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Princess Mononoke (Joe Hisaishi) (1997)
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Average: 4.12 Stars
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Good soundtrack.
Theowne - April 7, 2012, at 6:33 a.m.
1 comment  (1344 views)
sheet music
dan - July 14, 2006, at 10:37 p.m.
1 comment  (4935 views)
Princess Mononoke(second film should be made)
Sloranyth - February 19, 2006, at 7:03 p.m.
1 comment  (2156 views)
music sheets   Expand
Mango - July 24, 2004, at 7:57 p.m.
3 comments  (7357 views) - Newest posted October 2, 2005, at 4:16 p.m. by Caitlin M
Sheet Music of Mononoke
Tony Cheng - May 27, 2004, at 8:55 a.m.
1 comment  (3708 views)
The Tatara women work
Vittorio Robiati - Italy - May 20, 2004, at 12:31 a.m.
1 comment  (2614 views)
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Composed, Arranged, Performed, and Produced by:
Joe Hisaishi

Lyrics by:
Hayao Miyazaki
Audio Samples   ▼
1998 TKDA Album Tracks   ▼
1999 Milan Album Tracks   ▼
1998 TKDA Album Cover Art
1999 Milan Album 2 Cover Art
Milan Records (American)
(October 12th, 1999)

TKDA (Japanese)
(1998)
Both the TKDA and Milan albums were regular commercial releases.
Mulan
The insert of the Milan release includes lyrics translated into English for the vocal track, but no extra information about the score. The Japanese releases include a plethora of extra material, including a cardboard CD stand, extra artwork, full lyrics, and photos from the recording sessions. Shortly after their release of the score, Milan also pressed a compilation of symphonic suites from this film (re-recorded in Europe).
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #73
Written 10/3/99, Revised 8/14/08
Buy it... if you seek a very strong introduction to the work of famed composer Joe Hisaishi or some the best of Japanese film music in general.

Avoid it... if you expect the complexity of the score's action material to rival the beauty of its dramatic melodic passages.

Hisaishi
Hisaishi
Princess Mononoke/Mononoke Hime: (Joe Hisaishi) Japanese animation took much longer than it should have to penetrate the international theatrical market. When Disney, through Miramax, decided to purchase the distribution rights to famed director Hayao Miyazaki's anime, their first major venture was Princess Mononoke (also known as Mononoke Hime). The film had briefly set Japan's box office records in 1997 (before Titanic shattered the records even there), and it debuted in America in late 1999 to a stellar critical response. It had been dubbed into English with an entirely new vocal cast, which did not effect the production in any adverse way. The film failed, however, to start a tidal wave of similar anime translations to a wider audience. Naturally, the story was aimed at an older audience, exploring topics of "man versus nature" that, in this case, include all the necessary fantasy elements to satisfy older youth while making its statements about conservation. The scope of the film's story is epic, which is all that you really need to know when approaching Joe Hisaishi's music for the Princess Mononoke. The score had been raising eyebrows ever since the film's initial release in Japan, and the media blitz surrounding this music in the United States was just as heavy as that for the film itself. Hisaishi, arguably Japan's foremost composer (having won the country's equivalent of the "Best Score" Academy Award the previous year for another project), already enjoyed a long collaboration with Miyazaki. During the first years of their work together, Hisaishi's music was often darker and more sinister, and after a few lighter efforts in the years just prior to 1997, Princess Mononoke marked Hisaishi's return to his popular and earlier brooding style. Comparisons have been drawn between the music from Princess Mononoke and that of Hisaishi's Nausicaa of the Valley of Wind and Laputa: Castle in the Sky, as well as that of the popular American composers Jerry Goldsmith and James Horner. For the mass majority of American listeners, the history of Hisaishi's career might have seemed distant and irrelevant at the time, and his immense effort for Princess Mononoke was a well-timed introduction.

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