Product details: - Product group: Music
- Edition: Audio CD
- Publisher: Dreamworks
- Performed by: John Williams
- Format: Soundtrack
- Release Date: 2002-12-10
- Number of discs: 1
- Tracks:
- Disc 1
- Catch Me If You Can
- The Float
- Come Fly With Me - Frank Sinatra
- Recollections (The Father's Theme)
- The Airport Scene
- The Girl From Ipanema -Stan Getz & Joao Gilberto feat. Antonio Carlos Jobim
- Learning The Ropes
- Father And Son
- Embraceable You - Judy Garland
- The Flash Comics Clue
- Deadheading
- The Christmas Song - Nat King Cole
- A Broken Home
- Doctor, Lawyer, Lutheran
- The Look Of Love - Dusty Springfield
- Catch Me If You Can (Reprise and End Credits)
- Studio: Dreamworks
- Manufacturer: Dreamworks
- Package Dimensions: 5.7 x 75 x 74 inches
Steven Spielberg veered from the futuristic sci-fi flirtations of A.I. and Minority Report with this brisk, stylish period take on the career of teen con-man extraordinaire Frank Abagnale (Leonardo DiCaprio) and his dogged G-man pursuer/de facto extended family member Carl Hanratty (Tom Hanks). As always, the director's musical collaborator is John Williams, and the scoring legend uses the occasion of their 20th collaboration as a rewarding musical journey back to the days when he was known as Johnny Williams, ambitious young pianist for Henry Mancini on such early jazz scores as Peter Gunn. Informed by a half-century of subsequent achievement, Williams's return to the jazz idiom of his youth yields a smart, nervous score that evokes more than mere nostalgia. But with Dan Higgins's moody sax often leading the way, the veteran composer's work here seems more evocative reinvention than revisitation, yet another tribute to his uncanny ability to make any idiom his own. A handful of pop standards (including Sinatra's "Come Fly with Me," Getz and Gilberto's "Girl from Ipanema," "The Christmas Song" by Nat "King" Cole) deftly color both period and plot, but, as always, it's Williams who provides Spielberg's masterful imagery with its musical life's blood. --Jerry McCulleyCustomer reviews: Minimal Jazz Content, 2008-04-15 The way people have been talking about this score, from the reviews to the liner notes, you'd think it was a stylistic counterpart to "Checkmate." In truth, there is minimal jazz or even pseudo-jazz content in this score. It is mostly orchestral with occasional jazzy touches, such as vibes or sax, but it's hardly a return to his days as Johnny Williams (as some have suggested). And the handful of tunes by the likes of Sinatra, Dusty, and Getz/Gilberto are readily available elsewhere in more appropriate settings. On its own terms, the score is certainly pleasant, but it's hardly a "jazz score" as defined by the likes of Mancini, Lalo Schifrin, Johnny Mandel, Kenyon Hopkins, and others.
Outstanding!, 2007-04-04 John Williams does it again! This man is the best composer I have ever heard! The music fits the scenes in the movies so unblievably well that you will wonder how one man was creative enough to think of it!
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