
John Barry
Game of Death & Night Games (1978)
I always liked Game of Death, perhaps much has to do with the allure of Bruce Lee as a child.

Game of Death
Various
The Music of The Sweeney
Funky crime style music to the TV series, recorded by some of the luminaries of the ‘library’ music scene of the era.

Opening Theme
I sure do, @Neil_Bulk (nice to see some old familiar names here), I always loved the score, I have just about every release including the LP, but La-La Land’s 2CD set is by far the best edition this music has ever seen.
Top 5 soundtracks for me at the moment are: Upstream Color / Mishima / Passion / Monsters / The Draughtsman Contract
I’m fairly certain I’ve never heard that John Barry…the title/cover are a total blank. Looking forward to it. ![]()
Two fairly strong Barry releases here of different decades!
John Barry
Born Free (1966)

I don’t know what year it was, because I’m a bit too young to have seen the film in 1966. However, I do remember as a young child watching the film and crying. The title track has always made me teary & I’m really not sure why (other than the film touched me as a child)
Born Free w/Matt Munroe
The Black Hole (1979)


‘Fever Dog,’ Stillwater
Stillwater walked so Daisy Jones & the Six could stage-dive. It’s a herculean task to make a fictional rock band look believable, let alone good. You can thank Nancy Wilson, who wrote “Fever Dog,” for this — it’s basically the male version of “Crazy on You.” In the world of Almost Famous, it’s the band’s first self-produced single, instead of studio legend Glyn Johns. And the magic is there: Jeff Bebe’s Robert Plant-like howl hits Russell Hammond’s guitar like a groovy train wreck. As teenage rock critic William Miller tells the band, it’s incendiary. —A.M. [Rolling Stone Australia]

If you like Zimmer’s Millennium score, you might also like these soundtrack from him:
Those three are all synthesiser scores. The next are heavy based on synths but also have great African influence:
Ennio Morricone
A couple of giallo soundtracks, (as if the covers don’t give that away) * both with the wonderful vocals of Edda Dell’Orso.
La Corta Notte Delle Bambole Di Vetro (1971)
…the film itself was relatively successful, with a cast that included Ingrid Thulin & Barbara Bach.

Trailer
La Tarantola Dal Ventre Nero (1971)

Thank you, I had no idea he scored these movies. Excited to check them out!

An old favorite of mine, EXTREME PREJUDICE.
Say, why do some of your images say “roon” in the lower right-hand corner? Seems many here use it as a “standard” image for sharing, but I haven’t actually found that type of display yet?
Those particular images are generated when you use the Roon “Share” feature (check under the 3-dots menu).
Oo, The Black Hole soundtrack is definitely on my “Want” list. ![]()
I have to break out our Bluray copy and give it a watch. Perfect for wintertime. What a movie! I have to keep an eye out for the soundtrack.
Ah, there it is… thanks. ![]()






