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The Lion cover version of the main Transformers theme was itself covered on the NES by chiptune artist Inverse Phase and renamed to "NESformers". [7] "Subsong 2" from the Commodore 64 game Turrican is actually the song "Escape" from The Transformers: The Movie soundtrack. [8] Unicron’s theme appears in Transformers: Rise of the Beasts.
Til All Are One is a soundtrack that contains musical compositions from The Transformers: The Movie. The release is a 2-CD set, the first contains tracks from Stan Bush Call to Action album. The second CD contains the whole music score of The Transformers: The Movie (minus the three score pieces featured in the Motion Picture soundtrack release ...
Calling the music one of the important aspects, Melissa Thompson of We Are Movie Geeks wrote that "The score from film composer Jongnic "JB" Bontemps is fantastic, but what really connects is the early 90's hip hop tracks that are used to pump up the action sequences. They fit nicely into the time frame and has the audience moving in their seats.
Transformers: The Score is a soundtrack that features the musical score by film composer Steve Jablonsky for the 2007 film Transformers. It was released October 9, 2007, on Jablonsky's 37th birthday and exactly one week before the film's DVD release date.
The soundtrack debuted at number 21 on the U.S Billboard 200, selling about 32,000 copies in its first week. The album has sold 150,000 copies. [5] Each group on the album, except for Julien-K, was signed to a label owned by Warner Music Group at the time of the album's release. Tracks 7, 9, 10, and 12 do not appear in the actual film.
The song itself was the first single to be released for the soundtrack reaching 86 on Billboard Hot 100 and 9 on Hot Adult Top 40, although the song, "What I've Done" by Linkin Park was written and used for most of the Transformers promotional purposes. The song was later included on the band's second compilation album Greatest Hits Volume One ...
“Transformers One” director Josh Cooley wanted an end credits song that captured the tone of his new animated feature. He had already enlisted composer Brian Tyler to compose the film’s ...
An audio video for the song was posted on YouTube on June 2, 2011. The video itself achieved over 1 million views in the first three days of posting. [4] [5] The song won Choice Rock Track at the 2011 Teen Choice Awards. On March 24, 2016, the song was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), for sales exceeding ...