and more substantial than this. ~ arwulf arwulf

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"The Rocky Horror Picture Show [Original Soundtrack]" (04/19/2004) Rock & Pop Original Soundtrack, Sanctuary (USA)Cast includes: Tim Curry, Meat Loaf. For the 1975 film version of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, American producer Lou Adler wisely mixed the best of the London and Los Angeles stage versions, shooting the movie in England with Tim Curry and several of the other original cast members, plus Meatloaf (years before Bat Out of Hell), and Americans Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon as the innocent couple Brad and Janet. Adler also brought back original London stage musicians in place of the slick studio musicians who had marred the L.A. cast album. The film version resequenced the songs and reassigned some of the vocals, with Brad's song "Once in a While" dropped. But it all worked out fine. The strings that were added to ballads like "Science Fiction/Double Feature" only improved them; the rockers rocked out; Bostwick and Sarandon proved to be the best Brad and Janet ever; the original cast members, especially Curry, reveled in the opportunity to immortalize their portrayals; and Rocky Horror's potential as a witty parody of cheap movies, rock & roll, and sexual mores was fully realized. The film soundtrack album became the definitive version of the score, despite lacking the songs "Planet Shmanet Janet" and "The Sword of Damocles." The Rocky Horror Picture Show was not successful in its initial theatrical run, but then a strange thing happened. In 1976, the Waverly Theater in New York's Greenwich Village began showing the film at midnight on Fridays and Saturdays. Soon, a cult of repeat viewers began turning up every week; they began to dress like the characters, call out their own comments at strategic moments, sing along, and add their own theatrical effects. The phenomenon spread across the U.S., with fans rivaling Trekkies and Deadheads for loyalty and eccentricity, and The Rocky Horror Picture Show took on a life Richard O'Brien never could have anticipated. ~ William Ruhlmann

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"Haunted House Horrors" (07/20/1999) Soundtracks Drew's Famous, Turn Up The Music, Inc.Haunted House Horrors is the Halloween installment in the Drew's Famous series of compilations, and it's a decent, unexceptional, fairly typical set of horror-film-esque background noises that set a spooky, creepy Halloween mood. One distinguishing feature is the voice-over monologues, which add to the overall atmosphere. ~ Steve Huey

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"Sound Effects: Horror & Science Fiction" (11/01/1995) Soundtracks Sound Effects, Kado Records

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"Dario Argento's Horror Movies" (02/20/1998) Rock & Pop Original Soundtrack, ButterflyThis collection of horror-film music composed by Claudio Simonetti features 10 tracks. Personnel: Claudio Simonetti (piano, electric piano, Kurzwell synthesizer); Felix, David Sion (rap vocals); Giacom Castellano (acoustic guitar, electric guitar); Walter Martino, Giulio Sirci (drums); Luca Cucchetti (scratches). Recording information: Acquario Studio, Rome, Italy.

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"Rocky Horror Picture Show: 25 Years of Absolute Pleasure" (08/22/2000) Soundtracks Original Soundtrack, Essential Records (UK)Music and lyrics by Richard O'Brien. Principal Cast: Tim Curry (Frank N Furter); Susan Sarandon (Janet Weiss); Barry Bostwick (Brad Majors); Richard O'Brien (Riff-Raff); Patricia Quinn (Magenta); Little Nell (Columbia); Jonathan Adams (Dr. Everett Scott); Peter Hinwood (Rocky); Meatloaf (Eddie); Charles Gray (Narrator). Recorded at Olympic Studios, London, England in 1974. Digitally remastered by Bob Fisher (Pacific Multimedia Corp). This 17-song CD was released in 2000 to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the original soundtrack to the "Rocky Horror Picture Show" stage music that spawned the cult classic film of the same name. This U.K. reissue has new liner notes by Nick Drake biographer Patrick Humphries. The Rocky Horror Show changed substantially in the two and a quarter years between its opening in a tiny theater in London on June 19, 1973, and its movie premiere as The Rocky Horror Picture Show on September 24, 1975. Richard O'Brien's humorous mixture of British glam rock with old horror movie clich?s was a trashy, low-rent success on-stage in Great Britain due to its irreverent attitude, its catchy pop/rock score, and its cast, led by Tim Curry. American producer Lou Adler took Curry to Los Angeles for a 1974 American version that lost some of the original's subversive appeal in a broadly played Hollywood satire; it did well at the Roxy nightclub, but flopped on Broadway in 1975. For the film version, Adler wisely mixed the best of the London and Los Angeles versions, shooting the movie in England with Curry and several of the other original cast members, including Patricia Quinn, Little Nell, and O'Brien himself, plus Meatloaf (years before the rock stardom he achieved with Bat Out of Hell), who had made a favorable impression in the L.A. version, and Americans Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon as the innocent couple Brad and Janet. Adler also brought back original London stage musicians like guitarist Count Ian Blair in place of the slick L.A. studio musicians whose professional approach had marred the L.A. studio cast album. The film version rearranged the story somewhat, resequencing the songs and reassigning some of the vocals, with Brad's song "Once in a While" dropped. But it all worked out fine. The strings that were added to ballads like "Science Fiction/Double Feature" only improved them; the rockers rocked out; Bostwick and Sarandon proved to be the best Brad and Janet ever; the original cast members, especially Curry, reveled in the opportunity to immortalize their portrayals; and Rocky Horror's potential as a witty parody of cheap movies, rock & roll, and sexual mores was fully realized. The soundtrack album was the definitive version of the score, despite lacking the songs "Planet Shmanet Janet" and "The Sword of Damocles," which were heard in the film. The Rocky Horror Picture Show 15th Anniversary, a four-CD box set released in 1990, included the three missing songs "Once in a While," "Planet Shmanet Janet," and "The Sword of Damocles" on a separate disc. Finally, The Rocky Horror Picture Show: 25 Years of Absolute Pleasure expands the original soundtrack album, which ran under 45 minutes, to a 64-minute version that features the three missing songs along with nine minutes of dialogue excerpts. Those who would prefer an all-music album can still purchase the original version, but the 2000 reissue is a CD-era release that gives a fuller sense of the film. ~ William Ruhlmann

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"Rocky Horror Picture Show: 25 Years of Absolute Pleasure" (07/24/2000) Soundtracks Original Soundtrack, Essential Records (UK)Music and lyrics by Richard O'Brien. Principal Cast: Tim Curry (Frank N Furter); Susan Sarandon (Janet Weiss); Barry Bostwick (Brad Majors); Richard O'Brien (Riff-Raff); Patricia Quinn (Magenta); Little Nell (Columbia); Jonathan Adams (Dr. Everett Scott); Peter Hinwood (Rocky); Meatloaf (Eddie); Charles Gray (Narrator). Recorded at Olympic Studios, London, England in 1974. Digitally remastered by Bob Fisher (Pacific Multimedia Corp). The Rocky Horror Show changed substantially in the two and a quarter years between its opening in a tiny theater in London on June 19, 1973, and its movie premiere as The Rocky Horror Picture Show on September 24, 1975. Richard O'Brien's humorous mixture of British glam rock with old horror movie clich?s was a trashy, low-rent success on-stage in Great Britain due to its irreverent attitude, its catchy pop/rock score, and its cast, led by Tim Curry. American producer Lou Adler took Curry to Los Angeles for a 1974 American version that lost some of the original's subversive appeal in a broadly played Hollywood satire; it did well at the Roxy nightclub, but flopped on Broadway in 1975. For the film version, Adler wisely mixed the best of the London and Los Angeles versions, shooting the movie in England with Curry and several of the other original cast members, including Patricia Quinn, Little Nell, and O'Brien himself, plus Meatloaf (years before the rock stardom he achieved with Bat Out of Hell), who had made a favorable impression in the L.A. version, and Americans Barry Bostwick and Susan Sarandon as the innocent couple Brad and Janet. Adler also brought back original London stage musicians like guitarist Count Ian Blair in place of the slick L.A. studio musicians whose professional approach had marred the L.A. studio cast album. The film version rearranged the story somewhat, resequencing the songs and reassigning some of the vocals, with Brad's song "Once in a While" dropped. But it all worked out fine. The strings that were added to ballads like "Science Fiction/Double Feature" only improved them; the rockers rocked out; Bostwick and Sarandon proved to be the best Brad and Janet ever; the original cast members, especially Curry, reveled in the opportunity to immortalize their portrayals; and Rocky Horror's potential as a witty parody of cheap movies, rock & roll, and sexual mores was fully realized. The soundtrack album was the definitive version of the score, despite lacking the songs "Planet Shmanet Janet" and "The Sword of Damocles," which were heard in the film. The Rocky Horror Picture Show 15th Anniversary, a four-CD box set released in 1990, included the three missing songs "Once in a While," "Planet Shmanet Janet," and "The Sword of Damocles" on a separate disc. Finally, The Rocky Horror Picture Show: 25 Years of Absolute Pleasure expands the original soundtrack album, which ran under 45 minutes, to a 64-minute version that features the three missing songs along with nine minutes of dialogue excerpts. Those who would prefer an all-music album can still purchase the original version, but the 2000 reissue is a CD-era release that gives a fuller sense of the film. ~ William Ruhlmann

starting at

$75
Deals on Horror movie soundtracks in TV & Movie Soundtracks. Visit BizRate to find the best deals on TV & Movie Soundtracks. See which Music stores have the Horror movie soundtracks that you want. Read reviews on Music merchants and buy with confidence. Find savings on Drew's Famous: A Tribute To Stephen King Horror Movie Themes by Drew's Famous/Original Soundtrack/Va - Horror Movie Hits by 101 Strings/Original Soundtrack (CD - 07/2005).