The Bourne Legacy
James Newton Howard Composer , James Newton Howard Producer , James Newton Howard Main Performer
See full product detailsChoose a format:
| 1 | Legacy | Howard | 2:39 |
|
| 2 | Drone | Howard | 4:15 |
|
| 3 | NRAG | Howard | :58 |
|
| 4 | You Fell in Love | Howard | 1:41 |
|
| 5 | Program Shutdown | Howard | 3:00 |
|
| 6 | Over the Mountain | Howard | :51 |
|
| 7 | High Powered Rifle | Howard | 2:49 |
|
| 8 | They're All Dead | Howard | 2:48 |
|
| 9 | Manila Lab | Howard | 2:39 |
|
| 10 | Wolves / Sick Ric | Howard | 2:18 |
|
| 11 | Doctor of What? | Howard | 4:28 |
|
| 12 | Aaron in Chicago | Howard | 1:31 |
|
| 13 | Wolf Attack | Howard | 2:57 |
|
| 14 | Chem Talk | Howard | 1:35 |
|
| 15 | Flight 167 | Howard | 3:29 |
|
| 16 | Aaron Run! | Howard | 1:07 |
|
| 17 | You Belong Here | Howard | 1:16 |
|
| 18 | Cognitive Degrade | Howard | 2:48 |
|
| 19 | 17 Hour Head Start | Howard | 3:50 |
|
| 20 | Viralled Out | Howard | :57 |
|
| 21 | You're Doing Fine | Howard | 1:17 |
|
| 22 | Simon Ross | Howard | 1:37 |
|
| 23 | Larx Tarmac | Howard | 1:45 |
|
| 24 | Magsaysay Suite | Howard | 3:03 |
|
| 25 | Aftermath | Howard | 2:48 |
|
| 26 | Extreme Ways (Bourne's Legacy) | Moby [1] | 4:50 |
|
-
Overview
-
Production Details
-
Editorial Reviews
The Bourne Legacy
Audio Compact Disc [Original Motion Picture Soundtrack]
Label: Varèse Sarabande
Category: Stage & Screen
The Bourne Legacy
UPC: 030206715828
Release Date: 08/07/2012
Original Release Date: 08/07/2012
Number of Discs: 1
- James Newton Howard
Composer
- James Newton Howard
Producer
- James Newton Howard
Main Performer
James Christopher Monger
Award-winning composer John Powell passed the baton to award-winning composer James Newton Howard (The Hunger Games, Water for Elephants, The Sixth Sense) for the fourth installment (and first to feature new lead Jeremy Renner and director Tony Gilroy) in the Robert Ludlum-created Bourne series. The resulting score for The Bourne Legacy is as relentlessly taut as it is atmospheric, expertly doling out layer after layer of chilly electronics, thundering kettle drums, and dissonant strings, before careening feet-first into the familiar opening strains of Moby's "Extreme Ways," which appears here in a slightly updated form. ~ James Christopher Monger, Rovi
