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Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid - Soundtrack
 
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Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid - Soundtrack [Soundtrack]

~ Burt Bacharach, B.J. Thomas
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
Price: £2.98 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
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Frequently Bought Together

Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid - Soundtrack + The Sting + The Sting (Special Edition) [DVD] [1973]
Price For All Three: £12.63

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  • This item: Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid - Soundtrack ~ Burt Bacharach

    In stock.
    Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk.
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  • The Sting ~ Marvin Hamlisch

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  • The Sting (Special Edition) [DVD] [1973] DVD ~ Paul Newman

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Product details

  • Audio CD (30 Jun 2003)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Soundtrack
  • Label: Commercial Marketing
  • ASIN: B000023X81
  • Other Editions: DVD  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 8,176 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

    Popular in this category:

    #2 in  Music > Soundtracks > Themes > Western

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Listen to Samples and Buy MP3s

Songs from this album are available to purchase as MP3s. Click on "Buy MP3" or view the MP3 Album.

Samples
Song TitleArtist Time Price
Listen  1. The Sundance KidBurt Bacharach 2:09£0.69
Listen  2. Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head (Butch Cassidy/Soundtrack Version)B.J. Thomas 2:57£0.79
Listen  3. Not Goin' Home Anymore (Butch Cassidy/Soundtrack Version)Burt Bacharach 3:26£0.69
Listen  4. South American GetawayBurt Bacharach 5:13£0.69
Listen  5. Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head (Instrumental (Butch Cassidy/Soundtrack Version))Burt Bacharach 2:30£0.79
Listen  6. On A Bicycle Built For JoyB.J. Thomas 3:07£0.69
Listen  7. Come Touch The SunBurt Bacharach 2:26£0.69
Listen  8. The Old Fun City (N.Y. Sequence)Burt Bacharach 3:59£0.69
Listen  9. Not Goin' Home Anymore (Reprise (Butch Cassidy/Soundtrack Version))Burt Bacharach 1:02£0.69


Product Description

CD Description

Bacharach's score for this Paul Newman/Robert Redford classic is probably his best-known film work, as it contains the instant standard "Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head". "Raindrops", like the similarly infectious "On A Bicycle Built ForJoy" is sung in the film by B.J. Thomas. The rest of Bacharach's score is equally impressive, slyly echoing the great scores of the John Ford westerns of the '40s in much the sameway the film itself plays with the conventions of the genre.
"Not Goin' Home Anymore", in particular, has the elegiac feel so integral to westerns, while "South American Getaway" has a bossa-nova groove more in keeping with the era in which the film was shot. Though Bacharach is justifiably bestknown as a songsmith, his film scores are equally impressive, with BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDACE KID standing as one ofhis finest.

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Raindrops" is definitely not the only reason, 27 Jul 2001
By A Customer
Come Touch The Sun (and Not Goin' Home Anymore -- same song, different arrangement) and South American Getaway are gems. The Sundance Kid (song #1) was responsible for a cousin of mine falling in love with Bacharach's music (a 30 year-old affair), and it isn't even in the movie.

Compare South American Getaway, Raindrops, and Come Touch The Sun. Any similarities? Only one: they are the work of a an exceedingly versatile musical genius.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Classic, 4 Sep 2000
By A Customer
This recently became fashionable again, popping up in a BBC link thing, and Alexander McQueen's runway show, over the last couple of years. Of course, I dug it out before that because I'm so cool. It's very cool, with its very 60s tum tee tum thing. The most famous tracks are the South American getaway and Raindrops. It's a pretty essential soundtrack, if soundtracks are your bag, and it's soft and easily listenable, and innovative and you'll probably like it.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Legends., 2 Nov 2008
By Themis-Athena (from somewhere between California and Germany) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)   
How do you ensure somebody's legacy as a hero? In the good old days, you wrote a book. Nowadays, you make a movie - and if you're lucky and it's really, really successful, you can retrospectively even make legends out of dangerous criminals. Not that that always works, of course. But with two great actors with instant chemistry (Paul Newman and Robert Redford), a script (by William Goldman) bursting with one-liners making the audience bowl over laughing every other minute, without once derailing into slapstick, a director's (George Roy Hill's) ingenious use of the occasion to turn a whole genre on its head, and some of the world's most beautiful locations, filmed by an exceptional cinematographer (Conrad Hall) ... you just may pull it off. Case in point: "Butch and Sundance."

While Butch Cassidy (Robert LeRoy Parker) was known as the Old West's Robin Hood for his charm, masterly planning, avoidance of bloodshed - he really did claim he'd never shot anyone - and his stance for settlers' rights vis-a-vis the wealthy cattle barons, Sundance (Henry Longbaugh) had the reputation of a loner; a fast draw repeatedly in and out of prison before even turning twenty-one. After several of their Wild Bunch/Hole in the Wall Gang associates had seen the short end of the stick in various encounters with the law, Butch and Sundance determined things were getting too hot in the West and, unlike the outlaws who not much earlier had stood it out until the end (Billy the Kid, the James Gang and the O.K. Corral gunfighters), decided to head for South America. With a woman named Etta Place, possibly a teacher as portrayed here or, perhaps more likely, a prostitute, they first spent several years farming in Argentina - both had done cattle work before turning to robbery, although in the form of rustling (stealing unbranded cattle) - but eventually reverted to their more profitable, preferred occupation. Most sources believe they died in a 1909 shootout with the Bolivian military in a town named San Vicente; others, however, claim either or both escaped alive, returned to the States under assumed names and died there (Sundance in Casper, WY in 1957 and Cassidy, according to his sister, in Spokane, WA, in 1937).

While their decision to leave the West instead of duking it out with the law and the mystery surrounding their deaths would already have made for a great movie, director Hill cleverly used the material for a 180-degree-turn on the Western genre. The opening credits roll next to sepia-tinged silent shots depicting a Hole in the Wall Gang train robbery, followed by the bold claim that "most of what follows is true" - which in itself couldn't be further from the truth. What does follow is a wild ride from the Outlaw Trail to Bolivia ... during which our heroes aren't getting rid of their pursuers, no Western music with guitars and harmonicas accompanies them but Burt Bacharach's multiple-award-winning, deliberately anachronistic, upbeat score (plus "Raindrops Are Falling on My Head" during the most romantic scene - raindrops???), a knife fight is settled by a kick in the groin, and a marshal trying to assemble a posse first meets with a lackluster population, neither willing to bring their own horses and guns nor clamoring to be supplied with such by him, and in short order sees his meeting usurped by a bicycle salesman. Add to that Oscar-winning cinematography, repeatedly using black-and-white lighting techniques even after the film's switch to color (e.g. in Sundance's first visit with Etta), reverse lighting to make daytime shots look like nighttime (during several scenes of the pursuit) and sepia-tinted shots for period feeling (besides the opening, also to sum up the trio's stay in New York), a Bolivian bank robbery with a crib sheet containing "specialized vocabulary" that Butch, contrary to initial claims, doesn't know in Spanish, and an immortalizing freeze-frame ending - and you have one heck of an entertaining movie, shot in some of the West's most spectacular settings and in Mexico (as Bolivia's stand-in).

"Butch and Sundance" turned Redford into a megastar - Hill lobbied hard for the then-perceived "playboy"'s casting, and his instincts proved so dead-on that Newman's entourage became worried the movie's expected primary star would be sidelined (a feeling never shared by Newman himself, though, who has been friends with Redford ever since). In a twist worthy of Goldman's Oscar-winning screenplay, fearsome loner Sundance became one of Redford's most popular roles, and his independent film festival's namesake. The movie renewed popular interest in the Outlaw Trail, which Redford himself traveled later, too (chronicled in a fascinating, alas out-of-print book). Its script is littered with memorable one-liners; from both heroes' "Who *are* those guys??" to Butch's comments on the small price to pay for beauty, on Sundance's gun-prowess ("like I've been telling you - over the hill"), on vision, bifocals and Bolivia, on Sundance's asking Etta (Katherine Ross) to accompany them, although if she'll ever "whine or make a nuisance," he'll be "dumping her flat" ("Don't sugarcoat it like that, Kid ... tell her straight!") and his downplaying the final shootout because their archenemy LaForce isn't there; Sundance's "You just keep thinking, Butch," his comments on the secret of his gambling success (prayer), on not being picky about women (followed by a litany of required attributes), on the excessive use of dynamite, and his one weakness ("I can't swim!!"); and finally Strother Martin/mine-owner Percy Garris's deadpan delivery of the Shanghai Rooster song, of "Morons ... I've got morons on my team" and his assertion not to be crazy but merely colorful. The famous freeze-frame ending has repeatedly been cited, both cinematographically (e.g. "Thelma and Louise") and in dialogue (e.g. 1998's "Negotiator"). And although initially almost uniformly panned by critics, the movie won quadruple Oscars and multiple other awards. In true Hollywood fashion, it has made two fearsome outlaws legends forever ... and in the process, also won legendary status itself.
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