Product Details
Casino Royale

Casino Royale
Casino Royale

Price: CDN$ 17.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $39. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca

10 new or used available from CDN$ 10.00

Track Listing

  1. African Rundown
  2. Nothing Sinister
  3. Unauthorised Access
  4. Blunt Instrument
  5. CCTV
  6. Solange
  7. Trip Aces
  8. Miami International
  9. I'm the Money
  10. Aston Montenegro
  11. Dinner Jackets
  12. Tell
  13. Stairwell Fight
  14. Vesper
  15. Bond Loses It All
  16. Dirty Martini
  17. Bond Wins It All
  18. End of an Aston Martin
  19. Bad Die Young
  20. City of Lovers
  21. Switch
  22. Fall of a House in Venice
  23. Death of Vesper
  24. Bitch Is Dead
  25. Name's Bond...James Bond

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #13910 in Music
  • Released on: 2006-11-14
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Soundtrack
  • Dimensions: .20 pounds
  • Running time: 74 minutes

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.com
Now in its fifth decade, the James Bond film series has outlived the Cold War concerns that spawned it--not to mention the acting careers of a Sean Connery replacement or three. Indeed, its musical sensibility has often been the cycle's most reliable artistic link across the decades. While the arrival of latest Bond Daniel Craig inspired the producers to forge a long-overdue prequel plot gambit ("How Bond became Bond") for their Casino Royale redux, composer David Arnold's fourth Bond score helps bridge the past while subtly pushing it ever forward. The album's absence of a pop-song title single (though the melody of the Arnold/Chris Cornell-composed "You Know My Name" is interpolated into the underscore) isn't terribly shocking, considering the waning fortunes of recent efforts in the genre. But other traditions continue, with the full-bodied score here subtly infusing the elegant spirit of original Bond maestro John Barry into Arnold's own mix of brooding tension-builders and the dynamic, brassy rhythms of his signature action cues. The latter even gingerly cross over into the synth-charged club milieu of Eric Serra's GoldenEye score, a sensibility that was reviled as sacrilege by Bond aficionados a decade ago but that's since become a staple of mainstream film scoring. Arnold brings it all full circle with the muscular coda "The Name's Bond...," a lovingly authentic, barely revamped workout of the epochal Barry/Monty Norman theme that anchors the series to glories past. --Jerry McCulley