Music Of Lord Of The Rings Trilogy
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The music of ''The Lord of the Rings'' film series was composed, orchestrated, conducted and produced by
Howard Shore Howard Leslie Shore (born October 18, 1946) is a Canadian composer and conductor noted for his film scores. He has composed the scores for over 80 films, most notably the scores for ''The Lord of the Rings'' and ''The Hobbit'' film trilogies. ...
between 2000 and 2004 to support
Peter Jackson Sir Peter Robert Jackson (born 31 October 1961) is a New Zealand film director, screenwriter and producer. He is best known as the director, writer and producer of the ''Lord of the Rings'' trilogy (2001–2003) and the ''Hobbit'' trilogy ( ...
's film trilogy. It is notable in terms of length of the score, the size of the staged forces, the unusual instrumentation, the featured soloists, the multitude of musical styles and the number of recurring musical themes used. Shore wrote many hours of music for the trilogy, effectively scoring the film for its entire length. Over 13 hours of the music (including various alternate takes) have been released across various formats. Shore conceived the score as operatic and antiquated-sounding. He made use of an immense ensemble including a large symphony orchestra (principally, the
London Philharmonic Orchestra The London Philharmonic Orchestra (LPO) is one of five permanent symphony orchestras based in London. It was founded by the conductors Sir Thomas Beecham and Malcolm Sargent in 1932 as a rival to the existing London Symphony and BBC Symphony ...
), multiple instrumental "bands", various choirs, and vocal and instrumental soloists, requiring an ensemble ranging from 230 to 400 musicians. The series music is widely regarded as a milestone in the history of film music. It became the most successful of Shore's career, earning three Oscars, two Golden Globes, and three
Grammy The Grammy Awards (stylized as GRAMMY), or simply known as the Grammys, are awards presented by the Recording Academy of the United States to recognize "outstanding" achievements in the music industry. They are regarded by many as the most pre ...
s, among other nominations. Some of his themes or leitmotifs (like the Concerning Hobbits, Shire theme) became individually popular. The music has attracted the interest of musicologists and Tolkien research, Tolkien scholars. It is performed by choirs and orchestras around the world as symphony pieces, concert suites and live to-projection concerts. Shore invited the musicologist Doug Adams (music journalist), Doug Adams to observe the composition process and to document it in what became the 2010 book ''The Music of the Lord of the Rings Films''. It identifies the many themes of the score, and describes how these are used in each of the scenes of the film trilogy. The music for the film series was voted the best soundtrack of all time by a Classic FM (UK), Classic FM listener poll for six years in a row.


Creation


Film scores

The Canadian composer and conductor
Howard Shore Howard Leslie Shore (born October 18, 1946) is a Canadian composer and conductor noted for his film scores. He has composed the scores for over 80 films, most notably the scores for ''The Lord of the Rings'' and ''The Hobbit'' film trilogies. ...
composed, orchestrated, conducted and produced the trilogy's music. The filmmakers had considered the American composer James Horner and the Polish composer Wojciech Kilar for the role. Shore visited the set in 1999, and composed a version of the Shire theme and Frodo's Theme before Jackson began shooting. In August 2000 he visited the set again, and watched the assembly cuts of ''The Fellowship of the Ring'' and ''The Return of the King''. In the music, Shore included over 50 leitmotifs to represent the different characters, cultures and places—the largest catalogue of leitmotifs in the history of cinema. There are for instance multiple leitmotifs just for the hobbits and the Shire (Middle-earth), Shire. Although part of the score for the first film was recorded in Wellington, New Zealand, virtually all of the trilogy's score was recorded in Watford Colosseum, Watford Town Hall and mixed at Abbey Road Studios in London. Jackson planned to advise the score for six weeks each year in London, though for ''The Two Towers'' he stayed for twelve. Shore composed a main theme for the Fellowship rather than many different character themes, and the Fellowship's highs and lows are depicted during the series. On top of that, individual themes were composed to represent different cultures. The score is primarily played by the
London Philharmonic Orchestra The London Philharmonic Orchestra (LPO) is one of five permanent symphony orchestras based in London. It was founded by the conductors Sir Thomas Beecham and Malcolm Sargent in 1932 as a rival to the existing London Symphony and BBC Symphony ...
, ranging from 93 to 120 players throughout the recording. There are contributions by London Voices, the London Oratory School Schola boy choir, and artists such as Ben Del Maestro, Sheila Chandra, Enya, Renée Fleming, James Galway, Annie Lennox and Emilíana Torrini contributed. The actors Billy Boyd (actor), Billy Boyd, Viggo Mortensen, Liv Tyler, Miranda Otto (extended cuts only for the latter two) and Peter Jackson (for a single gong sound in the second film). Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens wrote the libretto; David Salo translated it into Languages constructed by J. R. R. Tolkien, Tolkien's constructed languages. The third film's end song, "Into the West (song), Into the West", was a tribute to a young filmmaker Jackson and Walsh befriended named Cameron Duncan, who died of cancer in 2003. In keeping with his operatic vision, Shore used the three scripts and the book itself to write themes even before having film reels to compose to. As a result, Shore spent nearly four years on the composition, compared to the 6–8 weeks per film, and a week or two of recording, typical for film composers. For the recording process, which extended over four weeks per film, he arranged the music in long suite-like pieces for the orchestra to go through during a day of playing, rather than short cues, making the score more cohesive. Only a few minutes of finalized music were recorded each day, to allow for input from director Peter Jackson and revisions to the music and performance. Shore began his work on the music early in the production of ''The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, The Fellowship of the Ring'', in late 2000. He recorded the first pieces of music, the Moria (Middle-earth), Moria sequence, early in 2001. Shore's orchestration called for an immense ensemble: a core 96-piece orchestra and 100-piece choir, as well as additional instruments for select sections of the score, onstage instrumental "bands" and additional choirs: overall, over 330 players. Among the less-usual instruments are contrabass clarinet in B-flat for Gollum's theme, French horn, horns doubling on Wagner tubas and trumpets in C, F, Bb and rotary valve. Shore spent 4 years composing and recording the score, constantly referring to Tolkien's book.


Use of Middle-earth languages

The film score for ''The Lord of the Rings'' incorporates extensive vocal music blended with the orchestral arrangements. The great majority of the lyrics used in the libretto are in the invented languages of Middle-earth, representing the various cultures and races in Tolkien's writings. These languages include Quenya and Sindarin associated with Elves, Adûnaic and Rohirric for Men, and Khuzdul for the Dwarves. The score follows Tolkien's use of Old English as an analogue for Rohirric, while English is used as an analogue for the Common Tongue. Some of these languages had been developed extensively by Tolkien, while others were extrapolated by the linguist David Salo based on the limited samples of vocabulary and linguistic style available. For example, the "Footsteps of Doom" song, in Sindarin, is heard in the "Prologue: One Ring to Rule Them All" introductory chapter of the film trilogy, at the start of ''The Fellowship of the Ring''. To a spoken narration by Cate Blanchett as the Elf-lady Galadriel, scenes of a long and violent history unfurl on screen, overlaid with several of Shore's themes, including "Lothlórien" for the Elves, "Threat of Mordor", "Sauron", "Evil of the Ring", "Ringwraith", and "Footsteps of Doom" for the forces of the Dark Lord; "Fall of Men", "Gondor in Decline", and "Minas Tirith" for the human allies of the Elves; and throughout the Prologue, the "History of the Ring" theme as the One Ring passes from one owner to another. The libretto was derived from several sources, including songs and poems written by Tolkien, phrases from the screenplay (often sung against the corresponding dialogue or recitation) as well as original and adapted material from Shore and from screenwriters Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens, and others, all translated by Salo while stressing good choral sounds.


Songs and diegetic music

The score includes a series of songs, some Diegetic music, diegetic, some not. A selection of them, with the associated underscore, were released as single CD releases and music videos featuring footage from the film and the production, prior to the release of the entire soundtracks. Some of the diegetic songs were not composed by Shore, but he orchestrated and conducted the orchestral accompaniment and even reprised some of them in his symphony. Thus, The Fellowship of the Ring#Book I: The Ring Sets Out, Bilbo's farewell party sees the hobbits celebrating and dancing vigorously to music by Plan 9, a group who had long worked with Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh. Shore commented that their music had "the right feel" for the scene, and liked the difference from his own music. A few of the diegetic songs are settings of Poetry in The Lord of the Rings, poems by Tolkien, interspersed in the text of ''The Lord of the Rings''. Among these is "The Road Goes Ever On (song), The Road Goes Ever On", sung softly by Ian McKellen playing Gandalf arriving in Hobbiton in his farm cart, to a melody by Walsh. Some of the non-diegetic songs, too, were by other composers; for instance, "May It Be" and ''Aníron'' (the theme for Aragorn and Arwen) were composed and sung by Enya. "The Funeral of Théodred" in ''The Two Towers'' was composed by Plan 9 and performed by the actor Miranda Otto, playing Éowyn, Eowyn; the words are not Tolkien's.


Symphony

For the music to be played as the six-movement ''The Lord of the Rings Symphony'', over 200 musicians and singers are required on stage. To suit the complex narrative, with its contrasting cultures, Shore wrote music in different styles for each of the peoples of Middle-earth. For the Elves, the music is mainly women's voices, Rivendell designed to appear as J. R. R. Tolkien's explorations of time travel, a timeless place of learning, while Lothlórien was by intention "mystical and exotic". In contrast, the Orcs of Isengard were accompanied by a 5-beat rhythm on steel plates, Japanese drums, and metal chains, giving a harsh industrial effect. For Gollum, a corrupted Hobbit in two minds with a strange way of moving, Shore used the cymbaly, an instrument like a medieval hammered dulcimer, giving a trembling feeling. For some concerts conducted by Shore, images of Middle-earth by the films' conceptual designers Alan Lee (illustrator), Alan Lee and John Howe (illustrator), John Howe were projected while the music was played. There are over 50 leitmotifs in the music; the symphony begins with the rising and falling "The History of the Ring" theme with a "breathlike pattern to give the Ring a sense of consciousness and purpose". Shore comments that this could be taken as the central theme of the score. The "Fellowship" theme appears when the 9 heroes, the Fellowship of the Ring (characters), Fellowship of the Ring, first come together at the Council of Elrond at Rivendell; the theme splinters when the Fellowship breaks apart, and gradually reassembles as the Fellowship makes progress with its task. The symphony is edited to concert length from over 11 hours of film music. The symphony has a 19th century structure to give the audience a sense of history, hinting at the great lapse of time since the Third Age of Middle-earth. Shore, with Jackson and Walsh, wanted it to feel like opera. To represent the evolution of characters, the themes change; thus, the Hobbits' tin whistle is replaced by a flute when they return to the Shire. That return, The Scouring of the Shire, to save the Shire, is a central theme of the story, accompanied by the Hobbits' theme. ''Live to Projection'' is a series where ''The Lord of the Rings'' films (their soundtrack limited to dialogue and sound effects) are projected while the music is performed live in sync with the films. It is conducted by and Erik Eino Ochsner and was performed around the world, including Switzerland, Australia and the United States. The concerts, which consist of multiple movements, restore unused or alternate sections of the soundtrack (where other concerts of this kind for other films repeat the final film music) and even required Shore to edit several bars of the music, including a feature entr'acte suite.


Analysis

In 2010, the musicologist and music journalist Doug Adams (music journalist), Doug Adams published what is effectively the official book of Shore's scores for the films, ''The Music of the Lord of the Rings Films'', as Shore had invited him to "organize and present a cohesive view of the score". The book is based on unique long-term access to Shore throughout the four-year composition period. It is illustrated with drawings by the films' conceptual artists, the illustrators John Howe (illustrator), John Howe and Alan Lee (illustrator), Alan Lee. Shore describes the book as "a wonderfully readable version of what I created in music". He states that Adams became a friend, and "from all of his detailed study, [is] much more an expert in this music than I am!" The films' writer/producer Fran Walsh writes that "Howard's music ... gave the cultures of the Elves and the Dwarves and the kingdoms of Men a powerful authenticity", and that "I feel enormously proud that [Shore's] beautiful work, beloved by so many around the world, has been so eloquently celebrated by Doug Adams in this fine book."


Leitmotifs

Adams states that Shore has woven over 100 themes or leitmotifs (over 160, if the Music of The Hobbit film series, music of the ''Hobbit'' films is included), which can be grouped by the Middle-earth cultures to which they relate. Each theme is named, with the film scene where it is first heard; it is shown in musical notation, and then described in a few paragraphs of text. When Adams has identified other themes on related subjects, they immediately follow in the same section. Thus, the first section on themes is "The One Ring", with the main theme "The History of the Ring", followed by "The Evil of the Ring (Mordor/Sauron)", "The Seduction of the Ring", and "The Fate of the Ring/The Destruction of the Ring". The account is illustrated both with pencil drawings by the artists and by stills from the films. Adams states that Shore "instinctually" started with themes to ensure musical clarity. The first theme, "The Shire", may serve as an example. It features both in the films, many times, and in Shore's concert suite Concerning Hobbits. The melody, Diatonic scale, all in one key, occurs in pensive, rural, and hymn settings. The pensive setting is played classically, with the melody on whistle or clarinet according to the mood of the moment. The rural setting changes the theme into "a sprightly, Celtic music, Celtic-influenced peasant melody—the simple joy of Hobbiton in musical form." Adams notes that Shore commented that he wanted to give the impression that "the hobbits were playing the music", while Jackson said "Make it hobbity." Shore combined all three variations of "The Shire" in the end credits of ''The Fellowship of the Ring'' to create the song "In Dreams (Howard Shore song), In Dreams". The song has lyrics by Fran Walsh, and the film version is sung by the boy soprano Edward Ross of the London Oratory School Schola. Adams comments that "Like all Shore's music for the hobbits, this song is designed to feel as if it could be both about the Shire and from it—as if it were some sweetly nostalgic song sung at the closing of the The Shadow of the Past#Plot, Green Dragon [Inn] each night."


Orchestration

"The Shire" was soon followed by the Fellowship, Moria, and Dwarrowdelf themes. Shore worked from research into Western, African, and Middle-eastern music, from storyboards of the films; and sometimes straight from Tolkien's story. For example, he used the Arabic maqam Phrygian dominant scale, Hijaz scale for the Elvish Lothlórien/Galadriel theme, to create a sense of antiquity. The number of themes multiplied, but Shore took care to keep the orchestration to a limited "menu", so as to maintain a vision of "sturdy musical textures with orchestral color and detail coursing under the surface." Shore divided the orchestra to provide high, middle, and low sound degrees "regardless of instrument type"; Adams cites Shore's remark that "Orchestration is, in essence, about range. People think it's color, but it actually is range." The themes meanwhile evolved into "an interconnected network of dozens of leitmotifs", becoming not as Shore had anticipated in the style of Italian opera, but rather in the manner of Wagner and Opera in German, German opera. Adams describes the final bars of the score of ''The Return of the King'' as Richard Wagner, Wagnerian. Judith Bernanke similarly analyses Shore's "operatic" approach.


Annotated score

Adams describes the score for the three films of the trilogy in turn, scene by scene. He names the musical themes as they appear in each scene: the themes often recur. When a scene is accompanied by choral music, the lyrics are provided; when these are in one of Tolkien's constructed languages, an English translation is given alongside, line for line, and the source of the text (often Tolkien or the screenwriter/producer Philippa Boyens) and the translator (usually Salo) is stated. For example, for the scene "The Court of Meduseld" in ''The Two Towers'', Adams describes the picture as Théoden King of Rohan, Middle-earth, Rohan sits slumped in his throne, being whispered lies by Saruman's spy, the traitor Gríma Wormtongue, Wormtongue. The music is the "Gríma Wormtongue" theme, in which "contrabassoon, tuba, celli, and contrabasses wallow in a sepulchral, debauched chromatic line... colored by resonant bass drum strokes and a film of high string clusters." The music shifts as the wizard Gandalf and his companions Legolas and Gimli (Middle-earth), Gimli enter: the chorus sing "The King" (in Old English, the Languages constructed by J. R. R. Tolkien#Linguistic mapping, language Tolkien uses for Rohan), and the orchestra plays in turn the "Isengard" theme (for Saruman), the "Fellowship" theme (for Legolas and Gimli), and the "Gandalf the White" theme (for the wizard, returned from the dead). The account is illustrated with a drawing of the King on the throne, Wormtongue's head visible by his right arm; with the music of the "Wormtongue" theme modified by the "Rohan" theme's beat and Dorian mode; by a film still of the head of the aged and despondent king; and by the lyrics of "The King" in Old English and in translation.


Reception


Awards

The scores and soundtrack albums of the film trilogy have won three Academy Awards, three Golden Globe awards, and four Grammy Awards, including: * ''The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (soundtrack), The Fellowship of the Ring'' won an Academy Award for Best Original Score and a Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack Album for a Motion Picture, Television or Other Visual Media, Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack Album in 2001. * ''The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (soundtrack), The Two Towers'' won a Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack Album in 2002. * ''The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (soundtrack), The Return of the King'' won an Academy Award for Best Original Score, an Academy Award for Best Original Song with "Into the West (song), Into the West" by Annie Lennox, a Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score, and a Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack Album in 2003.


By critics

The philosopher and author Roger Scruton, for the ''Future Symphony Institute'', notes that the phrase "film music" has, however unfairly, often been Film score#Music criticism, used pejoratively by critics. He writes that, on the contrary, "the most successful film music today exhibits a quite extraordinary level of competence." In Scruton's view, "Howard Shore’s evocative music for ''The Lord of the Rings'' exhibit[s] a mastery of harmonic sequences, Polyphony, polyphonic organisation and orchestral effect that would be the envy of many a composer for the concert hall."


By Tolkien scholars

Kristin Thompson, in the scholarly book ''Picturing Tolkien'', writes that "even the film [series]'s harshest critics credit it with ... superb design elements, including ... music". The Tolkien scholar David Bratman, in his survey of music inspired by Tolkien, provides what ''Mythlore'' called "justified and sharp" criticisms of the film score. Bratman describes the score as "uninspired hackwork" and states that Shore's Celtic music representing The Shire (played on a "Celtic assortment of instruments", namely bodhrán, hammered dulcimer, dulcimer, Celtic harp, Musette de cour, musette, mandolin, and guitar) is inappropriate, given that the hobbits' homeland is known to have been inspired by the English Midlands where Tolkien lived. The folklorist Dimitra Fimi, also in ''Picturing Tolkien'', comments that "ethereal music" accompanies the procession of Elves in Middle-earth, Elves in the extended version of ''The Fellowship of the Ring'' (scene 11, "The Passing of the Elves"). She states that the scene borrows visually from the "Celtic" imagery of John Duncan (painter), John Duncan's 1911 Pre-Raphaelite painting ''Riders of the Sidhe'', giving an "otherworldly" effect Peter Jackson's interpretation of The Lord of the Rings, very unlike the "playful tone" in Tolkien's text. Shore deliberately creates the "same 'Celtic' feel'", she writes, in the music for the Elves in Rivendell; Shore had approached the Irish "folk-cum-New Age" singer Enya, whose music represents "Celticity as melancholy over a lost tradition." In Fimi's view, the "'Celtic' air and ambience" that Jackson uses for the Elves is reinforced by what the film's conceptual designer Alan Lee (illustrator), Alan Lee called "the use of natural forms ... [and] of flowing graceful lines" and "elements of Art Nouveau and Celtic design". Fimi notes that both Tolkien and the historian Malcolm Chapman wrote "mocking[ly]" about the romantic stereotyping of Celts in this way, Tolkien speaking of "the wild incalculable poetic Celt, full of vague and misty imaginations", and Chapman of "high-flown metaphysical and moral conclusions drawn from 'Celtic' art by its admiring critics".


By musicologists

Vincent E. Rone writes that while many commentators noticed that Shore had borrowed techniques from "Romantic opera, especially his predilection for Richard Wagner, Wagnerian leitmotifs", the score is "far more nuanced" than that, identifying each people – Hobbits, Men, Elves – with their own system of harmony. In Rone's view, Hobbits are placed harmonically as familiar, using major-minor Diatonic scales. Men are placed as at once familiar and unfamilar, by means of modal scale, modal diatonic scales. Finally, Elves are placed as unfamiliar, through the use of nondiatonic scales ("chromatic mediants"). Rone suggests that in this way the film score both echoes 19th century tradition and helps the viewer to understand the different peoples in the fantasy. Matthew Young sets out to show that Shore's music is rooted both in Jackson's visual narrative and in Tolkien's text, and that Shore's leitmotivs give the audience a precise "musical Affect (psychology), affect" for the different cultures of Middle-earth. Young does this by analysing musemes, individual elements of the music analogous to phonemes in speech. Young further suggests that the way the themes change during the film series conveys to the audience an "emotional understanding of the evolution of the [leading] characters". For example, Young analyses the Shire Fiddle theme in ''The Fellowship of the Ring'', arguing that the fiddle and flute used relate to Tolkien's Hobbits, while in his view "the rural nature of Celtic music is consistent with the rural, peasant nature of Hobbits described by Tolkien." Estelle Jorgensen considers Peter Jackson's interpretation of The Lord of the Rings, how Tolkien's text translates to film, and in particular how the implicit music of Poetry in The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien's poetry is realized, both visually and aurally. She cites Jackson's remark that Tolkien's "music" is "imaginary", objecting only that his Gregorian chanting of "Namárië" and his "dramatic" performance of "Ride of the Rohirrim" give "a glimpse" of how he imagined his songs might have sounded. Jackson, she writes, omitted Tom Bombadil and Goldberry, along with all their music; and Galadriel's singing, too, is dropped. Jackson acknowledged his musical limitations, relying on Shore to represent Tolkien's music. Shore stated that he wanted to "re-insert" Tolkien's verse into his score with choral versions of songs in Tolkien's invented languages. Jorgensen comments that be that as it may, songs such as "May it Be" and "Aníron" are set to words not by Tolkien, while most of Tolkien's "rich" provision of Hobbit songs is absent from the score. She notes that the score is "pervasively orchestral and tonal" in keeping with Shore's intention to create "a feeling of antiquity", almost as if the music had been "discovered" rather than newly written. She comments that the actual result is rather different: "What happens, however, is that while the music lends another dimension to sight, it is swallowed up by sight...; the audience's focus is primarily upon the screen."


Recordings


Original soundtracks

Recordings of the score were originally issued on single-disc albums, named ''The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (soundtrack), The Fellowship of the Ring'', ''The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (soundtrack), The Two Towers'', and ''The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (soundtrack), The Return of the King'', that closely followed the cinematic releases of the films, or presented earlier versions recorded during the film's editing. The music on the disc was arranged as a concert-piece while also keeping reasonably with the plot progression of the film.


''The Complete Recordings''

Starting in 2005, a year after the extended release of ''The Return of the King'', Reprise Records released one multi-disc set for each part of the trilogy. These annually published collections, titled ''The Complete Recordings'', contain the entire score for the extended versions of the films on Compact disc, CD, along with an additional DVD-Audio disc that offers 2.0 stereo and 5.1 Surround sound, surround mixes of the soundtrack, and liner notes by Doug Adams. They were re-released in 2018 by Rhino Entertainment.


''The Rarities Archives''

The 2010 book by Doug Adams, ''The Music of the Lord of the Rings Films'', contains a companion CD, ''The Rarities Archives'', of alternate versions and otherwise unpublished music created during the composition process.


Documentary films

Two short documentary films have been made of the score's production process: ''Howard Shore: An Introspective'', released as a bonus DVD with ''The Return Of The King'' in 2003, and ''Howard Shore - Creating The Lord Of The Rings Symphony'', the latter recorded live in Montreal at the Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier in 2004.


See also

* Music of Middle-earth * The Lord of the Rings (soundtrack), ''The Lord of the Rings'' (soundtrack), the score of the 1978 Ralph Bakshi film by Leonard Rosenman. * Symphony No. 1 "The Lord of the Rings", a 1988 concert band composition by Johan de Meij * Music of The Hobbit film series, Music of ''The Hobbit'' film series


Notes


References


Sources

* * *
Online
*


External links


New Line's promotional website for the soundtracks
*
Annotated Score for ''The Fellowship of the Ring''
*
Annotated Score for ''The Two Towers''
archived fro
the original
*
Annotated Score for ''The Return of the King''
archived fro
the original

Official website of Howard Shore

Doug Adams's blog on the scores and his book, ''The Music of the Lord of the Rings Films''

List of CD releases for Lord of the Rings
on Soundtrackguide.net

by Eric Rawlins {{DEFAULTSORT:Lord Of The Rings Film Trilogy, Music The Lord of the Rings (film series) music, Classical music soundtracks Film music by media franchise Films scored by Howard Shore Howard Shore soundtracks