DVD & BluRay isolated 5.1 soundtracks

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rikpepe

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Sticky worthy?
Pls. add!


DVD with Isolated Soundtracks
• 1941 - Special Edition (1979)
• 28 Days (2000)
• 5 Dolls for an August Moon
• The Adventures of Robin Hood (1939)
• Alien (1979)
• All About My Mother (1999)
• Amadeus (1984)
• American Psycho (2000)
• Any Given Sunday: Special Edition (1999)
• Apartment Hunting (2000)
• Apollo 13 (1995)
• Assault on Precinct 13 (1976)
• Atomic Journeys
• Auntie Mame (1958)
• Bad Boys - Special Edition (1995)
• Bats (1999)
• Beetlejuice (1988)
• Ben Hur (4-disc SE)
• The Best Years Of Our Lives (1946)
• Bicentennial Man (1999)
• The Big Blue (1988)
• Bird With the Crystal Plumage (1970)
• Blade (1998)
• Blade II (2002)
• Blood and Black Lace
• Blow-Up (1966)
• The Bone Collector (1999)
• The Brave One (1957)
• The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
• A Bug's Life (1998)
• Bully (2001)
• Camelot (1967)
• The Cell (2000)
• Center Stage (2000)
• City Of Angels (1998)
• Contact (1997)
• The Cooler (2003)
• Corpse Bride (2005)
• The Corruptor (1999)
• The Craft (1996)
• The Crimson River (2000)
• Dante's Peak (1995)
• The Dark Crystal (1985)
• Dead & Rotting (2002)
• Dead and Rotting (Limited Edition) (2002)
• Dick (1999)
• Doctor Who - Ghost Light (1989)
• Don Juan DeMarco (1992)
• Donnie Brasco (1996)
• Dr. T and the Women (2000)
• Dr. Zhivago (1965)
• Edge of Darkness (1985)
• Edward Scissorhands (1990)
• The End of the Affair (1999)
• Enter the Dragon - 25th Anniversary Edition (1971)
• Erin Brockovich (2000)
• The Family Man (2000)
• Fantastic Voyage (1966)
• Field of Dreams (1993)
• The Fifth Element (1997)
• Final Destination (2000)
• Final Fantasy (2001)
• Fly Away Home (1996)
• Forbidden Zone (1980)
• Frequency (2000)
• Frida (2002)
• Fried Green Tomatoes (1989)
• Get Carter (1971)
• Ghost Dog (2000)
• Girl, Interrupted (1999)
• Glory (1989)
• Gorgeous
• Groove (2000)
• Hanging Up (2000)
• Heavy Metal 2000 (2000)
• Hellboy (2004)
• Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959)
• Hollow Man (2000)
• House of 1000 Corpses (2003)
• I Dreamed of Africa (2000)
• I, Robot (2004)
• Incognito (1997)
• Jakob The Liar (2000)
• Jandek on Corwood (2003)
• Jumanji (1994)
• The King and I (1956)
• Kiss Me Kate (1953)
• L.A. Confidential (1997)
• Lady In White (1997)
• The Last of the Mohicans (1992)
• The Legend Of The Seven Golden Vampires (1974)
• Legend: Ultimate Edition (1985)
• Legends of the Fall (1994)
• The Limey (1999)
• Little Shop Of Horrors (1986)
• Little Women (1995)
• Looney Tunes: Golden Collection Volume 1 (2003)
• Looney Tunes: Golden Collection Volume 2 (2004)
• Lord Of Illusions (1996)
• The Man Who Knew Too Little (1998)
• Mars Attacks! (1996)
• The Matrix (1999)
• Meet Me in St. Louis (1944)
• Melinda and Melinda (2004)
• Men in Black (1996)
• A Merry War (1999)
• The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc (1999)
• Miracles
• Most Wanted (1997)
• MTV's Pilates
• The Mummy (1999)
• The Mysterians (Tokyo Shock) (1957)
• The Ninth Gate (2000)
• North By Northwest (1959)
• Notorious (1946)
• Nukes in Space
• One From the Heart (1982)
• One Night Stand (1997)
• Papillon (1973)
• Patch Adams (1998)
• Patton (1971)
• Pee-Wee's Big Adventure (1985)
• Planet of the Apes (2001)
• Planet of the Apes: 35th Anniversary (1968)
• Pleasantville - Special Edition (1998)
• The Professional (1994)
• Quest For Camelot - Special Edtion (1998)
• Random Hearts (1999)
• Re-Animator (1988)
• Red Dragon (2002)
• Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves (1991)
• Robotech - Macross Saga (1982)
• Rudy (1996)
• Rush Hour (1997)
• The Sand Pebbles (1966)
• Seven (1995)
• Short Circuit (1986)
• Short Cuts (1993)
• The Sixth Day (2000)
• Sleepless in Seattle (1993)
• The Sound of Music (1965)
• Space Jam (1996)
• Starship Troopers (1997)
• Steel Magnolias (1989)
• Stuart Little (1999)
• Superman (1979)
• The Sweet Hereafter (1997)
• The Thing - Special Edition (1982)
• The Third Miracle (1999)
• Tin Drum (1979)
• Titus (1999)
• Tomorrow Never Dies - Special Edition (1997)
• Toy Story 2 (1999)
• Traffic (1999)
• The Train (1964)
• Trinity and Beyond: The Atomic Bomb Movie (1995)
• The Twilight Zone (1959)
• The Way of the Gun (2000)
• What Planet Are You From? (2000)
• Whatever It Takes (2000)
• Whip and the Body
• Witches of Eastwick (1988)
• The Wizard of Oz (1939)
• The Yellow Submarine (1968)
• You've Got Mail (1998)
BluRay with isolated soundtrack
ALIEN (Theatrical Cut) - Jerry Goldsmith - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 448 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit (Final Theatrical Score + Composer's Original Score) *
ALIENS (Theatrical Cut) - James Horner - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 448 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit (Final Theatrical Score + Composer's Original Score) *
ALIEN³ (Theatrical Cut) - Elliot Goldenthal - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 448 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit *
ALIEN: Resurrection (Theatrical Cut) - John Frizzel - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 448 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit *
All About Eve (1950) - Alfred Newman - DTS / 5.1 / 768 kbps / 48 khz / 24-bit
Assault on Precinct 13 (1976) - John Carpenter - Dolby Digital / 2.0 / 256 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
Batman: The Movie (1966) - Nelson Riddle & Neal Hefti - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 3001 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
Battle of Britain (1969) - William Walton - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 448 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit*
BEETLEJUICE - Danny Elfman - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 640 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit *
Ben-Hur (1959) - Rózsa Miklós - Dolby Digital / 2.0 / 192 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
Big Trouble in Little China - John Carpenter - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 3699 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit *
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory - Danny Elfman - Dolby TrueHD / 5.1 / 1480 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
CONTACT - Alan Silvestri - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 640 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
Corpse Bride (2005) - Danny Elfman - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 640 kbps / 48 khz / 16-bit
The Day the Earth Stood Still (1951) - Bernard Herrmann - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 2648 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit *
The Day The Earth Stood Still (1951) - Bernard Hermann - DTS / 5.1 / 756 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
Edward Scissorhands - Danny Elfman - Dolby Digital / 2.0 / 224 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
The Egyptian (1954) - Bernard Herrmann and Alfred Newman - DTS-HD Master Audio / 2.0 / 1683 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
The French Connection - Don Ellis - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 448 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit *
The French Connection II (1975) - Don Ellis - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 2829 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
Fright Night (Limited Edition) - Brad Fiedel - DTS-HD Master Audio / 2.0
The Getaway (1972) -Jerry Fielding (Rejected) - Dolby Digital / 2.0 / 192 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
Godzilla (1954) - Akira Ifukube + SoundFX - LPCM / 1.0
High Anxiety (1977) - John Morris - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 2563 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
History of the World: Part I (1981) - John Morris - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 2687 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
History of the World: Part I (1981) - John Morris - DTS / 5.1 / 768 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
Inception - Hans Zimmer - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 4355 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
L.A. Confidential Jerry Goldsmith - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 1823 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
L.A. Confidential - Jerry Goldsmith - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 640 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
LEGEND - Ultimate Edition (US Theatrical Cut) - Tangerine Dream *
Looney Tunes Platinum Collection Vol. 1 - Isolated Score on select shorts by Various Artists
[Show spoiler]
including sound effects
[Show spoiler]
- Dolby Digital / 1.0 / 192 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
THE MATRIX - Don Davis commentary w/Isolated Score - Dolby Digital / 2.0 / 192 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
Mysterious Island (1961) - Bernard Herrmann - DTS-HD Master Audio / 1.0
North by Northwest - Bernard Hermmann - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 640 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit *
THE OMEN (1976) - Jerry Goldsmith - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 448 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
Planet of the Apes (1968) (Commentary + isolated score) - Jerry Goldsmith - *
Beneath the Planet of the Apes Leonard Rosenman - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 2422 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
Escape from the Planet of the Apes - Jerry Goldsmith - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 2259 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
Conquest of the Planet of the Apes - Tom Scott - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 2562 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
Battle for the Planet of the Apes - Leonard Rosenman - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 2793 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
Rapture (Limited Edition) - Georges Delerue - DTS-HD Master Audio / 2.0
RED DRAGON - Danny Elfman - Dolby Digital / 2.0 / 192 kbps / 48 khz / 16-bit
The Robe (1953) - Alfred Newman - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 448 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
The Sand Pebbles - Jerry Goldsmith - Dolby Digital / 2.0 / 224 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
The Sound of Music (1965) - Irwin Kostal + Director's Commentary - Dolby Digital / 2.0 / 224 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
SUPERMAN: The Movie - John Williams - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 640 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
To Be or Not To Be (1983) - John Morris - DTS-HD Master Audio
The Wizard of Oz (1939) - (with sound effects) Carl W. Stalling and Herbert Stothart - Dolby Digital / 1.0 / 192 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
THE X-FILES: I Want to Believe (2008) Easter Egg - Mark Snow - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 640 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
X-Men: First Class - Henry Jackman - Dolby Digital / 5.1 / 448 kbps / 48 kHz / 16-bit
Young Frankenstein (1974) - John Morris - DTS-HD Master Audio / 5.1 / 2371 kbps / 48 kHz / 24-bit
 
:confused:
...
excuse me...but ..I don't get it....
What does it mean?
I apologize ...maybe my "cerebro de inglés" ees no workin dis mornin...
I have a few of these...
 
It means you can play the soundtrack in 5.1 format without watching the film. The Inception soundtrack is on a bonus disc for example.
 
Awesome Thread! Small correction: Don Juan DeMarco is from 1995. Apparently, the score is available on both the DVD and BluRay edition (while e.g. the BluRay of Amadeus has no isolated score).

Does anybody know the Don Juan score? How is it? How's the mix?

Also, are you 100% sure that all the isolated scores on all the titles you listed are mixed in 5.1?

EDIT: also found this thread about films with isolated scores: http://forums.thedigitalfix.com/forums/showthread.php?t=91687
 
So how do you listen to only the isolated score? Inception is obvious, as it is an option on the disc. But with the Aliens movies, what I remember, you have to go through the whole movie, so also the bits without any music. Or did I select the wrong option on the BD menu? Thanks for any advice.
 
Also, are you 100% sure that all the isolated scores on all the titles you listed are mixed in 5.1?
To tell the Truth = No =But most are probably at least 4 channel and SW My Doctor who's are in stereo and only in the Doctor 1 thru 7 so far)

So how do you listen to only the isolated score

It really varies from Disc to Disc some give you a separate disc some require you go to the "features" some require to go to LANGUAGES menu some are actually Easter Eggs !!! I will try to find the links I found that say which ones require the special tricks
 
Do not confuse this with the Conan released last year
I love the soundtrack by Basil Polidouris. In a GREAT and EPIC MOVIE with Arnold, Written by oliver stone, Directed by John Milius.
Basil Poledouris' score to Conan the Barbarian is one of the great powerhouses of film music and remains as one of my favorite film scores to this date.
It is in many top 10 lists - it is in mine.

If you get it on CD get it on the VARESE SARABANDE 16 cut release (not the 12 track milan release). There is a 2 CD complete score but performed by the Prague Philharmonic Orchestra and Chorus is a worthy well recorded addition to the original release.

The score on the VHS and DVD's were in stereo and sound "quality" was a joke....
Then came the BluRay - WOW DTS-HD!!! and someone left 95% of the Vocals and action on the center channel and left score on the rest of the SPEAKERS... giving you a decent quad plus Subwoofer recording.
Although there is no FORMAL way to isolate the soundtrack I disconnected the center speaker and WOW it was like one big music video. Only for a total of 60 seconds in the entire movie do you hear some action artifact (horse hooves etc) but it is muted and sounds like musïc concretê. It may not be real 5.1 but it just sounds so great. Can anyone suggest a methodology to record these channels? You can call it preserving if you must but I am a fair use advocate as define by the law.
 
Although there is no FORMAL way to isolate the soundtrack I disconnected the center speaker and WOW it was like one big music video. Only for a total of 60 seconds in the entire movie do you hear some action artifact (horse hooves etc) but it is muted and sounds like musïc concretê. It may not be real 5.1 but it just sounds so great. Can anyone suggest a methodology to record these channels? You can call it preserving if you must but I am a fair use advocate as define by the law.

Sounds very appetizing! As far as extracting this, the steps would be:

• use the command-line tool eac3to.exe - (Those of us who use this amazing utility all had to learn it by reading the 582-pages of posts and most of all the wiki about it :: on Doom's 9 Forums and wikibooks.org respectively).

• Once you have the 5.1 audio the way you want it (probably best saved as a .w64 file as these multichannel beasts are huge and will definitely go over the 2gig limit for a wav file), just load it into your DAW and do the editing to remove the center channel in a program such as Sound Forge or Adobe Audition.

Also, I think you meant to say musique concrète (rather than musïc concretê)
 
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So how do you listen to only the isolated score
[/SIZE][/SIZE]
It really varies from Disc to Disc some give you a separate disc some require you go to the "features" some require to go to LANGUAGES menu some are actually Easter Eggs !!! I will try to find the links I found that say which ones require the special tricks

Was there ever an update on how to find these easter eggs and other ways of accessing the isolated scores?
 
Probably the best news about this thread for me is that The Egyptian is on Blu-ray! We only have it on a dodgy Chinese DVD and it's a 'flipper'. The isolated score is a bonus.

Now, if only I could find The Valley Of The Kings from the same year.
 
How can anybody stand to listen to a 90 min track with 45 minutes of silence?

I wish they would put the music separate like INCEPTION BLU RAY!!!!
 
The "Qatsi" BD trilogy released on Criterion last year features 3 scores by Phillip Glass - most notably "Koyaanisqatsi." All 3 feature DTS HD MA 5.1 soundtracks. No need for isolated scores or separate tracks - the entire film is the score - no dialogue - visually a treat - however you can always turn the screen off, or if you have the capability, extract the stream an encode to your codec of choice (I use FLAC for media streaming via the OPPO 103). My favorite is "Naqoyqatsi" the third in the trilogy featuring the sublime cello work of Yo Yo Ma.

Can you elaborate please? No dialogue, just images set to music?
 
The "Qatsi" BD trilogy released on Criterion last year features 3 scores by Phillip Glass - most notably "Koyaanisqatsi." All 3 feature DTS HD MA 5.1 soundtracks. No need for isolated scores or separate tracks - the entire film is the score - no dialogue - visually a treat - however you can always turn the screen off, or if you have the capability, extract the stream an encode to your codec of choice (I use FLAC for media streaming via the OPPO 103). My favorite is "Naqoyqatsi" the third in the trilogy featuring the sublime cello work of Yo Yo Ma.

I was unaware of this release. How is the surround mix? Years ago in Chicago I saw the Phillip Glass Ensemble accompany a screening of Koyaanisqatsi. It was absolutely brilliant.
 
I was unaware of this release. How is the surround mix? Years ago in Chicago I saw the Phillip Glass Ensemble accompany a screening of Koyaanisqatsi. It was absolutely brilliant.

Not to go OT, don't forget the Koyaanisqatsi DVD-Audio :)
 

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The Mummy: Collector's Edition - From the main menu click in Languages. Once the animation is complete Jerry Goldsmith's score plays uncut from start to finish.

Interesting score, not much in the rears, mostly ambiance.

Unfortunately it seems they didn't repeat this easter egg on The Mummy Returns.
 
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