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Dune: Part Two (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Hans Zimmer

Film Soundtracks - Released February 23, 2024 | WaterTower Music

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Denis Villeneuve and Hans Zimmer (Interstellar, Gladiator…) reunite for the second installment of Dune, the film adaptation of Frank Herbert’s science fiction novels. In this sequel, Paul Atreides (Timothée Chalamet) unites with Chani (Zendaya) and the Fremen to lead a revolt against those who destroyed his family. Haunted by dark premonitions, he finds himself confronted with a difficult choice between the love of his life and the fate of the universe. Zimmer’s troubling score echoes these menacing intuitions, full of metallic textures that intertwine with the textures of the human voice, leading to sonorities that are both familiar and strange at once. We also hear the first film’s famous gimmick, the guttural voice of the Bene Gesserit, contributing to the project’s profoundly spiritual quality. Overall, the soundtrack to Dune: Part Two is more meditative than that of the first film, as is evidenced by the choice of the duduk, the Armenian woodwind instrument that most notably haunts the opening piece (“Beginnings Are Such Delicate Times”). Loyal to the great tradition of Hollywood film music, Hans Zimmer graces us with a love song that’s full of tenderness. Those who love the enchanting Zimmer of Terrence Malik’s The Thin Red Line will certainly appreciate this soundtrack to one of 2024’s most anticipated films. © Nicolas Magenham/Qobuz
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The Mandrake Project

Bruce Dickinson

Metal - Released March 1, 2024 | BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited

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The seventh solo studio album from the iconic Iron Maiden vocalist is his first in nearly 20 years, following 2005's Tyranny of Souls. The album was co-written and produced by Roy Z (Judas Priest, Sepultura), who also contributes guitars and bass, and Puddle of Mudd's Dave Moreno plays drums. Dickinson continues his fascination with classic literature, ancient cultures, myths, and legends, with an overarching fantasy concept which is also the basis for an accompanying comic book series.© John D. Buchanan /TiVo
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Mahler: Symphony No. 2 "Resurrection"

Otto Klemperer

Classical - Released March 14, 2000 | Warner Classics

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The Stone Roses

The Stone Roses

Alternative & Indie - Released March 1, 1989 | Sony Music UK

Distinctions The Qobuz Ideal Discography
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Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon (Original Game Soundtrack)

Power Glove

Video Games - Released May 1, 2013 | Ubisoft Music

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Hellbilly Deluxe

Rob Zombie

Pop - Released January 1, 1998 | Geffen

Distinctions The Qobuz Ideal Discography
Just as White Zombie was on the verge of becoming the most popular metal band in the land, Rob Zombie decided he was an auteur. Stopping short of breaking up the band, Zombie set out to make sure everyone know that he was the main force in the band, as if there were any doubt in the first place. He did extracurricular animation, managed a band, started a record label, drew a sequence in Beavis & Butt-Head Do America, appeared in films, wrote the script for The Crow 3 (which he planned to direct), and most tellingly of all, he recorded a solo album, Hellbilly Deluxe. Since White Zombie was always his baby, it seems a little strange that he had the need to break away from the group, especially since the album sounds exactly like a White Zombie record, complete with thunderous industrial rhythms, drilling metal guitars, and B-movie obsessions. For most listeners, it doesn't matter if Hellbilly Deluxe is technically a White Zombie or Rob Zombie album, since it delivers the goods, arguably even better than Astro-Creep: 2000. To outsiders, the entire schlock enterprise may seem ridiculous or sound monotonous, but even the weak cuts here hit hard and give fans exactly what they want.© Stephen Thomas Erlewine /TiVo
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Mahler: Symphony No. 2, 'Resurrection'

Sir Simon Rattle

Symphonic Music - Released February 7, 2011 | Warner Classics International

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The Sacrament of Sin (Deluxe Version)

Powerwolf

Metal - Released July 20, 2018 | Napalm Records

The Sacrament of Sin is the seventh studio album from German power-metal outfit Powerwolf and follows their 2015 release Blessed & Possessed. Recorded at the beginning of 2018 at the Fascination Street Studios in Örebrö, Sweden with producer Jens Bogren (Amon Amarth, Opeth), the album sees the group deliver a collection of bold, anthemic power metal in their trademark style.© Rich Wilson /TiVo
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Call of the Wild

Powerwolf

Metal - Released July 16, 2021 | Napalm Records

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The number of metal bands formed after the turn of the century that have managed to become real headliners can be counted on one's fingers. Powerwolf is one of them. Call of the Wild is their tenth album: the group was formed in 2004 and has been releasing records like clockwork ever since. The band has stuck, limpet-like, to its chosen style (power metal) from the outset. But over the years it has added various spices to its unchanged basic recipe in order to avoid the "photocopier" effect that plagues this rather formalised genre. The increasingly grandiloquent Powerwolf serves up a collection of hymns with some larger than life choruses. Increasingly focused on arrangements worthy of a big-screen film soundtrack, the quintet's music gives pride of place to Falk Maria Schlegel's flamboyant keyboard performances, which are better for creating a cinematic atmosphere than those of many competitors, who often struggle to recreate the majesty of a symphony orchestra with two Casios and a Roland. With Call of the Wild, Powerwolf could even appeal to fans of musicals: their music is always melodic and accessible to a wide audience, and Attila Dorn's vocals remind one of the powerful and spirited performances for which Demis Roussos became famous. The reference to Roussos might raise eyebrows at first glance, but it is actually much more accurate than you might think. Unsurprisingly, the band have announced that they are planning a very major stage production for their coming tour. It makes sense: it's hard to imagine such a forceful musical explosion being performed without a visual counterpart to match. Bursting with out-of-the-box hits (Beast of Gévaudan, Dancing with the Dead, or the lighter Undress to Confess), Call of the Wild is a very smart move by the Saarbrücken band: it's accessible for a lot of people but as power metal, it is still eminently credible and expertly written so as not to alienate purists. Great work. © Charlélie Arnaud/Qobuz
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The Second

Steppenwolf

Rock - Released January 1, 1968 | Geffen

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The group's second album was virtually a re-creation of its predecessor, only slightly more sophisticated in its range of songs and the manner of playing them, and the in-house writing had improved, though the latter also became highly derivative. Steppenwolf the Second embraces everything from hard rock to psychedelia to blues, and the band is in excellent form, playing very hard and edgy, except on the deliberately lyrical, reflective "Spiritual Fantasy," a rare acoustic number for the group. Much more to the point of the group was the single "Magic Carpet Ride," the ultimate psychedelic pop dance number of the decade, and the marijuana anthem "Don't Step on the Grass, Sam," the pounding "28," and the album-opener "Faster Than the Speed of Life." Side two of the original LP was a great achievement in its own right, opening with "Magic Carpet Ride," which leads into a nonstop extended array of hard-rocking numbers, mostly in a blues idiom: "Disappointment Number (Unknown)," "Lost and Found by Trial and Error," "Hodge Podge, Strained Through a Leslie," and "Resurrection." The playing was as good as the first album, and though there's nothing quite comparable to "Born to Be Wild" here in terms of cultural impact, the level of the surrounding numbers is higher.© Bruce Eder /TiVo
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Mahler: Symphonies Nos. 2 "Resurrection", 4, 7, 9, Das Lied von der Erde & Other Lieder

Otto Klemperer

Classical - Released March 20, 2024 | Warner Classics

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English Royal Funeral Music (Purcell, Morley, Tomkins)

Lionel Meunier

Sacred Vocal Music - Released February 26, 2012 | Ricercar

Hi-Res Booklet Distinctions 5 de Diapason - Gramophone Editor's Choice - 4 étoiles Classica - The Qobuz Ideal Discography
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Violence Unimagined

Cannibal Corpse

Metal - Released April 16, 2021 | Metal Blade Records

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Aquostic II-That's a Fact!

Status Quo

Rock - Released October 21, 2016 | earMUSIC

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Following the gold-certified success of 2015's Aquostic (Stripped Bare) album, the Quo present a second volume of their pared-down re-creations of the band's classic tunes. Once again the band have enlisted the photography skills of a certain Mr. Bryan Adams to complement the album package, as well as scheduling a huge Aquostic show in Hyde Park later in the summer, featuring the full 16-piece Aquostic band.© Simon Spreyer /TiVo
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Symphonic Suite Castle in the Sky

Joe Hisaishi

Classical - Released August 1, 2018 | UNIVERSAL MUSIC LLC

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Mahler: Symphonies Nos. 1-9

Gustav Mahler

Symphonic Music - Released April 7, 2017 | Signum Classics

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Reflections Revised

Apocalyptica

Rock - Released January 30, 2003 | Harmageddon Records - OMN Label Services

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Nero Anthology

Two Steps From Hell

Film Soundtracks - Released May 10, 2017 | Two Steps from Hell

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LION

Elevation Worship

Gospel - Released March 4, 2022 | Elevation Worship Records

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The Monumental Mass: a Cinematic Metal Event

Powerwolf

Metal - Released July 8, 2022 | Napalm Records

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