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List Price: $18.98
Our Price: $8.97
Your Save: $ 10.01 ( 53% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Sony
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0827969268926 Format: Soundtrack Label: Sony Manufacturer: Sony Publisher: Sony Release Date: 2005-04-26 Studio: Sony
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Ladies in Lavendar Soundtrack Comment: Loved the movie and love the music even more. The violin music is wonderful! Takes me back to the shores of England just listening to it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Moving Music! Comment: I found this CD to have extremely moving music. It touches the soul. Joshua Bell on the violin is outstanding. A top drawer recording -- just as Maggie Smith and Judi Dench are top drawer!!!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Ladies in Lavender Comment: This movie is a sleeper and should have won many awards. Great movie.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Listening to Ladies in Lavender Comment: Lovely music for musing, background for closed eyes relaxation, or, if played very softly, for meditation for forgiveness.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Music of "Ladies in Lavender" Comment: Very lovely film music played by violonist Joshua Bell.
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Editorial Reviews:
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The screenwriting/directing debut of veteran British stage and screen actor Charles Dance tells of a pair of Cornish spinsters (Judi Dench and Maggie Smith) who discover a charismatic young Polish violin virtuoso castaway (Daniel Bruhl) on the beach below their home. The tale leads inexorably to tender romantic conflicts and a warm concert house finale. Composer Nigel Hess masterfully utilizes his background as Music Director and House Composer for the Royal Shakespeare Company to conjure a score that evokes its quiet, emotional dignity via neo-classical orchestral arrangements that feature real life young virtuoso Joshua Bell on solo violin. Hess' intimate original compositions form a virtually seamless tapestry with the story's requisite classical repertory choices, which range from Massenet and Debussy to Bell's delightful variations on Paganini's "The Carnival of Venice." --Jerry McCulley
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