Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. joelmcneely.com › albums › jawsJaws - Joel McNeely

    Sep 12, 2000 · From Bad to Worse 0:53. Quint Thinks It Over 1:08. The Shark Cage Fuge 2:00. The Shark Approaches 0:42. The Shark Hits the Cage 1:45. Quint Meets His End 1:08. Blown To Bits 3:11. End Title 1:56. Total Album Time: 50:02.

    • Contact

      RepresentationFortress Talent Management 23901 Calabasas Rd,...

    • Gallery

      © 2024 Joel McNeely Website by Warm Butter Design....

    • Biography

      Joel McNeely is an Emmy ® Award-winning composer and...

  2. The Jaws soundtrack (officially Jaws: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the music composed and conducted by John Williams for Steven Spielberg 's 1975 film Jaws. The soundtrack is particularly notable for the 2-note ostinato which represents the shark, a theme so simple that Spielberg initially thought it was a joke by the composer.

  3. Sep 12, 2000 · John Williams: Jaws by Joel McNeely, Royal Scottish National Orchestra, John Williams released in 2000. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and mor AllMusic relies heavily on JavaScript.

    • (3)
  4. People also ask

  5. Jun 26, 2000 · Listen to Jaws (Original Motion Picture Score) by John Williams, Royal Scottish National Orchestra & Joel McNeely on Apple Music. 2000. 25 Songs. Duration: 51 minutes.

  6. Explore songs, recommendations, and other album details for Jaws (Original Motion Picture Score) (Joel McNeely Re-Recording) by John Williams, Joel McNeely, Royal Scottish National Orchestra. Compare different versions and buy them all on Discogs.

    • (14)
    • Classical, Stage & Screen
    • 13
    • Soundtrack, Score
  7. Aug 8, 2012 · Just a warning: this is not the OST as indicated but a re-recording of a large proportion of the score by the Royal Scottish National Orchestra conducted by Joel McNeely - they've done a number of these type of great quality re-recordings of great soundtracks (including Williams' Superman, and Bernard Hermann's Citizen Kane, Vertigo, and Psycho).

    • (4)
  8. The Bond scores and soundtracks fared rather well in the first decade of that franchise too. But the masses never really sat up and took notice until John Williams sunk his own teeth into Jaws, universally accepted (pun intended) as the first ever blockbuster movie as the audiences queued up around the block at the box office.