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  2. Bruce Broughton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruce_Broughton

    Bruce Harold Broughton (born March 8, 1945 [1]) is an American orchestral composer of television, film, and video game scores and concert works.He has composed several highly acclaimed soundtracks over his extensive career and has contributed many pieces to music archives, including the 1994 version of the 20th Century Fox fanfare with short versions for 20th Century Fox Television and Foxstar ...

  3. Glossary of music terminology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_music_terminology

    All; all together, usually used in an orchestral or choral score when the orchestra or all of the voices come in at the same time, also seen in Baroque-era music where two instruments share the same copy of music, after one instrument has broken off to play a more advanced form: they both play together again at the point marked tutti.

  4. Soundtrack album - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soundtrack_album

    A soundtrack album is any album that incorporates music directly recorded from the soundtrack of a particular feature film or television show. [1] 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]

  5. Soundtrack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soundtrack

    16 mm film showing a sound track at right [1]. A soundtrack [2] is a recorded audio signal accompanying and synchronised to the images of a book, drama, motion picture, radio program, television program, or video game; colloquially, a commercially released soundtrack album of music as featured in the soundtrack of a film, video, or television presentation; or the physical area of a film that ...

  6. Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammy_Award_for_Best...

    The Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media is an honor presented to a composer (or composers) for an original score created for a film, TV show or series, or other visual media [1] at the Grammy Awards, a ceremony that was established in 1958 and originally called the Gramophone Awards.

  7. Sheet music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheet_music

    A vocal score (or, more properly, piano-vocal score) is a reduction of the full score of a vocal work (e.g., opera, musical, oratorio, cantata, etc.) to show the vocal parts (solo and choral) on their staves and the orchestral parts in a piano reduction (usually for two hands) underneath the vocal parts; the purely orchestral sections of the ...

  8. Incidental music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Incidental_music

    Incidental music is music in a play, television program, radio program, video game, or some other presentation form that is not primarily musical.The term is less frequently applied to film music, with such music being referred to instead as the film score or soundtrack.

  9. Film score - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Film_score

    Film scores encompass an enormous variety of styles of music, depending on the nature of the films they accompany. While the majority of scores are orchestral works rooted in Western classical music, many scores are also influenced by jazz, rock, pop, blues, new-age and ambient music, and a wide range of ethnic and world music styles.