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 Soundtrack
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Aggiungetemi!
Bruce Springsteen - The Wrestler (Video Lyrics)

This beautiful film won the Golden Lion at the 65th Venice International Film Festival in 2008 and features the remarkable performance of Mickey Rourke, who was fifty-six at the time.

At just sixteen, Philip André Rourke Jr., an avid cigarette smoker, was a regular at a famous boxing gym on Fifth Street in Miami Beach. He became one of the most promising young boxers and was called to be a sparring partner for the then welterweight world champion. Due to serious injuries sustained during sparring matches, he reluctantly decided to leave boxing behind (despite his amateur career having led him to win 20 matches, 17 by KO, and for the record, he lost 4).

Thus, he changed direction and headed to New York, where with money loaned to him by his sister Patty, he enrolled at the prestigious "Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute," studying "method acting" alongside Alfredo James "Al" Pacino, with those professors who trained actors of the caliber of Robert Anthony "Bob" De Niro Jr., Ronald "Christopher" Walken, and among others, also trained at that school were: Alexander Rae "Alec" Baldwin III, Steven Vincent "Steve" Buscemi, Rosario Isabel Dawson, Rebecca De Mornay, Laura Dern, Matthew Raymond "Matt" Dillon, Scarlett Johansson, Angelina Jolie, Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta, also known as Lady Gaga, Brandon Bruce Lee, Norma Jeane Mortenson, also known as Marilyn Monroe, Tyrone William Power IV, Theresa Lynn Russell, Omar Sharif Jr. (his grandfather was the late Omar Sharif), Mary Elizabeth "Sissy" Spacek, Uma Karuna Thurman, Jon Voight, and nothing...
 
Can't You Hear Me Knockin'

Included in the OST of "Casino" by the legendary Martin Scorsese in '95.
 
Goblin & Giorgio Gaslini - Dario Argento Profondo Rosso (Deep Red) 1975 - Official Soundtrack Album

The famous OST of the film, composed and performed by the progressive rock group "I Goblin," formed by Claudio Simonetti, Walter Martino, Massimo Morante, and Fabio Pignatelli, complemented by jazz-rock music from Giorgio Gaslini, was chosen by Argento as a fallback. The director, in fact, had even wanted Pink Floyd to compose it. The band politely declined the invitation, being too busy working on their new album "Wish You Were Here." However, Argento felt that Gaslini's music was not suitable for the film and that something more modern was needed. The first draft of the obsessive little song was deemed simply terrible by Argento, which greatly irritated Gaslini, who subsequently abandoned the project, leaving it unfinished. Initially, the director wanted famous bands at the time, such as Emerson Lake & Palmer or Deep Purple, to perform the jazz musician's music.
At the time, for those who had just seen The Exorcist, the soundtrack of Profondo rosso echoed the piece Tubular Bells by Mike Oldfield, music made extremely famous by William Friedkin's film, which was released in Italy in the same cinematic season, just five months earlier, on October 4, 1974. Recently, Argento has indeed stated that he suggested to the Goblin to draw inspiration from Tubular Bells... (cit. wiki)
 
Can - She Brings the Rain

Having stated that the 2006 film "Le luci della sera" by Aki Kaurismäki, the third in a trilogy that addresses themes such as unemployment, loneliness, and the plight of the homeless, I haven't seen at all (unfortunately, but I intend to seek it out sooner rather than later, along with the first two: "Nuvole in viaggio" from '96 and "L'uomo senza passato" from 2002), well, to make a long story short, I stumbled upon this videoclip while going through "Alfama" by Madredeus and realizing that it was also included in the soundtrack of "Lisbon Story," a film from '94 directed by Wim Wenders. So, scrolling through the titles of its OST out of curiosity, I searched for this same "She Brings The Rain" by Can on YT, and nothing...
 
I would ask @[G] (or whoever it is) a little question not worth a Million $$$:

Why do the listeners I recently added to this group not go directly to the page "La lista d'ascolto"?

Not that I really care that much, but just out of curiosity (who knows... nothing).
 
THE LAST WAVE (1977) - Original Music by Charles Wain

In Australian Aboriginal mythology, the Dreamtime or Dreaming is the era preceding the creation (or formation) of the world.

In the Dreamtime, the world already existed, but it was "undifferentiated."

Certain places, created by events of particular significance (such as fights, deaths, or other dramatic occurrences), hold a special power, referred to by Aboriginal people as the "dream" of the place. At the end of the Dreamtime, the gods themselves settled in certain locations, "becoming" mountains, rocks, rivers, and so on. (source: wiki)
 
Kitaro - Heaven & Earth Soundtrack - Heaven & Earth Land Theme (1993)

The Phoenix Program was a program designed, coordinated, and executed by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), U.S. special forces, special operations forces from the Australian Army Training Team Vietnam, and the security services of the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) during the Vietnam War.

The program aimed to identify and "neutralize" (through infiltration, capture, terrorism, torture, and assassination) the infrastructure of the National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam (NLF or Viet Cong).

The CIA described it as "a set of programs that sought to attack and destroy the political infrastructure of the Viet Cong."

The program was active from 1965 to 1972, with similar initiatives recorded before and after this period.

The men of Phoenix "neutralized" about 81,700 suspected NLF agents, informants, or sympathizers, of which between 26,000 and 41,000 lost their lives. (source: wiki)
 
c'era una volta il west (scena finale) I too want to be quenched by the Cardinal.
 
Clockwork Orange - Overture to the sun Stanlio's good taste for the folk compositions used in his films.
 
Natural Born Killers - end credits

Serenella writes in her latest editorial:

"I'm looking for a new unit of measurement.

I almost forgot, thank goodness for music, I know it's a thought thrown out there without logic but in this enormous disorganized order very well organized..."
 
The good, the bad and the ugly - Ecstasy of Gold For me, the most beautiful piece as a soundtrack of all time.