For Your Eyes Only | ||||
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Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | 1981 | |||
Label | Liberty | |||
Producer | Bill Conti | |||
Bill Conti chronology | ||||
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James Bond soundtrack chronology | ||||
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Singles from For Your Eyes Only | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
For Your Eyes Only is the soundtrack for the 12th James Bond film of the same name.
The theme song was written by Bill Conti (music) and Michael Leeson (lyrics),and performed by Sheena Easton. The song was later nominated for both an Academy Award and Golden Globe in 1982. Easton also made Bond film history as the first (and,to date,only) artist to perform the theme song on-screen during the opening title sequence.
Originally,the band Blondie was approached to write and perform the theme song for the film. They produced a song also called For Your Eyes Only that they turned in to the producers,however,this was rejected because the company wanted the Conti song and the band refused,and subsequently asked Easton to record an entirely new theme. Blondie eventually released their song on the 1982 album The Hunter . The track Make It Last All Night,performed by Rage and used for the scene at hitman Gonzales' Spanish poolside,is notable for lyrics more suggestive than in almost any other Bond film.
The soundtrack was composed by Bill Conti,since the series' regular composer,John Barry,was unable to work in the UK for tax reasons (he,like many high earning Britons,had become a tax exile in the 1970s). Barry had recommended Conti as a possible alternative. Conti's score is notable for its use of disco elements (which prompted Danny Biederman to write in the liner notes to the two-CD release The Best of James Bond:30th Anniversary Limited Edition,"Conti's largely disco-styled score feels more like a celebration of the music of the moment than a score of durability"). During the main ski chase sequence (the track Runaway),Conti showed that he had versed himself in the previous Bond films' music,as his manages to evoke memories of the music from previous ski action in both On Her Majesty's Secret Service and The Spy Who Loved Me . This,Conti's only contribution to the series to date,was released as an album concurrent with the film's release and later on a bootleg compact disc in combination with John Barry's music from Octopussy . When the soundtrack was officially released on CD in the year 2000,six bonus tracks were added that further showed Conti's versatile approach to the film,aiding the production in its return to a tougher,more realistic James Bond. Not released but also heard in the film is a brief homage to John Williams' familiar theme from Jaws ,when an unseen underwater horror (it is revealed to be an attacker in a JIM diving suit) approaches within the sunken ship. This was the third Bond film in a row to wittily include familiar music from a classic film. Additionally,notes from the title song to The Spy Who Loved Me,"Nobody Does It Better",can be heard as the tones of a key code for a security door early in the film.
Chart (1981/82) | Peak position |
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Australia (Kent Music Report) [3] | 74 |
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria) [4] | 16 |
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista) [5] | 15 |
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan) [6] | 25 |
US Billboard 200 [7] | 84 |
The Best of Bond... James Bond is the title of various compilation albums of music used in the James Bond films made by Eon Productions up to that time. The album was originally released in 1992 as The Best of James Bond, as a one-disc compilation and a two-disc 30th Anniversary Limited Edition compilation with songs that had, at that point, never been released to the public. The single disc compilation was later updated five times in 1999, 2002, 2008, 2012, and 2021. The 2008 version was augmented with the addition of a DVD featuring music videos and a documentary. Another two-disc edition, this time containing 50 tracks for the 50th anniversary of the franchise, was released in 2012.
William Conti is an American composer and conductor, best known for his film scores, including Rocky, The Karate Kid, For Your Eyes Only, Dynasty, and The Right Stuff, which earned him an Academy Award for Best Original Score. He also received nominations in the Best Original Song category for "Gonna Fly Now" from Rocky and for the title song of For Your Eyes Only. He was the musical director at the Academy Awards a record nineteen times.
Sheena Shirley Easton is a Scottish singer and actress. She came into the public eye in an episode of the first British musical reality television series The Big Time: Pop Singer, which recorded her attempts to gain a record deal and her eventual signing with the EMI label. Easton's first two singles, "Modern Girl" and "9 to 5", both entered the Top 10 of the UK Singles Chart simultaneously. She became one of the most successful British female recording artists of the 1980s.
Since its inception in 1962, the James Bond film series from Eon Productions has featured many musical compositions, many of which are now considered classic pieces of British film music. The best known piece is the "James Bond Theme" composed by Monty Norman. Other instrumentals, such as "On Her Majesty's Secret Service", and various songs performed by British or American artists such as Shirley Bassey's "Goldfinger", Nancy Sinatra's "You Only Live Twice", Paul McCartney's "Live and Let Die", Carly Simon's "Nobody Does It Better", Sheena Easton's "For Your Eyes Only", Duran Duran's "A View to a Kill", Tina Turner's "GoldenEye" also become identified with the series.
The Hunter is the sixth studio album by American rock band Blondie, released on May 24, 1982, by Chrysalis Records. It was Blondie's last album of new material until 1999's No Exit. It was recorded in December 1981.
For Your Eyes Only is a 1981 spy film directed by John Glen and produced by Albert R. Broccoli. The film stars Roger Moore as the fictional MI6 agent James Bond, and co-stars Carole Bouquet, Chaim Topol, Lynn-Holly Johnson and Julian Glover.
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For Your Eyes Only may refer to:
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