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The Score is the second [4] studio album by the hip hop trio Fugees, released worldwide on February 13, 1996, on Columbia Records. The album features a wide range of samples and instrumentation, with many aspects of alternative hip hop that would come to dominate the hip-hop music scene in the mid- to late-1990s.
The Score released their debut EP, The Score EP, in 2014, which features earlier songs, "Dancing Shoes" and "Don't Wanna Wake Up".The EP also contained their earlier released covers of "Say Something" and "Holy Grail" as bonus tracks, as well as new songs, "Til The Stars Burn Blue", "Haunted", and "This Beating Heart" and a ScoreSundays acoustic version of "Dancing Shoes".
The score album did not have a separate release in digital and physical formats. A promotional album for the score does exist, according to Soundtrack.Net featuring the complete score. [9] On January 28, 2015, the score was released along with that of his compositions for The Interview (2014) also directed by Rogen and Goldberg. [10]
The Shrek soundtracks are a collection of soundtracks from all four movies of the Shrek series, including separate editions for the movie score.Each soundtrack contains all songs that featured in their respective film, and the score album contains the music composed by Harry Gregson-Williams and John Powell.
The score album was released by Walt Disney Records on May 26, 2014. It includes 22 tracks from Howard's score, and a cover version of the song " Once Upon a Dream " performed by Lana Del Rey . The track was earlier released as a single on January 26, 2014, to coincide the 56th Annual Grammy Awards , and also released for free digital download ...
The score for Scream 3 was compiled in a two-disc album (disc 3 and 4), in its entirety, that runs for one-and-a-half hour. [19] [20] Unlike, its predecessors, which saw a separate "deluxe edition" release for the full score. A vinyl box set was later released on June 10, 2022, although only 44 minutes of music were present.
The Score, a 1978 Swedish film, released in Sweden as Lyftet; The Score, a 2001 crime drama film starring Robert De Niro and Edward Norton; The Score, a 2005 science fiction film by Kim Collier starring Jonathon Young
The first such album to be commercially released was Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the soundtrack to the film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, in 1938. [2] The first soundtrack album of a film's orchestral score was that for Alexander Korda's 1942 film Rudyard Kipling's Jungle Book, composed by Miklós Rózsa. [3]