Soundtracks that you listen all the way through and it's all great.


Hey! sometimes the soundtrack is so good that you don't care about the movie anymore. The music behind soundtracks can be compilation of various artists rock, jazz or mixed styles or created by one composer. Electronic music soundtracks, orchestral neo-classical and other styles I will list my favorites here in this discussion:

1. Gladiator -- an awesome neo-classical movie score with voice of Lisa Gerrard on double-CD. near 2 hours of pure joyful music uninterrupted by movie. At the same time the role of Commodus was brilliant as well as Lucilla

2. Shining -- great movie and state of the art soundtrack done by Wendy Carlos.

3. Dark City -- great electronic score by Trevor Jones

4. Pulp Fiction -- various

5. Kill Bill
czarivey
Recently bought OST from Rob Roy, mostly classical music sound with some Celtic thrown in. Very nice.
PS: More Irish than Scottish IMO but who cares?
Me, Myself and Irene. It's all Steely Dan tunes performed by other bands and every tune is fantastic.
0K, here is a real sound track, not a concert, or collection of previously released pop/rock songs but an actual originally recorded sound track written for a musical, Paul Simon's, "Songs of the Capeman". Every song is beautifully written and performed with a story to boot.

To add suggestions not already listed:

Run Lola Run
To Live and Die in LA
Grand Canyon
Some Kind of Wonderful
Twin Peaks

"Legend" Tangerine Dream and Jon Anderson (YES) - Version
"Blade Runner"
"Final Fantasy XII" - Video Game OST
"Chariots of Fire"
"Gladiator"
"Edward Scissorhands"
"Oblivion"
Bladerunner. The Thin Red Line.  Van Helsing.  Bram Stoker's Dracula.  The Hours (Glass).  Jacob's Ladder.  The Nightmare Before Chistmas (and, IMHO, any soundtrack by Danny Elfman).  Baraka.  The Hunger.  2001: A Space Odyssey.  The Last Temptation of Christ (Peter Gabriel). Garden State.   
mapman,
I like Kill Bill Vol.1 much better vs. vol. 2 because of 5,6,7,8's mainly :-)
Fiddler on the Roof. Movie soundtrack

Jesus  Christ Superstar the one featuring Ian Gillan from Deep Purple. 

Bridges of Madison County

The Harder They Come

Somewhere In Time. 

Re: Umbrellas of Cherbourg

Catherine Deneuve? Oh man. I should have watched this years ago. This get queued on the video stream ASAP.  $3.99 to rent via iTunes. 

Then I'll listen to soundtrack.

Thanks for the link Al. 

T.

The Umbrellas of Cherbourg has been added to my Roon Tidal library for listening soon.....
Some of the scenes in the following brief trailer provide an indication of the remarkable use of color in the film that I mentioned earlier, as well as presenting some of the main musical theme.

I should mention, also, that inferences that might be made from the trailer about the plot are likely to be inaccurate.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=imCOi7pqKh0

Enjoy! Regards,
-- Al

This thread made me realize how much movie music I own and how it directs my listening choices.

Thanks for bringing it up czarivey.

Recent years, Abel Kornzeniowski has managed to wring out a few emotions from me with his music in:

W/E

A Single Man

The Umbrellas of Cherbourg has been added to my Roon Tidal library for listening soon.....


The Natural
Local Hero
Cal
Grizzly Man
Inside Llewyn Davis
Rushmore
+1 on One Trick Pony and Hard Days Night

+1 for Tin Cup

One Trick Pony

Almost Famous

Zachariah

What Dreams May Come (and a lot of Michael Kamen's other work)

Much Ado About Nothing (and a lot of Patrick Doyle's other work)

Tune in Tomorrow

Sevs, glad I was helpful. Note that Dekay also mentioned "The Umbrellas of Cherbourg," in his post on 8-27-2016. A uniquely beautiful film, literally and figuratively, with a correspondingly beautiful soundtrack :-)

Regards,
-- Al

ALMARG and DBTOM2: thank you for clearing my brain: 
Trainspotting and "The Umbrellas of Cherbourg" - Yes! Unforgettable!!!
I am seriously impressed there is no mention of "Jesus Christ Superstar", this is my first choice.
Gladiator pushed Lisa Gerrard into mainstream and stardom but any Dead Can Dance album, with Brendan Perry baritone diluting her wailing is much more listenable all the way thru. If in doubt, just listen to Lisa Gerrard with Klaus Schulze albums: too much of a good thing is too much for me.
Tangerine Dream soundtrack and Zabriski Point share the bronze medal in my collection: far from the best but I have to bow to my fav groups ;-)

The Cat Stevens soundtrack from "Harold and Maude." If only they had made one. Most songs are available on "Greatest Hits," and of course, on the boxed set. I really liked "If You Want To Sing Out...Sing Out." 
Just a few ...

Bird.

Ray.

When Harry met Sally.

Dances with Wolves.

The Mission. 

Casper.


Game of Thrones - I have seasons 2 and 4

Elizabeth:  The Golden Age

Conan the Barbarian and Conan the Destroyer both re-recordings conducted by Nic Raine

The Patriot

Gladiator

Glory

Nice selections, 
None mentioned Pink Panther!
I can certainly add Mission Impossible!
The Cotton Club

The Russia House

The Benny Goodman Story

Quigley Down Under

Fantasia

In addition to many above . . . .


Tin Cup, movie soundtrack.  I tied to search it on Tidal; it wasn't available.  I had to search individual tracks.  There were quite a few tracks that were not available by the respective artists on Tidal.
Just a few off the top of my head:

Purple Rain

Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon

Angela's Ashes

Saturday Night Fever

The Umbrellas of Cherbourg

The Big Chill

Shaft

A Hard Day’s Night

Anything Goes (stage - not movie)
Jackie Brown  "I didn't know you liked the Delfonics!"
Guardians of the Galaxy 
"Jaws," particularly the Intrada edition. Probably my favorite non-rock soundtrack of all time.
Forgot to mention the Beatles' Love Album ('06, George Martin and his son, Giles...this is a re-editing of the original track elements and a re-imagining of representative works of the Beatles' career on a single disc. It was not a film soundtrack, but one for the live Cirque du Soleil show. Saw that one in Vegas one year and it was great, as is the CD).
Plenty out there on CD...

Under Fire (’83, Jerry Goldsmith, w/ Pat Metheny on guitar)(this entire film soundtrack was specially conceived by Goldsmith to be listened to straight through as you would any album).

The Carey Treatment (’72, Roy Budd...FSM edition also includes sndtr for ’78’s Coma - Goldsmith, and Fred Karlin’s ’73 score of Westworld, both of which may be more uneven).

The Taking Of Pelham 123 (’74, David Shire).

Tora! Tora! Tora! (’70, Goldsmith)

Planet Of The Apes (’69, Goldsmith...brilliant use of various ambulatory rhythms throughout)(a suite from Escape From The POTA at the end of the disc is a nice inclusion).

Bullitt (’68, Lalo Schiffrin....FSM version uses both the soundtrack album And the film soundtrack on one disc, but Schiffrin works differing magic on each and it results in Zero sense of redundancy, very nice).

The Gauntlet (’78, Jerry Fielding...only 33 minutes on the disc, but man, not a note wasted).

Edward Scissorhands (’90, Danny Elfman...the separate soundtrack Album edition would be the one you want, the expanded original film version, while interesting, offers little in the way of musical flow).

In fact, that can be said of more than a few soundtrack album versions of some big movies, some of which can be found packaged together as a separate disc in the 2, or 3, disc expanded versions...they usually are remastered for the better, as well. Like:

Conan The Barbarian (’82, Basil Poledouris, 3-disc, Intrada)

Star Trek The Motion Picture (’79, Goldsmith...3-disc La-La Land version....the last 9 tracks on disc 2 are the sndtr album).


Other titles:

Good Night And Good Luck (’05, Dianne Reeves).

Journey Through The Secret Life Of Plants (’79, Stevie Wonder...this was Sony Music’s first digital recording).

Trinity And Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Movie (’01, William Stromberg).

Citta Violenta (AKA: The Family) (’70, Ennio Morricone...only one or two musical themes, but rewoven every time and ranging in widely varying moods).

Charade (’64, Henry Mancini...the BMG version I have is in stereo).

Rio Conchos (and special track: The Artist Who Did Not Want To Paint) (Goldsmith)(an ’84 rerecording by Goldsmith that is better than his original, I would say).

Ice Station Zebra is interesting, as well. (’68, Michel Legrand).



...and I’ll +3 on just about anything Herrmann.








"Magical Mystery Tour"
"A Hard Day’s Night"
"Saturday Night Fever"
"Help"
"The Rose"
"The Kids are Alright"
"The Song Remains The Same"
And..
A Man and a Woman (1966, Claud Lelouch)
The Last Adventure (1967 with Alain Delon and Lino Ventura)
The Professional (1981, with Jean-Paul Belmondo)

All French, of course.
Also,
Carmen by Carlos Saura, music and performance by Paco de Lucia.
Patriot Games, music and performance by Clannad.
Dune by David Lynch.
Inception.
The Fountain.
Gladiator.
Insider.
Bladerunner, music by Vangelis.
Lift to the Scaffold, music and performance by Miles Davis.
1492 Conquest of Paradise, with Gerrard Depardeau as Columbus, music composed by Vangelis.