Written by: Ryan the Admin at 12:36 pm

Filed under: Contests

The War SoundtrackLiterary Illusions is proud to be able to give away all four soundtracks that make up the music from Ken Burns’ films The War. This amazing series put out by PBS tells the story of specific towns and the affects they felt during WWII. The music chosen is by some of the greatest artists in history and includes names like Duke Ellington, Count Basie, and Benny Goodman.

To win this excellent set all you need to do is let us know your thoughts on the current war that we are in. Jot down 100 or more words in the comment section on your feelings on Iraq. On November 2, we will sit down, read the responses and pick the one person to win. Other than that the only rule is that you live in the U.S. to win.

Keep reading for track information and more info on the film and music selections that are up for grabs.

Good luck in winning!

THE WAR soundtrack album and the three companion albums will be sold individually. They will also be packaged together in a box set, THE WAR, A KEN BURNS FILM: DELUXE EDITION, containing a PBS Series Viewers Guide and an essay written by Ken Burns.

THE WAR tells the story of the Second World War through the personal accounts of a handful of men and women from four quintessentially American towns. The series explores the most intimate human dimensions of the greatest cataclysm in history, and demonstrates that in extraordinary times, there are no ordinary lives.

Music is an integral element in the success of the award-winning documentary films produced and directed by Ken Burns, and three of his most recent projects have been accompanied by soundtrack albums released by Legacy Recordings: JAZZ (2001, certified multi-platinum), Mark Twain (2001), and Horatio’s Drive (2003).

Six years in the making, the series is nothing less than “a new masterpiece,” declared TV Guide. “THE WAR promises to be an unforgettable experience and could well rival Burns’s breakthrough landmark The Civil War in its simple yet profound artistry and universal appeal,” referring to the landmark 1990 series that won four Emmy Awards and two Grammy Awards.

THE WAR unfolds overseas and on the homefront by following four Americans from four American towns. The music complements the storyline; every title on the soundtrack album was personally chosen by Burns and Novick, for reasons that are explained throughout the liner notes essay.

“The music we chose for the film,” Burns and Novick write, “and for this soundtrack, is an essential element in our attempt to tell the story of the war. Each composition, each recording, helped us breathe life into old photographs and archival footage, added resonance to the testimonies of our witnesses… Again and again, we found that music – freshly created for our film as well as true to the period and gleaned from sources all across the world – helped us immeasurably in trying to describe the indescribable and express the inexpressible.”

SENTIMENTAL JOURNEY: HITS FROM THE SECOND WORLD WAR

1. We’ll Meet Again
2. Dancing In The Dark
3. Little Brown Jug
4. I’ll Be Seeing You
5. Moonglow
6. Memories Of You
7. I’ll Get By
8. On The Alamo
9. Pennies From Heaven
10. Body And Soul
11. Let’s Get Lost
12. Blues In The Night
13. There Shall Be No Night
14. Echoes Of Harlem
15. Skylark
16. Saturday Night Is The Loneliest Night Of The Week
17. Paper Doll
18. Long Ago And Far Away
19. Sentimental Journey
20. Waiting For The Train To Come In

I’M BEGINNING TO SEE THE LIGHT: DANCE HITS FROM THE SECOND WORLD WAR

1. C Jam Blues
2. Frenesi
3. In The Mood
4. Let Me Off Uptown
5. Taxi War Dance
6. The Sheik Of Araby
7. Pistol Packin’ Mama
8. American Patrol
9. For The Good Of Your Country
10. Cherokee
11. Rose Room
12. Opus #1
13. I’m Beginning To See The Light
14. Tuxedo Junction
15. One O’clock Jump16. I’m Confessin’
17. (I’ve Got A Gal In) Kalamazoo
18. Boogie Woogie
19. ’Tain’t What You Do (It’s The Way That You Do It)
20. Sing, Sing, Sing

SONGS WITHOUT WORDS: CLASSICAL MUSIC FROM THE WAR

1. Walton: The Death Of Falstaff
2. Dvořák: Cello Concerto In B Minor (Second Movement)
3. Copland: Concerto For Clarinet, Strings, Harp And Piano
4. Ligeti: Lamento from Hommage À Brahms
5. Fauré: Elégie, Op. 24
6. Liszt: Nuages Gris
7. Messiaen: Quartet For The End Of Time (Third Movement)
8. Copland: Grovers Corners from Our Town
9. Mendelssohn: Song Without Words
10. Elgar: Nimrod from Enigmavariations

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Written by Ryan the Admin - Visit Website
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Ryan is from California. He graduated from USC with a degree in English. In his free time, when he isn't working as a Literary Illusions gopher (er...editor) he enjoys writing short stories.




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