Red Sparrow (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) - James Newton Howard

Red Sparrow (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

James Newton Howard

  • Genre: Soundtrack
  • Release Date: 2018-03-02
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 20
  • Album Price: 9.99
  • ℗ 2018 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation, under exclusive license to Sony Music Ent
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Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Overture James Newton Howard 11:34
2
The Steam Room James Newton Howard 2:19
3
One Night is All I Ask James Newton Howard 1:29
4
Take Off Your Dress James Newton Howard 6:20
5
Arriving at Sparrow School James Newton Howard 2:50
6
Training James Newton Howard 1:42
7
Anya, Come Here James Newton Howard 2:44
8
When Did You First Notice the James Newton Howard 1:04
9
There's a Car Waiting to Take James Newton Howard 1:49
10
Follow the Trail Wherever It L James Newton Howard 2:29
11
Blonde Suits You James Newton Howard 4:59
12
Searching Marta's Room James Newton Howard 2:22
13
Ticket to Vienna James Newton Howard 1:45
14
Telephone Code James Newton Howard 1:10
15
Searching Nate's Apartment James Newton Howard 1:04
16
Can I Trust You? James Newton Howard 3:06
17
Switching Disks James Newton Howard 5:59
18
So What Next? James Newton Howard 3:45
19
Didn't I Do Well? James Newton Howard 8:48
20
End Titles James Newton Howard 9:30

Reviews

  • Vastly underrated spy thriller

    5
    By JIII12345
    Loved the movie. So much so, that I saw it twice in the theater. The score was perfect for the dark and somber feel of the film. James Horner succeeds again!
  • The main thing to take away from the movie.

    5
    By HistoryProf1989
    I personally was not a fan of the movie, however the music was very beautiful. It reminded one of something they may actually hear in the Bolshoi. It gave the movie depth, instead of just a feeling of a “50 Shades”-esque that happened to have some Russo-Anglo spy drama. Truly this is the redeeming quality of the film. Listen to the music, skip the movie. I’m not sure why but it reminded me of Mozart’s Requiems and Schubert’s (?) “Nocturne”....so only good things.