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Dc comics mas y menos
Dc comics mas y menos







  1. #DC COMICS MAS Y MENOS PLUS#
  2. #DC COMICS MAS Y MENOS SERIES#
  3. #DC COMICS MAS Y MENOS TV#

Visit Wikipedia.) And a fellow named Arthur Korb wrote three selections that will leave you wonder what he was thinking, including a head-scratching "Justice League of America" theme and a equally bizarre "Wonder Woman" song that made me think he somehow confused the Amazon Princess with Samantha Stephens from the sitcom "Bewitched." It's understating matters to say that these songs must be heard to be believed, because no words can do them justice. (My imagination's not genius enough to make that up. There's music from "The Adventures of Superpup," a failed 1950s pilot which portrayed the Superman characters as dogs.

dc comics mas y menos

And not to be outdone, composer Shirley Walker and animation's Joker, Mark Hamill, join forces for a rendition of that old elementary school favorite, "Jingle Bells, Batman Smells" (at least, it was a favorite in my small-town elementary school). There's also a Western-style song, "The Ballad of Batman," from "Batman: The Brave and the Bold," which captures that show's singular outlook on the Caped Crusader's world perfectly.

#DC COMICS MAS Y MENOS TV#

Lending this collection a sense of novelty its companion/predecessor lacks are a number of selections that can quite charitably be called "oddities."Īmong them are three selections inspired by the classic "Batman" TV series, performed by a group called "The Sensational Guitars of Dan and Dale: Sun Ra and the Blues Project," that sound like they would have fit in with that show's third season.

#DC COMICS MAS Y MENOS SERIES#

Arrow." Also included are selections from the young Bruce Wayne series "Gotham" and the "Infinite Crisis" videogame.

#DC COMICS MAS Y MENOS PLUS#

The CW's "Arrowverse" series are represented by Blake Neely's themes from "Supergirl," and "DC's Legends of Tomorrow," plus a selection called "The Flash vs. Plenty of other, better work from the recent history of DC on film is here, as well. Williams' work from the latter is represented here by "The Flying Sequence/Can You Read My Mind?" and "Lex Luthor's Lair," which will not remind anyone of the engineer/businessman from the comics but complements perfectly Gene Hackman's portrayal of the Man of Steel's archenemy. Both invidividually and collectively, they define the phrase "background noise."Įven when he's phoning it in, as he does with the "Ruby-Spears Superman" animated series theme, which is just a riff on his well-known "Superman: The Movie" theme, John Williams produces superior music. Superman: Dawn of Justice," "Man of Steel" and "The Dark Knight Rises." All three are so forgettable, they fade from memory as soon as the orchestra plays the last note. His work from recent DC Comics films is well-represented in this sequel/companion to "The Music of DC Comics: 75th Anniversary Collection," with selections from "Batman v. 2" left me grappling with a mystery: How Hans Zimmer keeps getting hired to compose film scores.

dc comics mas y menos

Infinite Crisis: Mischief (Harley Quinn's Theme) Superman Dawn of Justice: Fight Night īatman and Robin: Batman Takes Over ĭark Knight Rises: Why Do We Fall? Ĭhristmas With the Joker/Jingle Bells Batman Smells Superman: The Flying Sequence/Can You Read My Mind? īatman v.

dc comics mas y menos

Man of Steel: What Are You Going to Do When You Are Not Saving the World? Superman Radio Show: The Baby from Krypton Intro Una gran calidad auditiva de los temas de dc.









Dc comics mas y menos