The Swan Princess (soundtrack) explained

The Swan Princess

Music From The Motion Picture

Type:soundtrack
Artist:Various Artists
Cover:Swan Princess.jpg
Released:November 1, 1994[1]
Genre:Soundtrack
Label:Sony Wonder
Producer:Various Artists

The Swan Princess: Music From The Motion Picture is the soundtrack to the Animated Feature The Swan Princess. It contains the songs from the film written by Lex de Azevedo and David Zippel, as well as the film's score composed and conducted by Lex de Azevedo, and additional score conducted by Larry Bastian. The score was orchestrated by Lex de Azevedo, Larry Bastian, and Larry Schwartz. The single "Far Longer than Forever" performed by Regina Belle and Jeffrey Osborne was nominated for a Golden Globe Award in 1995 for Best Original Song, but lost to "Can You Feel The Love Tonight" from The Lion King.[2]

Track listings

The Animated Classic Soundtrack track listing

  1. "Prologue" - 3:03
  2. "This Is My Idea" - 6:08
  3. "Rothbart Attacks King William" - 1:31
  4. "Practice, Practice, Practice" - 2:22
  5. "The Enchanted Castle" - 2:12
  6. "Far Longer than Forever" - 2:24
  7. "Jean-Bob's Theme" - 1:01
  8. "No Fear" - 3:35
  9. "It's Not What It Seems" - 1:45
  10. "Derek Finds Odette" - 1:44
  11. "No More Mr. Nice Guy" - 2:37
  12. "Princesses On Parade" - 4:04
  13. "Gator-Aid" - 2:48
  14. "Odette Flies/Derek Gallops" - 1:40
  15. "End Credits" - 1:31
  16. "Eternity" - 3:28

Crew

Original Score Composed and Conducted by Lex de Azevedo

Original Songs: Music by Lex de Azevedo; Lyrics by David Zippel

"Eternity" written by Masato Nakamura, Miwa Yoshida, Mike Pela, and David Zippel

Executive in Charge of Music for New Line Cinema: Toby Emmerich

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Swan Princess: Music From The Motion Picture: Lex De Azevedo, Howard McGillin, Michelle Nicastro, John Cleese, Steven Wright, Steve Vinovich, Mark Harelik, James Arrington, Joel McKinnon Miller, Dakin Matthews: Music . Amazon . 1994. 2012-03-11.
  2. Web site: Far Longer than Forever Golden Globes. Golden Globe Awards. October 19, 2020. October 19, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20201019232905/https://www.goldenglobes.com/song/far-longer-forever. dead.