|
Post by plasticsith on Aug 31, 2008 17:14:18 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by brittany on Sept 1, 2008 23:19:46 GMT -5
I don't get this...
|
|
|
Post by redshift on Sept 5, 2008 17:48:09 GMT -5
Definitely the soundtrack, with extras added (or maybe the full version from the OST?). Unbelievable. Yet another bloody example of them using the friggin soundtrack elsewhere but they won't let us - the paying public - get our hands on the damn thing?! Then they have the cheek to complain about music piracy!!! There is something wrong somewhere. I wonder if John Murphy has seen this ad, or saw the 'Cloverfield' trailer...did he get paid for those? Given the fact he is giving out the OST to anyone who asks for it suggests he wasn't. I bet he gets totally pissed off whenever he hears an Underworld track.
|
|
zortech
Trainee
Remember where you come from.
Posts: 10
|
Post by zortech on Sept 15, 2008 17:00:14 GMT -5
That's the track sometimes known as "Adagio in D Minor," other times as "Escape the Icarus 2." It's a different take on the same music your hear in the film during "Kaneda's Death" and the real "Escaping the Icarus 2" (as Capa detonates the ship).
And redshift, this all isn't anything crazy. I don't know quite the full legal issues keeping the soundtrack out of the public's hands (at least until this fall, I hear), but advertising firms and feature film advertising houses have access to tons of materials not available to the public. And I may be quite wrong, but I thought that, most often, a movie studio, not the composer, holds the rights to a film's score. Thus, that studio can give anyone (for the right amount of many) the right to use the music in such advertising.
|
|
|
Post by warduria on Nov 2, 2009 4:00:58 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by orten999 on Mar 16, 2010 10:24:42 GMT -5
|
|