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Lara Croft: Tomb Raider (soundtrack)

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Surten (talk | contribs) at 05:28, 7 July 2009 (Score Production: and yet another correction). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Lara Croft: Tomb Raider is a 2001 soundtrack album to the film of the same name. The various artists soundtrack was released June 15, 2001. The Score was later released on June 26, 2001.

Untitled

Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

# Song Title Artist Time
1 "Elevation" (Tomb Raider Mix) U2 3:36
2 "Deep" Nine Inch Nails 4:08
3 "Galaxy Bounce" Chemical Brothers 4:45
4 "Get Ur Freak On" (Remix) Missy Elliott featuring Nelly Furtado 3:10
5 "Speedballin'" Outkast 4:56
6 "Ain't Never Learned" Moby 3:46
7 "The Revolution " BT 4:17
8 "Terra Firma" (Lara's Mix) Delerium featuring Aude 5:06
9 "Where's Your Head At" Basement Jaxx 4:43
10 "Illuminati" Fatboy Slim featuring Bootsy Collins 3:14
11 "Absurd" (Whitewash Edit) Fluke 3:40
12 "Song of Life" Leftfield 7:03
13 "Edge Hill" Groove Armada 7:00
14 "Satellite" Bosco 3:39
15 "Devil's Nightmare" Oxide & Neutrino 6:04
16 "In Control" (Australian Edition Bonus Track)[2] Die Toten Hosen 3:13


Did My Time - KoRn

Original Motion Picture Score

Untitled


# Song Title
1 "Tomb Raider Main Titles"
2 "Lara Croft At Home"
3 "Powell and the Illuminati"
4 "Lara Dreams Of Her Father"
5 "The Clock"
6 "Home Invasion"
7 "Alex West and Mr. Wilson"
8 "The Letter"
9 "Journey To Cambodia"
10 "Angkor Wat"
11 "Lara Battles Stone Monkeys"
12 "The Brahman"
13 "Siberia"
14 "The Planetary Alignment"
15 "Lara Defeats Powell"


Score Production

Producers originally wished to hire game composer Nathan McCree, and later opted for Michael Kamen, a more Hollywood choice. Unfortunately for the composer, he did not recieve any feedback from the studio until after suplying a second demo recording where he was dismissed. Composer Graeme Revell was hired very late in the production, with reportedly 10 days to write, record and finish a replacement score. The short amount of time prevented Revell from travelling to the scoring sessions overseas, at London, aided by his associates including his brother.

The CD was released through Elektra Entertainment, but as noted by Revell and after failed attempts to stop the pressings, the tracks were mislabeled. For example, the opening track includes both the Main Titles and Lara Croft at Home cues together. The resulting score was poorly recived, even so that the composer himself issued an apology through his website.[3]

References