No Country for Old Men - Credits (Full)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 26 ก.ย. 2024
- 'Blood Trail', the theme which plays during the credits for the Coen Brothers film 'No Country for Old Men'. Uploaded since it appears there isn't a full 5-minute version elsewhere on TH-cam.
Composed and performed by Carter Burwell.
No Country For Old Men is without any doubt my favourite film of all time. And because of Carter Burwell's score, I always sit through the credits to hear this amazing music that perfectly captures the essence of the film. Just like the film perfectly captures the the essence of the book. This is an example of film, music and literature in a perfect symbiosis. Absolutely stunning. My favourite part is when the guitar kicks in.
Agreed
No music except for the Mexican trio when Mr. Moss wakes up bloody, until this beautiful song.
Yes it does, creepy sounds but was absolutely perfect for the film
I recently watched this with my 15 year old son. About half way through he remarked, "It makes this movie more unsettling having no music". Then at the end of it he told me it was his new favorite movie.
The reason we watched it was because I mentioned that the guy (Javier Bardem) who was playing King Triton in The Little, played one of the most ruthless villains I've ever seen depicted in a movie 😂
A soul after my own heart ❤️
I hate that people simply just don't get the point of the movie, and the ending to it. You overstep your boundaries, you imagine yourself coming out of everything all right because you grant yourself that courage as a survival instinct. Chances are they won't help.
Even Anton gets some sort of cumupence at the end. He may talk as if he is some sort of meta physical entity, but not even that saves him from being hurt in a car crash that he 'didn't see coming'. No Country is the greatest existential thriller made this century so far.
Pool Floozy: "What else, then?"
Llewelyn Moss: "Just lookin'' for what's comin'"
Pool Floozy: "Yeah, but no one ever sees that ..."
@@dimbulb5549 That's sums up the entire movie.
Beers whats coming….
They just don't get the film because it's complex and they want to be spoon fed everything. Numbers of movie goers think a story like this should have a simple plot, hardly any dialogue, big explosions and ultra fast car chases. Yet when they look at "No Country For Old Men", numbers of people frown and say "This movie isn't for me" when in actuality those people aren't for the movie.
I never felt so threatened by a song before. This is one of the best creations any musician has made.
it has a bit of hope/beauty in it to me. the movie did too, kinda, because of the way Chigur gets fucked up in the end too.
It's definitely Anton's theme.
Chigurh represents the ever present moving force,..the menacing unexpected threat we all eventually have an exchange with before we die-sometimes it’s the cause of our death,..prevision or second sight is our counter weight to the menacing force, its as real as a coin toss & it exists as intuition in humans,.. Lewellyn’s one achilles heal is thinking he’s safe outside in public, in the daylight..even life in daylight isn’t safe…
"A man would have to put his soul at hazard. He'd have to say: 'O.K., I'll be part of this world.'"
- Sheriff Ed Tom Bell
The guitar at 1:33 is haunting, which goes perfect with the essence of the film.
I would keep on playing this forever. It's just perfect.
The ambient sound in the back slowly goes down pitch if you listen closely
You Can't Stop what's comin'
They ain’t all waitin’ on you
*cain’t
Unbelievably good film.
I have never seen the film. Discovering the music 🎶 21st January 2024.
One 🐥 in Melbourne 👋 from The 🏖
Any time I stay in a hotel room alone, I listen to this on repeat a few times. It just feels right. 🤠
Then I woke up...
Had dreams… Two of ’em. Both had my father in ’em. It’s peculiar. I’m older now then he ever was by twenty years. So, in a sense, he’s the younger man. Anyway, the first one I don’t remember too well but, it was about meeting’ him in town somewhere and he gives me some money. I think I lost it. The second one, it was like we was both back in older times and I was on horseback going through the mountains of a night. Going through this pass in the mountains. It was cold and there was snow on the ground and he rode past me and kept on going. Never said nothing going by - just rode on past. And he had his blanket wrapped around him and his head down. When he rode past, I seen he was carrying fire in a horn the way people used to do, and I-I could see the horn from the light inside of it - about the color of the moon. And in the dream I knew that he was going on ahead and he was fixing to make a fire somewhere out there in all that dark and all that cold. And I knew that whenever I got there, he’d be there.....
...And then I woke up.
Ahh, here we are. The full version with those final, sweet closing chords from the film. Thank you for uploading this. : )
"...Alright, i'll be part of this world..."
The dvd version. In the menu screen had a soundtrack that isn’t anywhere else. I tried to find it on soundtracks but not on their or score. So melodic.
The film has one of the best suspense songs ever made
Ok, theory time! The music represents each of the three main characters:
The maracas and ambiance represents Anton Chigurh, the piano represents Llwelyn and the acoustic represents Ed Bell
The maracas represents rattlesnakes, which are deadly, vicious creatures, seldomly coming into the light, and the ambiance represents the unneasy nature and disturbing tension he brings. Notice it was the first pieces of the music that were heard because Chigurh was the first of the three to appear in the tale (not counting Ed Bell's epic intro dialogue).
The piano has a simple, subtle tune with a sense of unease, symbolizing Llwelyn's paranoia, cautiousness and ongoing role as the mouse in the cat and mouse chase. You could even say it sounds similar to a heartbeat monitor when calm, kind of like when Llwelyn is trying to reassure himself, his wife and Carson that he has things in control; the heartbeat also showing Llwelyn is still alive.
The guitar has an old timer, classy, western and mature feel to it that suits Ed Bell. Notice it is the last instrument that plays because Bell was always one step behind in their story.
Finally, the piano eventually goes away, symbolizing Llwelyn's death (ths heartbeat is no longer there), the maracas goes away eventually near the end, leaving only the guitar and the ambiance, meaning Ed once again was one step behind when Anton was long gone and the damage was already done. The guitar plays because the sherriff "didn't know what to make of that", and frankly didn't want to. He's still alive, retired, but the horrors he's seen and experienced haunts him forever.
Piano? I hear percussion, guitars, and that atmospheric lull could be a synthesizer, but it could also be another form of string instrument. If you look up Carter Burwell videos he uses a lot of string instruments.
@@Fan_Made_Videos the very beginning? That one note played over and over? Is that not a piano key?
Give me a timestamp
@@MrThurkin sure. 0:24
@@mehtalchaynzz it sounds like the plucking of an acoustic string, which could be a piano but not using a keyboard
If you like this piece, I recommend checking out Bill Frisell's album 'Where in The World', which this reminds me a lot of.
Thank you friendo.
@@abhishekconstantinewinches9907 that gives me ptsd, when you say friendo... Lol
Interesting observation. Different genres, yet similar sound and emotion.
This is so good on headphones.
The best credit song for the best movie!
The last 40 seconds are superb.
this score is simply the best!
I like to cite this as an example to prove that simplicity can be the most effective manner of conveying something.
starts out eery and haunting and ends so uplifting with the spanish guitars.
This track was my life late 2013 - early 2014.
@George Hennen Do you even know what a psychopath is?
Ich weiß dass du Deutsch kannst du kannst dich nicht vor mir verstecken :)
@@johnwack2897 what makes you say that?
@@Xipe-totex some guy called him a psychopath and i asked him what a psychopath is
@@johnwack2897 isnt it a condition where someone lacks emotional or moral influence in their minds so they rely on logic?
Friendo
Thank you so much for posting this! What a haunting score.
If the rule that you followed led you to this. Of what use was the rule?
fantastic ending and score to wrap it all up, bravo!
This is my favorite movie and The Last of Us my favorite game. Both of them have simple main concepts and story goals, yet the way the stories are told, characters are written and the tension you feel during the journey cannot be compared to any other work of art.
Also both are scored with a guitar.
@@TomEyeTheSFMguy both got Texans
Funny how both have a guy named joel
@@theoriginalcows1357That’s not a coincidence, Neil Druckmann named Joel the video game character after Joel Coen lol
This is the song for when the bad guy wins.
On my second viewing of this film, I paid much more attention to all the little nuances and intricacies in the screenplay. This closing music piece just hit so much differently than my first viewing.
this movie completes me
Had this year's ago thank you sir for the listen.
Well the song "The Quarantine Zone (20 Years Later)" sounds very similar to this. Plus, Joel was named after Joel Coen. MajorWolfCry is also correct about the ending having that kind of feeling.
This theme feels like it would fit in with one of the old school Fallout games.
This is my favorite song from a film.
2007 the year i became myself. the year i went to see this movie. the year i decided to become a filmmaker.
Acard89 Ten years later, have you accomplished what you wanted?
9 Years later if the rule you followed led you to this, of what use was the rule?
I wonder what have you become.
Hope you made it !
Thanks man for the upload. Great job
If there was a score to Blood Meridian, I think Carter Burrell would DELIVER.
It is not a "derivative piece of interactive cinema disguised as a game". It is a game, and it never forget it is a game. Just because it has a good story doesn't mean it can't be a game. And just because it is linear it doesn't mean it can't be a good game.
It's like a twisted and dark version of Malaguena but in the end there is no love just an empty fate
"Call it."
this is now my #1 favorite song since i watched the movie..... siiiiiiiiiiiiiiiigh I LOVE FLAMENCO
The best credit song for the best movie!
Real World Of Men
"Sugar?"
Very nice.
great song x
Dark sand sinister...just like the film.
Does anyone know similar songs to this one? Like acoustic, kind of dark melodies.
+Dávid Lizom
The Last of Us OST 20 Years Later.
Type in keywords like ambient tracks, video game sound tracks, especially red dead redemption soundtrack really good I can't think of the actual artist who's works featured the most it's Jose something damn, really good stuff.
Ry Cooder's "Paris, Texas"
I don't know if you're into metal, but the experimental metal band Neurosis' softer/more acoustic stuff has a very similar vibe to this. One song off the top of my head by them that's like this (incredible) song is "The Road to Sovereignty." Super dark, super fucking cool.
Alice in chains umplugged
Anton Chiburg: uno de los jinetes del Apocalipsis 🏙🔥 El sheriff dígase la justicia, la ley sueña con un mundo menos doloroso más justo pero... Terminar con este tema es excepcional
Perhaps, but I'd say the same about you, however art is subjective and thus cannot be judged as simple as that.
Great!
mmmmmmmassssssssterrrrrrrrrrrrrpiece!!!
Correct me if I'm wrong but didn't naught dog said that no country for old man ost was the main influence for the last of us ost
Asking, perhaps you could send it to me plz? it seems impossible to find.
can someone send tablature or a chord list for that guitar part? ive been looking but cant find a definitive answer.
It just sounds like malaguena in off-key. I like how the rhythm evokes the image of an old wounded cowboy on a dying horse as they trudge through the desert sand looking for a final spot to rest and eventually die .
It sounds like its in drop d tuning. Just fiddle around, i got something that sounds like it but its not it exactly
@@ThrottleJerk I think it's half a step down from drop d tuning, but yeah same string tuning. Most of the notes are just open notes from the bottom 3 strings
Watch The Ballad of Buster Scruggs and the theme for the Wingless Thrush episode is basically an expansion of this melody
@StarmanSuper00 thanks for the dirpy recommendation. its awesome
Linearity and poor lasting value are major red flags. Games are capable of much more than merely providing resonant experiences.
is there a long version of this, does anyone know?
No
Name of this song please???
+Wilson Llivicura Blood Trail
Right,
3:40
Hello friendo
Actual games and not derivative pieces of interactive cinema disguised as games.
like/dislike ratio is encouraging.
114
But this is a full of drugs ...
Ellie should play this song in The Last of us 2!
she'll need a band lol The reason its so menacing is because of the base and the ambient instruments
You have good taste in film and poor taste in video games. =)
You obviously haven't heard much Hans Zimmer then..
gay
🪙. “Well done!”
this song is so dark... i love it.
Friendo
Not the soundtrack, the actual film and game share similar tones and cinematic styles... in fact the ending of The Last Of Us (no spoilers ahead) is a very No Country For Old Men, kinda ending/vibe
Please, I'm begging - this isn't on iTunes obviously, and I'm not a torrent user. Where can I get a version of this that isn't compressed to bits?
What a perfect end to a perfect film.
Love the music. It's very haunting yet it grabs my attention as if seeing someone is about to be killed. Awesome movie.👍
Blasphemy
Correction naughty dog