Bambi Soundtrack
- bambifan56
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Bambi Soundtrack
I recieved the Bambi soundtrack in the mail today (got it off eBay). I suggest any fan of the film own it, it truely will make you appreciate the film even more and realize how powerful the music is to the film. The score is so beautiful and simple it will almost bring a tear to your eye (The instrumental/choral version of "Love is a song" from the ending scene almost did me in). Most of all you realize how much of a character the music was (you can almost play the movie in your head as you listen to the soundtrack). An excellent buy, will make you love the film already more than you do (don't know if thats possible for some of us though )
Last edited by bambifan56 on Sat Jan 28, 2006 3:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- FantasiaMan
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- bambifan56
- Gold Classic Collection
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..
The love is a song with the huge choir is some of the most beautiful music I've ever heard, just because when I hear It all I can imagine is the final scene of Bambi taking his place as the great prince of the forest and it showing how he overcame all of the terrble things that he did and still succeeded (its the same feeling you get whenever Rudy gets in the Notre Dame game vs Georgia Tech, I remember seeing that and not a dry eye among any of us there), the ending of Bambi just leaves you with that great wonderful feeling of hope and showing that love is stronger that hate...
"There is another who is over us all, over us and over man"
-Bambi (Novel)
-Bambi (Novel)
- bambifan56
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- musicradio77
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I have the CD soundtrack from 1996. That was 10 years ago. I bought that CD from Caldor 3 years before it went out of business. It was a great CD. Here is that pic of the CD cover.
On that CD it features 16 songs including the following:
1. Main Title (Love Is A Song)
2. Sleepy Morning In The Woods/Everybody Awake/The Young Prince/Learning To Walk
3. Exploring/Through The Woods/Say Bird/Flower
4. Little April Shower
5. The Meadow/Bambi See Faline/Bambi Gets Annoyed
6. Gallop Of The Stags/The Great Prince Of The Forest/Man
7. Autumn/The First Snow/Fun On The Ice
8. The End Of Winter/New Spring Grass/Tragedy In The Meadow
9. Wintry Winds
10. Let's Sing A Gay Little Spring Song
11. It Could Even Happen To Flower
12. Bambi Get Twitterpated/Stag Fight
13. Looking For Romance (I Bring You A Song)
14. Man Returns
15. Fire/Reunion/Finale
16. Rain Drops (Demo Recording)
The Disneyland LP that I don't have has 8 songs from the film has seen in this pic.
It features the following tracks:
Side 1:
1. Main Title
2. Little April Shower
3. Gallop of the Stags
4. Love Is A Song
Side 2:
1. Wintry Winds
2. Let’s Sing A Gay Little Spring Song
3. I Bring you A Song
4. Finale
This LP was from the early 60's most of the songs were edited long before the CD was released with additional musical cues. Tutti Camarata, a music director and founder of Disneyland Records did a decent job of editing the soundtrack removes some of the orchestration done by Alexander Steinert. Years later Randy Thronton and Ted Krysco put together additional musical scoring and bring the finishing touches into the extended "Bambi" soundtrack using some of its material that Tutti Camarata had originally put out from 50 years before the CD was released. Randy said on the producer's notes on the Bambi CD:
In restoring the "Bambi" soundtrack, I reconstructed the original recording using several sources: three element music only tracks, various music and effects tracks, and the Walt Disney Records "Bambi" soundtrack album master. Because the age of the sources spanned nearly 52 years, few complete sets of separate elements were available. In some cases sections of the choir tracks are missing, and all of the lead vocal tracks were gone By combining the best from the available sources, I was able to replace the great percentage of the missing elements. After they were pieced together, they were then balanced, equalized, and de-noised, resulting in what could be the best-sounding and most extensive soundtrack version of this tiemless classic.
If you can find the original Disneyland LP of the same name, keep in mind there are lot of Disney LP's floating around on Ebay except the one I have is the story and songs from "Bambi" with a die-cut magic mirror. Here is that pic again.
On that CD it features 16 songs including the following:
1. Main Title (Love Is A Song)
2. Sleepy Morning In The Woods/Everybody Awake/The Young Prince/Learning To Walk
3. Exploring/Through The Woods/Say Bird/Flower
4. Little April Shower
5. The Meadow/Bambi See Faline/Bambi Gets Annoyed
6. Gallop Of The Stags/The Great Prince Of The Forest/Man
7. Autumn/The First Snow/Fun On The Ice
8. The End Of Winter/New Spring Grass/Tragedy In The Meadow
9. Wintry Winds
10. Let's Sing A Gay Little Spring Song
11. It Could Even Happen To Flower
12. Bambi Get Twitterpated/Stag Fight
13. Looking For Romance (I Bring You A Song)
14. Man Returns
15. Fire/Reunion/Finale
16. Rain Drops (Demo Recording)
The Disneyland LP that I don't have has 8 songs from the film has seen in this pic.
It features the following tracks:
Side 1:
1. Main Title
2. Little April Shower
3. Gallop of the Stags
4. Love Is A Song
Side 2:
1. Wintry Winds
2. Let’s Sing A Gay Little Spring Song
3. I Bring you A Song
4. Finale
This LP was from the early 60's most of the songs were edited long before the CD was released with additional musical cues. Tutti Camarata, a music director and founder of Disneyland Records did a decent job of editing the soundtrack removes some of the orchestration done by Alexander Steinert. Years later Randy Thronton and Ted Krysco put together additional musical scoring and bring the finishing touches into the extended "Bambi" soundtrack using some of its material that Tutti Camarata had originally put out from 50 years before the CD was released. Randy said on the producer's notes on the Bambi CD:
In restoring the "Bambi" soundtrack, I reconstructed the original recording using several sources: three element music only tracks, various music and effects tracks, and the Walt Disney Records "Bambi" soundtrack album master. Because the age of the sources spanned nearly 52 years, few complete sets of separate elements were available. In some cases sections of the choir tracks are missing, and all of the lead vocal tracks were gone By combining the best from the available sources, I was able to replace the great percentage of the missing elements. After they were pieced together, they were then balanced, equalized, and de-noised, resulting in what could be the best-sounding and most extensive soundtrack version of this tiemless classic.
If you can find the original Disneyland LP of the same name, keep in mind there are lot of Disney LP's floating around on Ebay except the one I have is the story and songs from "Bambi" with a die-cut magic mirror. Here is that pic again.
- musicradio77
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Well I hardly use my tune table anymore, it's pretty old. It use to belong to my mom but she gave me it and her stero. So I'm pretty much living in the 80's in my room. I still have more vinyl than CD's well actually it's about the same quantity. And if that record player goes out, it'll be pretty hard to find another one or even a new one.
- TM2-Megatron
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I wouldn't say that, there are still many great turntables manufactured; along with ALOT of reissued and new releases. In fact, I have many albums on both CD and vinyl, even newer ones. Both Gorillaz albums, American Idiot, a few Radiohead, both Franz Ferdinand, Foo Fighters "In Your Honor", amongst many more. I also regularly buy reissues of older albums (Beatles, Harry Belafonte, AC/DC, etc.), usually those are on 150, 180 or 200g vinyl pressings, for the best sound quality. Most are actual good albums, some are just weird things and soundtracks I couldn't resist buying for the camp factor (you'd be surprised what gets re-released). They've even re-released the soundtrack for Fritz the Cat, though I can't say exactly why. Even Disney seems to see fit to release soundtracks on vinyl every once in a while. The Lion King's soundtrack was released in the format, on a special photo printed disc; same for The Nightmare Before Christmas.Zoltack wrote:And if that record player goes out, it'll be pretty hard to find another one or even a new one.
Not many turntables come cheap these days, though, as it's now seen as more of a niche market only for audiophiles and collectors. A moderate one will run you about $300 and up. The cheapest one that's worth buying at all is probably Sony's PS-LX350H. The most expensive one ($15,000-19,000) I've ever seen is this:
http://www.elpj.com/main.html
It actually uses a laser to read the record, eliminating the need to subject it to the potential wear caused by a needle. I wish they were more affordable.
If you use a laser for your vinyl records then why don't you just get a CD player I mean that's what it looks like an oversized CD player. It practically does the same thing but I can understand that you don't want to wear out your records. But that's cool I didn't know that but $300 for an average record player is kind of steep isn't it?
- TM2-Megatron
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It may look like a CD player, but it's still a fully analog device; despite the use of a laser to read the grooves. A record played on it will still have that same, organic sound that make some people prefer vinyl. The main advantages to that player are the lack of a damaging needle, and the fact the laser is able to read grooves better than a needle; in many cases it will even play scratched records as though they weren't damaged.Zoltack wrote:If you use a laser for your vinyl records then why don't you just get a CD player I mean that's what it looks like an oversized CD player. It practically does the same thing but I can understand that you don't want to wear out your records. But that's cool I didn't know that but $300 for an average record player is kind of steep isn't it?
Wow and yeah replacement needles are expenisve too now a days. I don't know exactly how much but I've heard they're pretty expensive and really hard to find.
You can't really say that it's analog. Well the record is analog but when the laser reads the vinyl it must covert what it reads to digital. Kind of the same way a dial-up modem works. I mean that's probably why you can get a good sound out of it because you're hearing digital sounds not analog. I don't know I guess that's how it could work. I really haven't received a whole lot of information on them. It's actually quite interesting because I never heard of a laser turntable until now. I always thought that you needed a needle.
I guess for the laser turntalbes it has to be dark in order for the laser to read the record well. That's why it kind of looked like an oversized CD player to me.
Not only that but for a record player that is almost $20,000, you better get a good sound out of it. Yeah you would have to be really into vinly and rich to get something like that.
You can't really say that it's analog. Well the record is analog but when the laser reads the vinyl it must covert what it reads to digital. Kind of the same way a dial-up modem works. I mean that's probably why you can get a good sound out of it because you're hearing digital sounds not analog. I don't know I guess that's how it could work. I really haven't received a whole lot of information on them. It's actually quite interesting because I never heard of a laser turntable until now. I always thought that you needed a needle.
I guess for the laser turntalbes it has to be dark in order for the laser to read the record well. That's why it kind of looked like an oversized CD player to me.
Not only that but for a record player that is almost $20,000, you better get a good sound out of it. Yeah you would have to be really into vinly and rich to get something like that.
- Roger Rabbit
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