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Water Horse: Legend Of The Deep | 
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| Creator: James Newton Howard Label: Sony Classics Category: Music
List Price: $18.97 Buy New: $12.66 You Save: $6.31 (33%)
New (37) Used (5) from $12.66
Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 41820
Format: Soundtrack Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 719300 UPC: 886971930023 EAN: 0886971930023 ASIN: B000WPE8L0
Release Date: December 4, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW Factory Sealed - Ready to be shipped within 24 hrs from California - Average 5 workdays delivery time - Excellent customer service - Buy with confidence!
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| Tracks:
| • | Back Where You Belong (Theme from The Water Horse) | | • | The Water Horse Main Title | | • | Angus Feeds Crusoe | | • | You Didn't Even Get Wet | | • | The Workshop | | • | Ann | | • | Bathtub | | • | Driving To The Loch | | • | Run Angus | | • | The Fishermen | | • | Angus In Training | | • | Swimming | | • | The Children Laugh | | • | The Dinner Party | | • | There's No Monster | | • | Saving Crusoe | | • | The Net | | • | The Jump | | • | End Of The Story | | • | The Water Horse Suite |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com The lead attraction on the soundtrack for this Scotland-set movie is "Back Where You Belong (Theme from The Water Horse)," a song written and performed by Sinead O'Connor, and produced by Daniel Lanois. It's a heartwrenching ballad that's all the more powerful because O'Connor's performance is so pared down. In an age of overbearing movie themes, it's a refreshing approach, full of tenderness and dignity. The song bookends the CD with "The Water Horse Suite," a piece performed by Irish trad-music superstars, the Chieftains, that steadily builds up momentum over the course of its eight-minute duration. Sandwiched between these two tracks is James Newton Howard's score. In his liner notes, director Jay Russell calls it "a beautiful Celtic symphony which delivers the complexity of Gustav Mahler with the simple grandeur of Aaron Copland." Er
not quite. Howard does not deviate much from the Hollywood template for family/fantasy films, except this time he introduces Celtic flavors on a few cues. At his best ("The Fishermen"), Newton Howard evokes a certain fierceness, but overall this is fairly standard. --Elisabeth Vincentelli
Album Description THE WATER HORSE: LEGEND OF THE DEEP is a sweeping epic rooted in one of the most enduring and intriguing legends of our time. Set in the desolate landscape of the Scottish Highlands during World War II, the story begins with an enchanted egg...and what hatches will set in motion an adventure that will take a young boy on an unforgettable journey of a lifetime. Soundtrack composed by six time Academy Award nominee James Newton Howard and features the new song "Back Where You Belong" by Sinead O'Connor and new music by the Chieftains
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| Customer Reviews:
Pretty Celic score, but not among JNH's best September 26, 2008 Jon Broxton (Thousand Oaks, CA) A delightful little fantasy with a Celtic lilt, The Water Horse is a children's family film directed by Jay Russell. Set in Scotland, it follows the adventures of a little boy named Angus MacMorrow (Alex Etel), who befriends a rather unusual animal: an amphibious `water horse', which causes much mischief and mayhem in the MacMorrow household, but also eventually becomes the source of a much-discussed legend - the Loch Ness monster. The film stars Emily Watson, Ben Chaplin, Brian Cox and David Morrissey in the adult roles, and features a pleasant score from James Newton Howard. As befits the setting, Howard breaks out his Scottish orchestrations, littering his orchestra with all manner of skirling bagpipes, Celtic fiddles, rapid fire percussion, and windswept woodwinds. It's cliched, but it sounds lovely, never more so than in the slightly lonely sounding "Main Title', the moody "The Workshop", or the vaguely romantic "Ann". Occasionally, the score sounds like one of James Horner's Celtic scores, or the Irish concept albums Mychael and Jeff Danna wrote for Hearts of Space in the 1990s; it's all very pleasant, unassuming stuff, which washes over the listener but never really rises out of the realms of `pretty nice'. Once in a while the true spirit of the Gaelic reel jumps out, such as the opening parts of "Bathtub", the hand-clap led "The Fishermen", or the raucous and unexpectedly Carl Stalling-esque "The Dinner Party", but the single highlight is inarguably the triumphant "Swimming", in which Howard presents a stirring, sweeping theme for the full orchestra and various soloists which truly captures a sense of energy and freedom, friendship and childhood innocence. Some of the album's conclusive cues, notably "There's No Monster", the thrilling "Saving Crusoe", and the stirring pair "The Net" and "The Jump" also feature a great deal of high-emotion composing for the orchestra, and sometimes recall the finale of Basil Poledouris's Free Willy. The album also features a lovely song by Irish vocalist Sinead O'Connor, "Back Where You Belong", and (to continue the trend of confusing geographical specificity) a performance by the legendary traditional Irish band The Chieftains in the conclusive "Water Horse Suite', and while The Water Horse certainly has its moments of great beauty and excitement, it can't really be counted amongst the composer's - or the year's - best.
JNH Is A Genius! August 19, 2008 Dog Res Q.R. (Reno, NV, usa) I didn't see the movie, but I bought it just because James Newton Howard wrote it and he does stellar work ALL the time. I wasn't really enchanted with most of this score. I don't like Celtic music that much or song vocals. Truthfully I haven't finished listening to the whole score, but found cuts #12 Swimming and #19 The End Of The Story to be absolutely worth the price of purchase. It amounts to about 10 minutes of music, but those two pieces are stunning! Like some of you others I too was sorry there weren't more pieces like these. JNH never fails to give us what we love and expect of him. And JNH, I think your brother Arliss is superb. Don't know why he never became an A-list supporting actor!
Celtic Music July 22, 2008 Mary G. Walts (Arkansas) Very easy to listen to. Evokes the atmosphere of the story, but also stands on its own merits. Just wish there was more of it.
Nessie more than a pretty face July 5, 2008 MELODY DENUNZIO (Beverly Hills, Fl. USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Water Horse was a terrific movie for any age. The story is a tale based on the Loch Ness legend, and it delivers the goods! there is also a pet bulldog who practically steals the whole show. Rivaling Disney's special effects the story is rather shallow on plot but delivers that plot with aplomb and sincerity. This is truly a must see DVD.
Mr. Howard does it again! April 4, 2008 Joshua Boland (Waynesville,MO) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Being an admirer of both celtic music and James Newton Howards work, I was really excited about this album. But, my interest was peeked even further when discovered that the Chieftains had collaborated with Howard for this score. And I wasn't dissapointed. The whole score is made up of melancholy, majesty, jaw-dropping swells of melody and emotion and the beauty of Scotland.
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