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Mortal Kombat was nominated for the Motion Picture Sound Editors, USA Golden Reel Award.It won the BMI Film & TV Awards BMI Film Music Award. [citation needed] The soundtrack went Platinum [2] in less than a year reaching No. 10 on the Billboard 200, [3] and was included in the 2011 Guinness World Records Gamer's Edition as the "most successful video game spin-off soundtrack album". [4]
Mortal Kombat: Songs Inspired by the Warriors is a compilation album featuring songs inspired by the iconic warriors from the Mortal Kombat game series. The soundtrack coincided with the release of the 2011 installment in the video game series, Mortal Kombat .
Mortal Kombat: The Album is a soundtrack album by The Immortals (Maurice "Praga Khan" Engelen and Olivier Adams), released in 1994 to accompany the home versions of the video game Mortal Kombat. Television commercials for the home versions included a brief plug for the album at the end. [2] The single Mortal Kombat (Techno-Syndrome) was ...
Skrillex unveiled several new songs on this tour including "First of the Year" (formerly known as "Equinox"), "Reptile", and "Cinema" (remix of a Benny Benassi track). "Reptile" was featured in the TV commercial for Mortal Kombat 9 , and "First of the Year (Equinox)" is featured on More Monsters and Sprites , his follow-up EP and remix ...
Reptile (Mortal Kombat), a fictional character from the Mortal Kombat video game series; ... "Reptile", a song by Skrillex from Mortal Kombat: Songs Inspired by the ...
In the United Kingdom, the song peaked at number eighty-one on the UK Singles Chart. An instrumental version of "Control" was released on the soundtrack to the film Mortal Kombat (1995), which was certified double platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), [1] and earned Lords her first music award. [2]
Mortal Kombat: Original Motion Picture Score is the instrumental score album released to accompany the Mortal Kombat (1995) film. The music was composed by George S. Clinton with additional guitar work provided by Buckethead and drums by Brain.
Reptile's character concept was conceived by Mortal Kombat co-creator and lead programmer Ed Boon after the original 1992 game was released into arcades. Noting the success of the palette swap method used for the sprites of the game's ninja characters Scorpion and Sub-Zero, [6] he and series character designer John Tobias collaborated on including a "super secret hidden feature" in the game ...