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"Ave Satani" is the theme song to the 1976 film The Omen, which is composed by Jerry Goldsmith. [1] The Omen won the Academy Award for Best Original Score , [ 2 ] with Ave Satani nominated for Best Original Song.
In addition to the score, Goldsmith penned and composed the original song "Ave Satani" which served as the film's theme song. [5]He wanted to create a kind of Satanic version of a Gregorian chant and came up with ideas with from Norton, something like a Black Mass, inverting Latin phrases from the Latin Mass. [6]
The Omen is a 1976 supernatural horror film directed by Richard Donner and written by David Seltzer.An international co-production of the United Kingdom and the United States, it stars Gregory Peck, Lee Remick, David Warner, Harvey Spencer Stephens (in his film debut), Billie Whitelaw, Patrick Troughton, Martin Benson, and Leo McKern.
That same year, the song "Al otro lado del río" (On The Other Side Of The River), which was featured in the film The Motorcycle Diaries, won the award, becoming the first song in Spanish and the second in a non-English language to receive such an honor (the first winner was the title tune to Never on Sunday, which was sung in Greek in the film ...
The score was successful among critics and garnered Goldsmith his only Academy Award for Best Original Score and a nomination for Best Original Song for "Ave Satani". [22] His wife, Carol Heather Goldsmith, also wrote lyrics and performed a vocal track titled "The Piper Dreams" released solely on the soundtrack album. [21]
The Omen (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack to the 2006 film The Omen, a remake of the 1976 film of the same name directed by John Moore.The film score was composed by Marco Beltrami, who reuses themes from the original film's score composed by Jerry Goldsmith.
A painting by William Blake depicting Satan smiting Job with boils. Hail Satan, sometimes Latinized as Ave Satanas or Ave Satana, is an exclamation used by some Satanists [1] to invoke the name of Satan in contexts ranging from sincere expression [2] to comedy or satire. [3]
The Director's Cut was released on July 9, 2001, by Patton's record label Ipecac Recordings. [2] The album's release was presaged by a tour of Europe the preceding May and June, while the album version of "Rosemary's Baby"—the lullaby theme from the film of the same name—was previewed on the Ipecac Recordings website. [3]