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Priest (Original Motion Picture Score)
 
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Priest (Original Motion Picture Score)

Christopher Young Audio CD
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

Price: $9.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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MP3 Download, 12 Songs, 2011 $5.00  
Audio CD, 2011 $9.99  

Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         

Samples
Song Title Time Price
listen  1. Priest 3:26$0.99 Buy Track
listen  2. Eclipsed Heart 3:34$0.99 Buy Track
listen  3. I Have Sinned 5:07$0.99 Buy Track
listen  4. Blood Framed Hell 3:52$0.99 Buy Track
listen  5. Sacrosanct Delirium 7:44$0.99 Buy Track
listen  6. Never One For Love 2:38$0.99 Buy Track
listen  7. Faith Work Security 2:14$0.99 Buy Track
listen  8. The Vampire Train 7:00$0.99 Buy Track
listen  9. Fanfare For A Resurrected Priest 2:39$0.99 Buy Track
listen10. Cathedral City Blue 6:44$0.99 Buy Track
listen11. Detuned Towne 2:33$0.99 Buy Track
listen12. A World Without End 7:38$0.99 Buy Track


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Priest (Original Motion Picture Score) + Soul Surfer (Original Motion Picture Score)
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Product Details

  • Audio CD (May 10, 2011)
  • Label: Madison Gate Records
  • ASIN: B004ZMUDJC
  • In-Print Editions: MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #24,492 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Music to slay by, May 15, 2011
By 
Jon Broxton (Thousand Oaks, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Priest (Original Motion Picture Score) (Audio CD)
You always know where you stand with a Christopher Young horror score. Throughout his career, going all the way back to Hellraiser in 1987 and continuing on through scores like Hellbound: Hellraiser II, Bless the Child and Drag Me to Hell, horror movies with religious overtones have defined the majority of his best work, brought him the most fans, and earned him the most acclaim. Although he is enormously accomplished at writing in literally dozens of styles, from the smooth jazz of scores like Rounders to the soaring orchestral beauty of scores like Murder in the First, his work in this genre remains the cornerstone of his writing, and Priest is yet another outstanding example of why he remains one of the best in the business as this kind of thing.

The film is based on a popular Korean comic book, is directed by Scott Charles Stewart, and is set in an alternate reality where humans and vampires have been at war for centuries, and where the Church has become one of the last vestiges of civilization on the planet, gathering the ragtag remnants of the human race inside giant walled cities. Paul Bettany stars as the nameless Priest - part clergyman, part ass-kicking warrior vampire slayer - who is forced into action when his niece (Lily Collins) is captured by the vampire leader Black Hat (Karl Urban), who is attempting to provoke mankind into an all-out war with the vampires. The film also stars Cam Gigandet, Maggie Q, Stephen Moyer and Christopher Plummer.

As one might expect, Young's score for the film is absolutely enormous, making use of a large and vigorous orchestra, electronics, a church organ, a massive choral element, and various vocal soloists ranging from Lisa Gerrard's soothing world music tones, to a bank of deep and menacing throat singers. Some of the ideas are clearly inspired by Hans Zimmer's current penchant for using repeated cello ostinatos as a base for the music - although it has to be said that Young uses the motif better and with more panache than anyone else who has used it - while other parts of the score pull up compositional flourishes from Young's past, including but not limited to scores like Hellraiser II, Species and Copycat.

The opening cue, "Priest", is powerful and portentous, with a swirling repeated string figure, resonant brass chords, an interesting ascending woodwind triplet which dances under the main melody, the ticking woodblock from Species, bold choral accents, and eventually a Toccata and Fugue-style pipe organ to complete the sense of ecclesiastical grandeur. It's a wonderful piece, full of everything that makes Chris Young great, and sets the tone for the score to come.

The second cue, the gorgeous "Eclipsed Heart", is the flipside of the horror, and introduces the first of several moments of deep orchestral and choral beauty. It has some of the same surging string work that so typified his excellent score for Murder in the First, and often plays the main theme in harmony with what sounds an Armenian duduk clarinet, to excellent and haunting effect. This tender central motif actually plays a large part in the score as a whole; in amongst all the mayhem that follows the theme makes guest appearances from time to time, reminding the listener that the driving force for all this is the rescue of an innocent young girl.

The pure action and horror music is of the in-your-face sturm-und-drang variety, more often than not employing the colossal orchestral and choral forces at their loudest, and often underpinned by a noticeably large percussion section. The immense "I Have Sinned" features a superb variation on the brass triplets that accompanied the resurrection sequence from the first Hellraiser, before erupting into a series of vicious explosions of horn-led carnage that are wondrous to behold. The moments of chaotic dissonance and rampaging rhythms towards the end of the cue are just fantastic. Later, in "Blood Framed Hell", a male voice choir chants ominously, accompanied by sinister vocal utterances, unnerving synth effects, and vivid outbursts of orchestral carnage.

The splendid "Sacrosanct Delirium" sees Young almost heading into Howard Shore/Lord of the Rings territory in the opening few moments, especially in the way the orchestra and chorus harmonizes, before continuing on through the subsequent seven minutes with terrific compositional creativity and orchestral muscle. The dark and threatening seven-note brass motif at the end of the cue clearly represents the appearance of something hideous and evil in the world.

"The Vampire Train" reveals itself to be a relentless powerhouse of a cue that revisits the Hellraiser triplets from earlier in the score, but augments them with an even more overwhelming layer of thrusting brass writing and choral turmoil, as well as a series of brutal percussion rhythms that keep the energy levels high. "Detuned Towne" is similarly exciting, and concludes with an extraordinary collision of full-throttle choral chanting, flute flutters, whooping horn clusters, and an astonishing snare drum rhythm that seems to mimic the death throes of a speeding train.

To counterbalance all this devilment, Young tempers his music with several moments more tonal, thematic writing. The majestic "Faith, Work, Security" begins with throat singers offset against a pulsating, more modern vibe that is little reminiscent of the music Daft Punk wrote for Tron Legacy last year, especially in the way the electronic pulses are married to the orchestra, before emerging into a heavenly choral variation on the main theme. "Cathedral City Blue" builds on this style further, even going so far as to add heroic triangle rings to the percussion section to add to the heroism, while beefing up the cello ostinatos, giving the cue a sense of movement, forward motion, and clarity of purpose that is highly appealing. These parts of the score have a clear similarity to Hans Zimmer's "Chevaliers de Sangreal" from The DaVinci Code, but Young's mastery of the orchestra and more varied arrangements give them a great deal more life and depth.

Composer and vocalist Lisa Gerrard lends her uniquely exotic tones to cues such as "Never One for Love" and the uplifting and majestic "Fanfare For A Resurrected Priest" to excellent effect, the latter of which reminds me a little of the more tribal parts of Brian Tyler's Children of Dune, coupled with sophisticated eletronica of the aforementioned Tron Legacy. The score concludes with what is probably its most impressive cue, "A World Without End", which revisits the hypnotically rhythmic theme from "Cathedral City Blue", but increases the sense of majesty and emotion by merging it with Lisa Gerrard's vocal work, higher register strings, and noble trumpet triplets, resulting in a cue that acts as a strong restatement of the score's core elements, as well as a fitting and optimistic coda to the action.

Priest is a marvelous listening experience from start to finish, filled with avant-garde orchestral and choral textures, colorful action music, and no small amount of majestic religioso beauty. There's virtually nothing to criticize about the score; at a touch under an hour it never outlasts its welcome, it constantly presents refreshing and interesting compositional ideas, it manages to take the all-pervasive RC cello lines and make them work well in a different setting, and it confirms Christopher Young as the undisputed master of this kind of music, as he has been since the mid-1980s. It's available as a digital download and a CDR-on-demand from Madison Gate Records via Amazon and iTunes, and I unhesitatingly recommend it to all.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Beautiful Score, July 6, 2011
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This review is from: Priest (Original Motion Picture Score) (Audio CD)
Most of my music collection consists of movie scores. The composer, Christopher Young, has been on my radar for several movies' worth of music but this is the first of his scores I have actually purchased. In this review I'm not covering the actual music (a mix of Phantom of the Opera like organ, Gladiator similar vocals, and darker but inspiring Batman Dark Knight type themes) because only you can judge if you like it from listening to it. So my review is more on how the music is arranged onto the CD.

I judge movie scores on three major components:

Is the music selected for the CD perfect for listening by itself? Even if the music is gorgeous and perfect for the movie, that doesn't necessarily mean I will want to play it in my car or put it on my iPod.

Is each individual track unique enough to justify buying all of them? Let's face it, many a movie score is full of the same music just sped up or slowed down or with different instruments and you'd be better off buying the one track of your favorite version at your favorite speed instead of the entire CD.

Is each individual track a complete "song?" I understand the music was created for a movie and so might not have a discernible "beginning" and "end," but if I'm going to buy the CD for my listening pleasure, both need to be present and each track needs to have a decent length; not too short and not too long.

Priest, in my opinion, fits all these criteria and I've been enjoying it for over a week now.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Music to My Ears, May 19, 2011
Well, because the fist reviewer, Jon B., has said more then any of us who enjoyed Young's latest epic score could ever, all I wish to say that if you are a fan of Howard Shore (Lord of the Rings), Globus, all those maddeningly epic movie-trailer music pieces you can only find on YouTube, or anything similar, you will enjoy "Priest's" soundtrack because it has all this and more. I watched the movie last night and kept thinking 'I got to have this soundtrack!' Buy the soundtrack, even if you haven't seen or didn't like the movie. There is so much beauty and talent in this OST but you can read John's review for all the details. Thank you Chris Young for such an enjoyable music experience!
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