Days of Thunder (soundtrack)

Days of Thunder
Soundtrack album by Various Artists
Released June 26, 1990
Genre AOR, pop rock, adult contemporary
Length 51:05
Label Geffen (U.S.)
Epic (International)[1]
Producer
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]

Days of Thunder is the soundtrack from the film of the same name, released in 1990 in the U.S. by Geffen Records and internationally by Epic Records.[1]

Background

"The Last Note of Freedom" was co-written by Hans Zimmer, Billy Idol and David Coverdale. Maria McKee's "Show Me Heaven" was released as a single alongside the movie. The album is also notable for the inclusion of Guns N' Roses' cover of Bob Dylan's "Knockin' on Heaven's Door", a year before the song was released with a slightly different mix (basically without the responses in the second verse) on the 1991 album Use Your Illusion II. The Cher song "Trail of Broken Hearts" was released in the single "Love And Understanding" and belongs to the recording sessions of her 1991 album Love Hurts. The song "Gimme Some Lovin'" is credited to Terry Reid, but the version in the movie is actually from The Spencer Davis Group. "Gimme Some Lovin'" also featured on Reid's 1991 solo album, The Driver, along with an alternate version of "The Last Note of Freedom" with different lyrics, titled "The Driver (Part 2)".

Track listing

  1. "The Last Note of Freedom" - David Coverdale
  2. "Deal for Life" - John Waite
  3. "Break Through the Barrier" - Tina Turner
  4. "Hearts in Trouble" - Chicago
  5. "Trail of Broken Hearts" - Cher
  6. "Knockin' on Heaven's Door" - Guns N' Roses
  7. "You Gotta Love Someone" - Elton John
  8. "Show Me Heaven" - Maria McKee
  9. "Thunderbox" - Apollo Smile
  10. "Long Live the Night" - Joan Jett & The Blackhearts
  11. "Gimme Some Lovin'" - Spencer Davis Group

Days of Thunder (score)

Days of Thunder
Soundtrack album by Hans Zimmer
Released November 5, 2013
Recorded 1989-1990
Genre Score, instrumental pop, melodic rock, pop rock
Length 71:14
Label La-La Land Records[3]
Producer Hans Zimmer, Paul Straveley O'Duffy

The film score to Days of Thunder was composed by Hans Zimmer and featured Jeff Beck on guitar. While bootlegs were available for years, an official album containing the score was not released until 2013, when La-La Land Records released the film's score, with bonus tracks, for the first time.[3]

While looking back at the film's production, Zimmer said, “It was complete insanity, but again because it was [director Tony Scott] he’d just keep it recklessly fun.” Zimmer elaborated on this by explaining how the film's production was behind schedule and what originally was a day trip to meet with producers in Daytona turned into a three month composing gig done inside a studio built within a warehouse.[4]

Track listing

  1. "Days of Thunder (Main Title)" (3:08)
  2. "Rowdy Drives/Who Is This Driver?" (02:06)
  3. "Let Me Drive/Cole Drives Rowdy's Car" (02:26)
  4. "Car Building" (02:05)
  5. "Darlington - Cole Wins" (04:47)
  6. "You're Home/Daytona Race/The Crash" (03:29)
  7. "The Hospital" (02:20)
  8. "Wheelchair Race" (00:37)
  9. "Rental Car Race" (03:50)
  10. "Claire Arrives at her Apartment" (01:55)
  11. "Physical Kiss" (01:05)
  12. "Cole Blows His Engine" (01:10)
  13. "Wheeler/Cole Smashes" (02:25)
  14. "Cole at the Laundry/Cole Agrees to Drive Rowdy's Car" (02:11)
  15. "Cole and Harry Fight/Harry Talks to Car" (02:52)
  16. "Cole in Truck/Pre-Race" (03:52)
  17. "The Last Race" (10:20)
  18. "The Last Note of Freedom" (04:57) - David Coverdale
  19. "The Hospital (Alternate)" (02:21)
  20. "Wheelchair Race (Alternate)" (00:38)
  21. "Claire Arrives at her Apartment (Alternate Ending)" (01:53)
  22. "Cole Blows His Engine (Alternate) (01:12)
  23. "Pre-Race (Alternate Mix)" (02:25)
  24. "Days of Thunder (Main Title) (Rock Arrangement)" (04:59)

The last track, although marked as an alternate version of the main title, is in fact an instrumental version of "The Last Note of Freedom", with some studio outtakes of Jeff Beck performing parts of "Darlington - Cole Wins" and "The Last Race" at the end. The track also includes some studio chatter, presumably between Jeff Beck and editor Chris Lebenzon.

Personnel

References

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