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Fantastic Mr. Fox (Original Soundtrack)
 
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Fantastic Mr. Fox (Original Soundtrack)

VariousMP3 Download
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

Price: $9.49
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Album Savings: $4.37 compared to buying all songs

  • Original Release Date: November 3, 2009
  • Format - Music: MP3
  • Compatible with MP3 Players (including with iPod®), iTunes, Windows Media Player
 
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  Song Title Artist Time Price  
Play   1. American Empirical Pictures Alexandre Desplat 0:14 $0.99 Buy Track  - American Empirical Pictures
Play   2. The Ballad Of Davy Crockett The Wellingtons 1:40 Album Only
Play   3. Mr. Fox In The Fields Alexandre Desplat 1:02 $0.99 Buy Track  - Mr. Fox In The Fields
Play   4. Heroes And Villains The Beach Boys 3:37 Album Only
Play   5. Fooba Wooba John Burl Ives 1:07 Album Only
Play   6. Boggis, Bunce And Bean Alexandre Desplat 0:51 $0.99 Buy Track  - Boggis, Bunce And Bean
Play   7. Jimmy Squirrel And Co. Alexandre Desplat 0:46 $0.99 Buy Track  - Jimmy Squirrel And Co.
Play   8. Love Nancy Adams 1:48 Album Only
Play   9. Buckeye Jim Burl Ives 1:19 Album Only
Play 10. High-Speed French Train Alexandre Desplat 1:26 $0.99 Buy Track  - High-Speed French Train
Play 11. Whack-Bat Majorette Alexandre Desplat 2:56 $0.99 Buy Track  - Whack-Bat Majorette
Play 12. The Grey Goose Burl Ives 2:48 Album Only
Play 13. Bean's Secret Cider Cellar Alexandre Desplat 2:06 $0.99 Buy Track  - Bean's Secret Cider Cellar
Play 14. Une Petite Ile Georges Delerue 1:34 Album Only
Play 15. Street Fighting Man The Rolling Stones 3:14 $0.99 Buy Track  - Street Fighting Man
Play 16. Fantastic Mr. Fox AKA Petey's Song Jarvis Cocker 1:20 $0.99 Buy Track  - Fantastic Mr. Fox AKA Petey's Song
Play 17. Night And Day Art Tatum 1:27 Album Only
Play 18. Kristofferson's Theme Alexandre Desplat 1:35 $0.99 Buy Track  - Kristofferson's Theme
Play 19. Just Another Dead Rat In A Garbage Pail (Behind A Chinese Restaurant) Alexandre Desplat 2:33 $0.99 Buy Track  - Just Another Dead Rat In A Garbage Pail (Behind A Chinese Restaurant)
Play 20. Le Grand Choral Georges Delerue 2:22 Album Only
Play 21. Great Harrowsford Square Alexandre Desplat 3:20 $0.99 Buy Track  - Great Harrowsford Square
Play 22. Stunt Expo 2004 Alexandre Desplat 2:27 $0.99 Buy Track  - Stunt Expo 2004
Play 23. Canis Lupus Alexandre Desplat 1:15 $0.99 Buy Track  - Canis Lupus
Play 24. Ol' Man River The Beach Boys 1:18 Album Only
Play 25. Let Her Dance Bobby Fuller Four 2:35 Album Only
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Product Details


Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
32 of 34 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
I grew up reading and loving Roald Dahl's stories; everything from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Witches and The Twits to The BFG, James and the Giant Peach and Matilda, his words (as well as Quentin Blake's incomparable illustrations) were an indelible part of my childhood, and remain beloved to this day. Strangely, the one Roald Dahl story I don't think I ever read was Fantastic Mr. Fox, written by Dahl in 1970 and which has now been turned into an animated feature film by directed Wes Anderson with a voice cast that includes such luminaries as George Clooney, Meryl Streep, Bill Murray, Michael Gambon, Owen Wilson, Willem Dafoe, and Jarvis Cocker from the English rock band Pulp. The story - as is always the case with Dahl's work - is a dark morality tale dressed up as an innocent children's story. The plot concerns Mr. and Mrs. Fox, a pair of wily and cunning animals who feed their family by stealing chickens, ducks and cider from under the noses of three despicable farmers named Boggis, Bunce and Bean.

The music for Fantastic Mr. Fox is a wild amalgam of styles and influences that places songs by everyone from The Beach Boys and The Rolling Stones to Burl Ives, two old Georges Delerue pieces, and a new score from French composer Alexandre Desplat, writing music for his second animated film after Le Château des Singes in 1999. In many ways, Fantastic Mr. Fox is the perfect response to those who criticize Desplat for being a one-trick pony, who can only write pretty little waltzes and clinical orchestral lines with no heart and soul. Fantastic Mr. Fox is about as zany as mainstream film music gets, and will certainly surprise those whose opinion of Desplat's is based only around his work on his more successful Hollywood scores - Lust Caution, The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, The Painted Veil, and so on. Rather than being a restrained and romantic, Fantastic Mr. Fox is raucous and ebullient, and takes a great deal of inspiration from Ennio Morricone's more offbeat works.

Once again, the thing that stands out of Desplat's work here is the attention to detail, the orchestration, and the compositional technique. Time and again, Desplat impresses with his interesting use of unexpected instrumental combinations, and this score of no exception; the difference here, however, is the instruments themselves: rather than a traditional orchestral complement, Desplat uses banjos, guitars, fiddles, and all manner of unusual percussion to create a child-like atmosphere of fun and innocence, while rooting the film in a kind of mixed-up aural location that seems to span the American west, the Deep South, ad the English countryside. It's a very, very peculiar jumble, but one which works despite itself, mainly because of Desplat's brilliance at bringing all these elements together into an enjoyable whole.

The opening cue, "Mr. Fox in the Fields", establishes the general conventions of the score, with bouncy country rhythms, picked banjos, pizzicato strings and glockenspiels overlaying an unexpectedly lovely orchestral melody led by a cello. Later, "Boggis, Bunce and Bean" is a pompous, self-important march, while the "Jimmy Squirrel and Co." and "High-Speed French Train" feature dainty, flighty woodwind themes and elegant little chimes, while "Whack-Bat Majorette" is a perfect pastiche of a John Philip Sousa march played by a high school football band, all pomp and pageantry. This is the most un-Desplat music imaginable, filled as it is with child-like inquisitiveness, playful melodies, and a charming innocent that is immediately beguiling. Anyone with an aversion to whimsical orchestrations or scores which could be construed as being painfully cute will find themselves retching immediately upon hearing these cues, but I found them to be wonderfully appealing and a refreshing change from the seriousness Desplat's work has contained of late.

Ennio Morricone is a clear influence on "Bean's Secret Cider Cellar", which sees Desplat combining bold snare and timpani rhythms with a twanging Jew's harp, elaborate acoustic guitars, fluttering bass flutes, and even a few moments in which Desplat himself whistles in a manner that would have made Alessandro Alessandroni proud. It's not quite action music, but it's certainly uniquely dramatic, and would have been quite at home in a Sergio Leone spaghetti western, Clint Eastwood squinting into the sun, rather than scoring the kleptomaniac antics of an animated fox. This cue also features the first appearance of the Farmer's theme, albeit in a deconstructed form, that features heavily in the score's second half. The style is revisited in the wonderfully named "Just Another Dead Rat in a Garbage Pail Behind a Chinese Restaurant", albeit with a little bittersweet touch in the cue's second half, with the Farmer's theme played somberly on a glockenspiel accompanied by emotional, funereal string chords.

After a brooding opening minute, "Great Harrowsford Square" takes the thematic fragment first introduced in "Bean's Secret Cider Cellar" and finally fleshes it out into a full-fledged theme for the nefarious farmers, complete with lyrics ("Boggis, Bunce and Bean/One fat, one short, one lean/These horrible crooks/So different in looks/Were none the less equally mean") taken directly from the book and sung by a vivacious children's chorus. It's this kind of enthusiasm and expressiveness which makes this score such a delight to experience; Desplat really got into the film's character. The orchestral recapitulation of the Farmer's march, and subsequent restatement of the choral version in "Stunt Expo 2004", is simply delightful. The finale, "Canis Lupus", is an unexpectedly beautiful piece for a boy soprano of the farmer's fragmented theme, and is nothing short of sublime.

Unless you're a fan of the Beach Boys the songs are nothing to write home about, and will likely be of little interest to score fans. The two Delerue pieces are "Une Petite Île" from the 1971 film Les Deux Anglaises et le Continent, and "Le Grand Chorale" from the 1973 film La Nuit Américaine. The former is a typically lovely, slightly baroque-sounding romance theme for harpsichord and strings, while the latter is a heraldic piece clearly inspired by the non-vocal parts of Handel's coronation anthem Zadok the Priest. They actually fit in quite nicely with the stylistics of Desplat's original score, and add to the overall listening experience.

One thing which will stand in the way of many listeners to this score is its quirkiness. Fantastic Mr. Fox is not a typical film score in any way, and the orchestrations are designed to present an overall feeling of old-fashioned whimsy and mischievousness. If you don't like banjos and fiddles, if you don't like intentionally childish-sounding rhythms and bounciness, and if you never appreciated Ennio Morricone's more unusual efforts in the western genre, then this is most definitely not the score for you. However, personally - and perhaps a little predictably - I thought it was entirely wonderful, showing a completely different side to Desplat's musical personality, and showcasing his wonderful touch with an entirely different instrumental setup, as well as his theme-writing prowess. Including the two Delerue pieces, the score comprises must 24 minutes of a 46 minute album; and works best when programmed out-of-sequence apart from the songs which comprise the rest of the album.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD|Amazon Verified Purchase
I am a great fan of Wes Anderson's films and the music he uses in them. This soundtrack features some very fun Burl Ives classics as well as the beautiful score by Desplat. This score sounds like something that Anderson's previous collaborator Mark Mothersbaugh would have composed but more sophisticated and orchestral. Fun, nostalgic and lovely.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:MP3 Download|Amazon Verified Purchase
Amazingly well done and heart-warming movie. I just Had to have the soundtrack, which helped make this movie so impressive.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Good, but not as good as the movie
I absolutely loved the movie ad the music is also very pretty. Make sure you love the music because I personally do not listen to it as much as I thought I would. Read more
Published 8 months ago by lshanok
"Here, put this bandit hat on...."
When a sentimental, tearful Georges Delerue melody is followed by the Rolling Stones' "Street Fighting Man," you know the album in question is going to be like nothing you've ever... Read more
Published 8 months ago by XNS
Love It
A sparkling, whimsical gem of a score from the lovely Monsieur Desplat. One of my favorites from one of my favorites!
Published 8 months ago by BlahBlahBlah
Just Great!
I loved the movie, and the music goes right along with the movie. With the short and lively, it fits the life of a mischievious fox. Read more
Published 21 months ago by stargazer
Fantastic Soundtrack!
This is a fabulous movie soundtrack. I think even people who haven't seen the movie will like it! It's got a delicious mix of all kinds of music. Read more
Published 24 months ago by Jennifer Aszling
Never boring
After I saw the movie, I wanted to continue listening to the music, so I bought this soundtrack. The score by Alexandre Desplat is playful, joyous and nostalgic at the same time. Read more
Published on April 15, 2010 by M. Tonatiuh Moreno Ramos
Quirky, soft, catchy and thrilling. This score exudes excellence!
I'm going to be honest. I never actually saw the movie "Fantastic Mr. Fox" due to taking a keen interest in the said film at too late a date, (was removed from theaters at the last... Read more
Published on February 14, 2010 by D. Johnson
A fantastic assortment of music
I really enjoy the Fantastic Mr. Fox soundtrack, and I'm glad it was nominated for an Academy Award. (In a slightly related note, I'm glad Up's soundtrack was nominated as well. Read more
Published on February 4, 2010 by Jordan Olling
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