Selected Product: | Doctor Who Original Music from Series Three Audio CD Publisher: Silva Screen Records Release Date: November 2007 ISBN-10: B000WGAQIS ISBN-13: 0738572125028 List Price: £13.99 Average Customer Rating: | | |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Doctor Who Original Music from Series Three by 0 (ISBN-10: B000WGAQIS, ISBN-13: 0738572125028). At this time we have not yet written a review for Doctor Who Original Music from Series Three by 0 (ISBN-10: B000WGAQIS, ISBN-13: 0738572125028). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Doctor (Who doesn't think this is a brilliant soundtrack?) | Customer Rating: | This soundtrack is brilliant. As a doctor who fan (the clue's in my name), I really love listening to the music - it reminds you of the great scenes there have been in Series 3. They are really amazing tracks. With other soundtracks, the soundtracks are barely recognseable. Not so with this one. Unfortunately, some of the good music from the series was released in the Series 1 and 2 Soundtrack. But this CD is still available. I do advise you buy both (you get the theme tune with that one!). But this CD is something special. It has 28 in all, with great unrecognizable tracks such as Martha's theme, to a sneak preview of 2007's Runaway bride, with Stowaway. Some of the great music is a bit short- there is loads of the track YANA- but on the CD there is only an excerpt. Bit of a shame. But other brilliant pieces include the gloriously long 'This is Gallifrey'. Love that one. I don't really know what it is, but it's truly brilliant. You can preview all of these tracks on Amazon, somewhere on this very page. It also includes a big kind of montage- the trailer music, which incorporates a lot of the themes from the series.
A must for any fan of the series. | A must-have for Doctor Who fans! | Customer Rating: | Doctor Who Original Music from Series Three
The Doctor Who music just keeps getting better and better. The album begins with the track 'All The Strange, Strange Creatures', an overall theme for the entire series. It's very fun to listen to. There are so many good tracks on this album, it's hard to pick a few and write about them. 'The Carrionites Swarm', 'Boe', 'Yana', 'Martha's Quest' and 'This Is Gallifrey: Our Childhood, Our Home' are the ones that stand out for me. They are epic and profound, and very addictive. A previous reviewer complained that the song 'My Angel Put The Devil In Me' (for the episode Daleks Of Manhattan') was sung by a different woman to the one who sung it in the actual episode, but I prefer the album version. A very enjoyable song to listen to. The other song on the album, 'Stowaway', is rather too Christmas-y and un-Doctor Who-ish for me but every album has its ups and downs. 'Blink' is different in its tone to most of the other tracks, but it's a chilling piece of music nonetheless (and quite sad, in a way, in the beginning). I can only hope a series 4 soundtrack will be released soon! | Great CD | Customer Rating: | | This CD is great. It is a must - have item for all Doctor who lovers. It has all your favourite tracks from Series 3, "The Voyage of the Damned" and "The Runaway Bride". I have enjoyed listening to the CD since it arrived. | Goldsmith would have liked Gold | Customer Rating: | I edited a film music magazine for several years, and at the risk of name dropping was honoured to be invited to London several times to attend the recording sessions of several Jerry Goldsmith scores and Varese Sarabande projects. Goldsmith was always very reticent to talk about music - he felt it should really speak for itself - but he was always open about other composers, especially those he admired. A word he would often use was "musicality". Always intended to be the greatest compliment and a reference to both a high level of skill and understanding, "musicality" was a word he associated with Franz Waxman, Alex North and Bruce Broughton, and no doubt many others who never cropped up directly in any of my conversations.
Murray Gold has musicality in spades and, like Bruce Broughton, I'm fairly certain Jerry Goldsmith would have considered him a "very talented young man".
The first collection of cues on the Seasons 1 and 2 CD were good, as Gold found his footing within the framework of the new show, but this CD shows a confidence and assuredness of touch that surely marks him as a major force within the British TV industry (and don't forget, this has a legacy of composers such as Ron Grainer, Christopher Gunning and Laurie Johnson etc, who managed to make the transition to films fairly successfully - a fate that surely must await Murray Gold at some stage).
A lot of modern British TV scores tend to be underwhelming and bland, almost as if the composer is frightened to draw attention to themselves for fear of upsetting the writer or director by being as noticable as the words and pictures. Of course, good scoring doesn't do that - rather, the opposite, it enhances the emotional and narrative context and subtext. Gold's use of proper themes and, when warranted, the full power of the orchestra at his disposal is therefore refreshing, almost a harking back to the days of Denis King and the great Barry Gray.
There is nothing to criticise about the lack of Ron Grainer's iconic theme here, as it was featured prominently on the first CD, and besides, this is Gold's time to shine if you'll pardon the pun. And shine he does. While some of the action cues may seem a little overworked on occasion (the swollen choral chant for the Daleks in New York is perhaps the most notable example), Gold's ability to write and explore themes and motifs is simply stunning. Martha's theme is a delicate, slightly lonely and haunting affair, as she remains just outside of the Doctor's sphere of affection - although interestingly, such is her influence that it is her theme that provides the basis for the swashbuckling "Doctor Forever" theme, a grand and vibrant piece that wouldn't be out of place in a Korngold or Bernstein pirate score (oh, and the way the harp is used at one point is absolutely brilliant).
Other highlights are the chilling, atmospheric "Blink", evocative of Joe Hisashi's Mononoke Hime forest music and dripping with mystery, the percussive and bold "The Carrionites Swarm", and "The Master Vainglorious", a pounding and inventive take on the rhythm of the Grainer theme, with synthesisers adding musical madness to an already barking performance by John Sims.
And anyone who went to a UK cinema in the early part of 2008 will no doubt recognise the opening track, "All the Strange, Strange Creatures", a thunderous powerhouse based on a recurring action motif associated with the Doctor, here extended into what can only be described as one of the most exciting individual cues I've ever come across. On my iPod, this gets as many plays as the likes of Capricorn One and The Wind and The Lion - and if you know those scores, you'll know that no higher praise can be forthcoming. | Outdoes the series 1/2 soundtrack by far. Great stuff. | Customer Rating: | Unlike some others here, I'll avoid the temptation to make a "Gold" joke about this. :)
The revived Doctor Who's third series (the 2007 one) is represented by this soundtrack. It contains a little beyond the third season, it has a song from the Dec 25, 2006 Christmas episode, as well as the Dec 25, 2007 Christmas episode (which at the time it came out was before the story had aired). This soundtrack, like the other one was done by composer Murray Gold, who has handled all the music for the new Doctor Who.
It's turned out to be fabulous. It's orchestral unlike the old series. That could be down to budget, but the old show's music never sounded like this, and I'm convinced it's a large part of the overall feel of the series now. There's all kinds of things on here. There's a few actual songs (with lyrics), but most is soundtrack stuff - and it's really good. As with the series itself, the third series (29th overall) soundtrack is better than the stuff that preceded it.
If you were a fan of the 2007 series of Doctor Who, then you should be all means check it out. I know lot a lot of people like listening to soundtracks (mostly because of there being no lyrics), but this is fantastic! Even my two year old loves listening to this, and she's never seen the show! When track 2 comes on, "Hey, it's Martha's song!"
One minor nit, though.. The show tune number from the Dalek episode "Daleks in Manattan" is here (My Angel put the Devil in Me). Unfortunately, it's not the original version. The woman who sang the song from the Christmas 2007 episode sings it here (Yamit Mamo), and while it's a good version, it's not the original. I really wish the original version was on here instead. |
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