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Don't Blow Up The Earth It's Where I Keep All My Stuff
   
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Added by Leo Sanyo, last edited by Leo Sanyo on Aug 05, 2007
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1. Raiders of the Lost Art - Kool Moe Dee & the Treacherous Three 2. Sun Don't Shine in the Hood - Grandmaster Melle Mel & the Furious Five 3. Do It Again - Whodini 4. Somebody Else - Da Original Spinderella 5. Keep on Rockin' - Fearless Four 6. G-party - Kurtis Blow 7. Mic Slayer - Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Fiven 8. Real - Busy Bee 9. Keep It Real - Kool Moe Dee 10. The Cooley (Do the Cooley) - Afrika Bambaata
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1. Raiders of the Lost Art - Kool Moe Dee & the Treacherous Three 2. Sun Don't Shine in the Hood - Grandmaster Melle Mel & the Furious Five 3. Do It Again - Whodini 4. Somebody Else - Da Original Spinderella 5. Keep on Rockin' - Fearless Four 6. G-Party - Kurtis Blow 7. Mic Slayer - Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Fiven 8. Real - Busy Bee 9. Keep it Real - Kool Moe Dee 10. The Cooley (Do the Cooley) - Afrika Bambaata
Jericho/The Ghostbreaker

$19.98(USD)


"Theme Composed by Jerry Goldsmith" Jericho was a WWII adventure series following three Allied specialists on secret missions throughout Europe. The theme and second episode were scored by Jerry Goldsmith in his military-suspense mode, replacing a theme by Lalo Schifrin who had scored the pilot. Goldsmith's theme and complete episode score are included on this CD, as are Schifrin's unused theme and a suite from his pilot score, significantly foreshadowing his music to Mission: Impossible. The remainder of Jericho was scored by Morton Stevens, Gerald Fried and Richard Shores, and suites from all of their episodes are included. The music recalls the style of The Man From U.N.C.L.E. but perhaps more grim. "Music Composed and Conducted by Johnny Williams" The Ghostbreaker was a one-hour pilot starring Kerwin Mathews as a parapsychologist investigator; although foreshadowing such television series as Kolchak: The Night Staker and The X-Files, it did not proceed to a series. The theme and pilot score to The Ghostbreaker were by none other than John (then "Johnny") Williams, who wrote a dynamite theme that compares favorably to his TV work for Irwin Allen, and a creepy score including harpsichord and solo soprano. The totality of Williams's score is included here -- a forgotten jewel by one of the world's most famous composers.
Men in Black
Barry Sonnenfeld



Xpect Da Unxpected
K.O. Kid

$10.99(USD)



Men in Black
Barry Sonnenfeld



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