![]() ![]() It also mentions when a theme was played but was not present on the commercial soundtracks. So for those looking for even more detail, below is a list of the themes as they appear in the film with a description on the scene. I also discovered that a couple themes were repeated. Well in my watching of the film I also realized that there were quite a few themes in Vampire Hunter D that were not present in the soundtrack at all. From this it also highlighted that a few themes were unused, which are listed at the end. The list was created from watching the film while sampling the soundtrack when a theme would play. It lists the track number off the CD release, while throwing in the ending song by TM Network “Your Song” that appears on the single. So for those looking for the movie order for the tracks here is that information. That means the cues were grouped into categories and placed on one side or the other thematically, without consideration for when they played in the movie. For this, the first half of the soundtrack was the “vampire side” and the other the “human side”. The soundtrack for Vampire Hunter D (32♸H-59) is not one of them.įor a back story, the soundtrack attempted to be creative via the LP release. Thankfully, a lot of commercial soundtracks are already in chronological order. One thing I’m a stickler for is trying to place the digital version of the soundtrack in chronological order. Sometimes that’s the end of the journey, sometimes not. ![]() SpaceGodzilla’s soundtrack, once I collect something I’ll then dump it onto my computer and other devices. ![]() As I noted in my fan track listing for Godzilla vs. As some might know I’m an avid and, admittedly, fanatic collector of soundtracks. ![]()
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