I might be crazy, because I could swear I heard hints of the old main theme throughout the new Dune! or maybe my mind was filling the gap left by that bizarre throat chant the movie opened with
I thought the score was good, it created the tension it needed. That being said it’s not something I’m going to put my headphones on and listen to. Brian Eno”s music transports the listener into another world. So lonely yet beautiful.
Bro I was watching the extended cut of dune 1984 to specifically hear this theme and learn more about the context but its not even in it! And if that's not enough, the movie sucks too. Denni's good, lynch's bad.
@@trueromani7262 There is a fan edit on YT of Dune 1984 that adds in loads of cut scenes and lost footage. There is also added dialogue to flesh everything out. It's like the version David Lynch wanted to release. It's the most complete version out.
Apocalypse now 1979 Blade runner 1982 Terminator 1984 Dune 1984 I was in my 20's, fascinated by these movies and their soundtracks ! No nostalgia, just awesome memories. Thank for sharing this soundtrack.
Same here. I loved Apocalypse Now in 1979, when I was 17. And I enjoyed Dune in 1984. Watched it several times since. I'm watching it all over again before it leaves Netflix in September 2023, and I appreciate it more now that before. And I love this piece of music from it.
I was born in 79 and 4 in 84" 12/12/79 so I watched this with my dad who was the cable guy for rte he hooked up the whole of Dublin 10 and there was peace 😌⚡🙌🤓🇮🇪
"I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration. I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me. And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path. Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain." ~ Frank Herbert
My favorite soundtrack of all time, it resonates with me like nothing else , it’s not meant to be ‘spa’ sounds to just relax to but more of a deep feeling it invokes which can be sadness, longing, awe of the universe. It’s meant to take the mind to places we might fear or refuse to see, vulnerability can be a good thing if we accept it. And maybe learn something about ourselves along the way
parts of the Zimmer soundtrack had hints of the 1984 soundtrack... so I kept expecting to hear it, and was sadly disappointed. There is no comparison... I searched for years to find the 1984 dune soundtrack in stores.... I only had a tape recording I made from a record I borrowed from the library. Oddly enough, I listened to the tape recording so much, I missed hearing the the little ticks from the record recording mixed in with the soundtrack when I would listen to the CD. I really hope someone re scores the new Dune with the 1984 soundtrack if possible. Best of both worlds.
Agreed the 1984 music is wonderful glorious and also to me evokes the terrifying vastness and mystery of the universe Listen and let yourself drift through eternity Genius
When this music started in the film it was like it was making me think of prophets from the Bible like lynch set it up with eno to hit like something new you recognize as familiar. Like the total insane power of being chosen by destiny to be the messiah of a people is such a crazy thing that this weird eerie foreboding and scary music is the only way to communicate that power coming to fruition.
I'll miss the sea, but a person needs new experiences. They jar something deep inside, allowing him to grow. Without change something sleeps inside us, and seldom awakens. The sleeper must awaken.
i agree, moving away from the coast, i remember this , having said that, if you have ever been taken away from the shore, you will empathise with the atreides
I didn't realize just how much I liked Brian Eno until I found out he wrote this Prophecy theme. I've watched the original Dune movie so many times and, to this day, this theme is still mesmerizing to listen to and adds so much depth and fascination to Paul's messianic destiny. Just beautiful and timeless.
It was used by Troika for a post-apoc game that was never developed. They made a demo using this theme and the track fit like a velvet glove (ruclips.net/video/NvgSGxNTADI/видео.html). I think I want this track to be played at my funeral, together with Rhubarb by Aphex Twin. I want everyone to feel bad and cry their guts out. I'm worthy.
I live 20 Minutes away from the NAMIB DESERT/NAMIBIA.....when I listened to this Song right in the Dunes,I SWEAR I saw WORMSIGNS !!!! (Greatings from Swakopmund)
I love this theme. It captures the universe of Arrakis (Dune). It’s dreamy and eerie maybe even beautiful. A great piece of work by Brian Eno he definitely captures the whole atmosphere of it and the concept in general.
@@Tommii38 you are looking at it from the wrong perspective. You have to look at it from a Lynch perspective. He tries to bury into your subconscious, which he does really well in this version of Dune.
100%. I absolutely love Dune 1984. I can watch Dune 1984 a million times and never tire of it. Lynch captured Dune's weirdness arguably better than Denis Villeneuve's version.
The longer directors cut that's four hours long is the best!!! They should have made this into two movies, movie exec's are sooooo stupid. Best Lynch ever..... He really did this story justice.
@@Yiroooo the movie for its time was very good but many of the interesting parts for depth of characters were not done unfortunately a big loser at the box office I truly doubt anyone currently worldwide could do better dialogue isn't governing filmmaking anymore cgi is tragically the best sci-fi with complex characters and action scenes is EXPANSE
Legend has it he did but it was replaced by Toto's score, there are some bits of music in the film not composed by Toto that sound very similar to Brian's work, it's believed to be from that score.
I find it hard to believe that Dune was written in the 60's. It looks to the future on so many levels and covers such a wide expanse in the human story. Frank Herbert must have been a visionary genius no less!!
He extrapolated the political Situation on Earth. So for nearly everything in Dune there is a real World Counterpart. One of the Things that amazed me though was his Idea about Mentats - so he forsaw that Robots/AI will be developed, will stage a War against Humanity, Humanity will win that War (kinda the Scenario from Terminator) and all sorts of AI will be forbidden afterwards so Humans have to become as competent in Mathematics as AI was before... I thought for a while if he is in the same League as a SciFi-Prophet as Philip K. Dick. While he surely had an unusual Brain and great Thoughts and was highly intelligent he might have not forseen the Future like Dick did. So I value his Work very high yet Dick seems to be the greater Prophet to me.
Carlos Fandango. He was most definitely operating on a higher level than most of us but is smart enough to dumb himself down enough to write something like we mere mortals can understand. You should just read the book man. Before the movie
@@Ezekielepharcelis It's not that simplifies. There was no war against the machines Terminator or even Matrix style . Our technology has simply reached a tipping point where we were really no longer needed for much of anything so upon becoming a type unnecessary, redundant afterthought to our technology, humanity began to fall into a state of complete apathy but lucky for humanity a segment of humanity saw what was happening, that being human extinction and what started as a philosophical, then political agenda exploded into violence and bloodshed.The Buliterian Jihad, the fanatics & their cause spread throughout the imperium and when it was all over the fanatics had won and said there's going to be new commandments if you will. The 1st and biggest, NO THINKING MACHINES. No A I. Which negated an enormous amount of our technology, including the highly advanced supercomputers that made the nano second course corrections on any given jump through space time or when they 'folded' space. Without that our empire would be lost, isolated from one another by vast distances of space. I mean you could chance it. We had already created the engine that did the actual space travel but it fell to computers to get us there safe. Without those computers you might run into a sun or some great rock in space
@@Ezekielepharcelis There's one gigantic, notable exception though, and I love what Phillip k. dick did for scifi but most of his work takes place in s not too distant future that is just a nudge or 2 from where we're at now. In the world of Dune we were supposed to have passed the technological state of most of the cyberpunk era literally thousands of years before the events of Dune rolls around. Herbert isn't writing about the year 2049 or 2160 . Herbert is writing about the year 10,1 91 and beyond. That's a pretty big difference
They were grossed out by the, let's say, earthier elements. It requires a higher sensibility that sees the beauty of meaning even in the arbitrarily meaningless and disgusting. Furthermore, one comes to appreciate the contrasts Lynch was trying to portray aesthetically. Lastly, there remains a camp of people who simply do not get it at all. Why? Because Dune is a religious movie that rests on certain philosophical premises that you can't understand if you weren't raised with them. For example, the people of the religious traditions that make sense out of Lynch's actual messianic Muad'dib (very very different from Herbert's largely politically fraudulent Muad'dib) are used to thinking about life as, 1) evolutionary, that humanity is evolving teleologically; and 2) that the human being is evolving toward divinity -- the convergence of the will with the natural laws of nature. This is an easy leap for someone raised in a Christian environment with the god-man Jesus archetype everywhere in their lives, it is even easier when you superimpose that image on a multicultural scientific society much concerned with universality and science fiction and material possibilities and progress. And yet even easier when you combine that with a sense of totally comprehensive natural destiny imparted by a meditative practice. Well, that was America in 1984, and it was David Lynch's deep personal experience, and those are the cultural prerequisites to understand the film. I have watched the movie with adult people who literally asked at the end, "How did he make it rain?!" They don't know what they don't know.
It's not a mystery it's a bad film. It murders the story of Dune. The film opens with a wall of text and multiple inner monologues. That's completely mental. Not even the director likes it. It's visually wonderful though.
Used to watch this movie a lot with my father before he passed away. Naturally when I listen to this now it makes me feel sad plus the current situation as well only amplifies that feeling of sadness.
Our memories etched into song is such an incredible ability. Your father will always be with you because music can never be taken away from us. This made me cry reading your words and I want you to know how touching it was for you to share such a raw memory paired with emotion.
My father was the one who gave me the book. And then VHS with the movie. He's gone now for two years, but his water is still with me. Sending virtual hug and hold on... they never really leave. One day we'll meet again.
@@cassattack "....music can never be taken away from us." This is sooooo true. My mother suffered with dementia for years. She lost skills, ability to perform tasks, names and faces, eventually even the ability to form coherent sentences, then her vocabulary was reduced to a three year old's. But MUSIC! A lifetime of music listening, playing and appreciating was literally bonded in her essence so well that it was the only thing not lost. Our last visit was Christmas Day. We took family photos and sang Christmas songs and played classical music. She knew all the verses better than me, still. She passed in January, and the music and memories are forever.
This is the film that deserves *not* to be lost or forgotten, even when the delayed-but-soon-expected one comes out. I'm sure it will be good. But *this* film from 1984, especially its music, should *not* be just cast aside! It was perfectly cast... *yes* including Kyle MacLachlan as Paul! {Look, he might not have looked *exactly* like he was 15 years old, like in the novel, but so what? He *did* look young enough to be a Duke's son, and he *did* act the role to absolute perfection.} And it was *also* perfectly scored. Who here can honestly say they remember much of anything from the music of that gawd-awful miniseries? *Either* of them? Yeah, well, not me either. I regard *this* 1984 production as one of the 10 best Science-Fiction films of all time; even with its two large flaws of 1.) The syrupy-sweet ending, ignoring Paul's anguish at his prescient knowledge of the bad things that would be done in his name, and 2.) It being almost impossible to take the Harkonnens seriously. It's still a fantastic film. Everything from the cinematography to the acting was otherwise splendid. Critics who disliked it were biased by their training and education. And I wouldn't change that for anything. They *have* to be educated in "the classics" to do their job properly. But that background makes them hopelessly biased against the entire genre of Sci-Fi, since it's oriented in the *other* direction, the future. Therefore, they should *never* be listened to when it comes to any work of that genre. Instead, refer to the counsel of true Science-Fiction fans. I do want to see the eventually-to-be-released updated movie. And I hope it's good, and that its music is good. But even if it's phenomenal, even if it's 10 times better than Director David Lynch's work from 1984, I *still* will always *also* want to steer peple towards *that* one every bit as much as this soon-expected one...or any other that may come after.
Timelord You're right in that many critics at the time, especially Gene Siskel, just didn't give the film negative reviews,they went far above and beyond their job description in their hatred for this film which tells me they had agendas. Be personal or financial or whatever, they had them. I loved this film when I was 11 or 12 & that was because I craved something more than Star Wars or Star Trek. I wanted hard sci fi, like ALIEN or
The production was a little bit cheesy, but the actors were superb. Kyle MacLachlan, Francesca Annis and Sean Young are perfect. Having read the book just before the film was released, I could have been disappointed, but I wasn't. The special effects were clearly behind, but it didn't matter too much because the actors' performances largely made up for it.
@@fixups6536 Actually some of the fx in the 1st hour were mind blowing. That shot of the entire House Atreides fucking with that massive heighliner was incredible and though dated now, those shield fx were actually one of the 1st digital cgi fx ever . Toward the end they were running out of money. I know 45 million was alot back in 84. Idk what it would be in today's dollars. My guess is something close to 110 to 125 million , but Villeneuve is getting 200 million to tell half the story. Quite a bit different situation.
I love Lynch’s version, yet it frustrates me at the same time, the first half is amazing, especially the set pieces. The second half feels like a highlights reel, the scenes are clipped and it feels like vital details are skipped over.
I was lying in the Desert listening to this and fell asleep. Upon awakening I found myself covered in Sand Trout. My Skin is not my own. I burrowed deep into the Sand and dreamed of Past, Present and Future Times for the rest of Eternity.
I recorded this on a shitty cassette player off of Hearts of Space in, I dunno, 84 or 85 on a Sunday night? And went to sleep listening to it until I was old enough to drive. It's one of the top tracks on "The Soundtrack of My Life."
Hearts of Space. Was that in the same period as that other program, "Musical Starstreams"? I had a hard time with that show every time the host/announcer Forest came on with his ridiculous electronically manipulated voice. I kept asking, "Why?"
@@snowmansid I've actually listened to a few of their songs, nowhere near all, I know 5 I think, and thanks for telling me of the bad ones, I sometimes get discouraged or convinced that the music is not for me. Thanks :D
After seeing some of the comments below, I think many of Dune's viewers got the point. And this theme, from Brian Eno, is one of the most mystical/spiritual sounding pieces. It always brings tears to my eyes, as if I am listening to a lost song from ancient of ancient times.
this music reminds me of the time i flew in a starship past Orion and the Tennhauser Gate, with moonbeams from Plexus bouncing off the iridium light waves.I was with a small crew including an alpha replicant called Roy Batty. He later escaped to Earth.
I was followed by an iridium light in central australia. It was about the size of a bowling ball but chrome. It would change directions like lightning and track your speed. Your story is great imagery imaginary however mine was not. The aborigines call the min min lights, I call it a vehicle from beyond earth.
So much I love about this movie that keeps bringing me back. Imagine the solar system in 30,000 years if we manage to live off world! Races of people forging their own cultures and evolving separately. Eno encapsulates the sheer vastness of space and the suffering of the future generations.
For me the old adaptation is a true masterpiece in all levels. When Lynch and Eno join their artistic minds and create this unforgettable rare moments while you simply watch a film ..
it had been years since I saw Dune, and had forgotten how awesome the music was. Growing up listening to late night Ambient radio on Double J back then, this bring back so many memories The Sleeper has awoken.
Yep, the Ambient programme with Arnold Frollows on JJ .... it was the high point of the week, a couple of hours of Astral travelling every Sunday night. Loved it!
It was tripple J by the time I was listening to his brilliant ambient program. I live in the UK now but I'll never forget lying in my bed letting his selection wash over me.
That moment the bassiness (can't think of a better term) comes in at 0:47 gives me shivers and enraptures me, especially while listening with quality headphones
"Tolerating oneself can be the hardest task in the universe" or so is what Duncan Idahos ghola repeated to Alia after saying it to Paul. For me this piece seems to reflect Pauls (and Alias) thought process of being trapped in the state of mind of knowing that no one can ever really understand you.
Grandiose, magical, mystical, cosmic, in a few musical phrases, Brian Eno, one of the most famous travelers in time and space, folds the universe for us and brings Arrakis to life before our eyes and in our hearts. Dune and its procession of cruelty, drama, and mortal splendors. Zimmer is so far behind that it almost becomes disloyal to try to compare them.
Dune makes me feel so small. Just the ideas behind it, the philosophy, it warps my mind. This music perfectly conveys that floating feeling, my own lack of understanding.
Apollo, atmospheres and soundtracks, is another gem by Eno. Klaus Schulze made an album inspired by and called Dune and a song called Frank Herbert in the album X.
This piece is just one of the (if not the) most powerful, yet ethereal art piece, and as said below he managed to say it all in one piece. Brian Eno is practically the inventor of Shimmer reverb, which he achieved by serializing around $30.000 of hardware. Now you can find excellent quality software shimmer reverb plugins (ex: Valhalla Shimmer), for fifty bucks... 😁
brian eno is like vangelis in a sense, they are gifted with music and sound, they are the gods of the electronic sound..., this piece is so special, this music is the sound of arrakis desert.... you know that the spice giant worms are below you as you walk in the sand......
Africa and into Dakar where I felt ALIVE. Every time I hear this music it takes me back to then, a time where I felt so free from anything ever, a feeling of peace and tranquillity and more that is just indescribable in words, I am so happy to experience it with my best buddy, something that we will take to the heavens and beyond when our time is up. Live Life, Love Life...LIVE.
It's amazing how, after watching Dune: Part One and Two, I immediately went on to watch the David Lynch version. It feels like time unfolds differently in his film, the Lynch version is truly mesmerizing!
One of my favorite ambient pieces. Used to listen to this as a kid, playing the record (I still have it!), with my headphones on. So layered, dreamlike. Gives me a floating feeling...
It's fascinating to think Eno would have composed this right after, or maybe even during, his first time working with U2. That album, The Unforgettable Fire, was recorded ca. May-July 1984 (and released at the end of September/beginning of October). Dune came out in December 1984. The prophecy theme would most likely have come about between those two events
Some of the eno stuff is cool but scenes of paul and Stilgar vigerously climbing upon and harnessing the power of the biggest cock...er phallic symbol in the universe set to TOTO' heavier tunes rock guitars was ridiculously out of place and should've been redone
Great music. And I love the image you picked from the movie to go with it. Yah, the old Dune was much more transporting and deep than the new one. Zimmer has done some good stuff, but his Dune music doesn't have the magic that Eno's did. Eno nailed it. Zimmer's treatment has too much sampled percussive effects and sound design that sounds just like the other stuff he has done. Best Zimmer was on Rainman, Gladiator, Interstellar and Inception IMO. But his treatment of Dune and Blade Runner fell short for me. The 80's had more soul. Music and cinematography were not so homogenized. I'm just glad we have the likes of Jonny Greenwood to make interesting film music now. But yah, this Eno track is great.
@@JPJMando It’s a beautiful piece, don’t get me wrong, but it’s an ambient cinematic drone that repeats a theme and a narrow set of tones for 12 minutes. Tears in Rain is an orchestral synth masterpiece. The intricately arranged dynamics, musical progressions, diverse tone, and production quality are just on an other level entirely. Not even in the same universe. Emotional reaction to music is entirely subjective so I can’t compare them in that regard. Personally though, I find that this piece (along with lots of Enos music) gives me more of a zoned out and relaxed feeling while Tears in Rain has my eyes welling up for 3 straight minutes.
Greatest sci fi movie ever .. Epic ... Eno is the God of Ambient & Atmospheric music &.... Perhaps the most influential person in music the last 50 years
This reminds me of working at a laser games centre when I was 17 in the early 90s. My dad had the film on vhs took me several watches to understand what was f was going on and I kept returning to it like a novel. Still by far amongst the most sublime cinema ever made in my life time (along with blade runner and apocalypse now..) in how image and sound can be combined in art. For all their sham drudgery and broken dreams these films are perfect as they ended up imho.
Well after years of memes and "the sleeper must awaken" stuff i finally decided to watch it. Wow. Its weirdly fantastic. I don't think the atmosphere of dune can ever be recaptured.
honestly this track is the best thing about the old Dune, whenever it kicks in the movie really becomes transcendent
totally agree
All due respect to Hans Zimmer, I think Brian Eno's Prophecy Theme captures the spirit of the book better than anything in the new movie's score.
I agree
The new movie’s score is not memorable. Nothing-no part-stands out. Villaneuve should get the rights to this for the water of life scene.
I might be crazy, because I could swear I heard hints of the old main theme throughout the new Dune! or maybe my mind was filling the gap left by that bizarre throat chant the movie opened with
I thought the score was good, it created the tension it needed. That being said it’s not something I’m going to put my headphones on and listen to. Brian Eno”s music transports the listener into another world. So lonely yet beautiful.
@@sunsetman22 So I heard...
This captures the awe, the loneliness, the mystery, the haunting cosmic horror, and the very slight hope peeking through the infinite desolate abyss.
How y think it's desolate ,distance, that was addressed in its origins
Zimmer sent his musicians around the world to find the best sound, Eno sent his mind off world.
Great comment.
It comes now…the Eno from the outer world…
Sent
Bro I was watching the extended cut of dune 1984 to specifically hear this theme and learn more about the context but its not even in it! And if that's not enough, the movie sucks too. Denni's good, lynch's bad.
@@trueromani7262 There is a fan edit on YT of Dune 1984 that adds in loads of cut scenes and lost footage. There is also added dialogue to flesh everything out. It's like the version David Lynch wanted to release. It's the most complete version out.
Apocalypse now 1979 Blade runner 1982 Terminator 1984
Dune 1984
I was in my 20's, fascinated by these movies and their soundtracks ! No nostalgia, just awesome memories. Thank for sharing this soundtrack.
Same here. I loved Apocalypse Now in 1979, when I was 17. And I enjoyed Dune in 1984. Watched it several times since. I'm watching it all over again before it leaves Netflix in September 2023, and I appreciate it more now that before. And I love this piece of music from it.
and "Christophe Colomb"
@@jeanlamer6764 1492: Conquer to paradise?
I was born in 79 and 4 in 84" 12/12/79 so I watched this with my dad who was the cable guy for rte he hooked up the whole of Dublin 10 and there was peace 😌⚡🙌🤓🇮🇪
@@constancekavanagh1125 rte? Radio and televisión española? Jk.
"I must not fear.
Fear is the mind-killer.
Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration.
I will face my fear.
I will permit it to pass over me and through me.
And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path.
Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain." ~ Frank Herbert
Justin Bullard 👌👏👏👏👏
Truth itself..Jesus even said, fear no evil. Fear nothing and only immortal you will remain...untouchable and pure.
bravo
THE PAIN!!!!!
Fear is from the evil ruler of this world; NOT from the Lord and Savior of the world in eternity. The war has been won!!
My favorite soundtrack of all time, it resonates with me like nothing else , it’s not meant to be ‘spa’ sounds to just relax to but more of a deep feeling it invokes which can be sadness, longing, awe of the universe. It’s meant to take the mind to places we might fear or refuse to see, vulnerability can be a good thing if we accept it. And maybe learn something about ourselves along the way
I agree!
Try Ludwig von Beethoven
Even Hans Zimmer failed to somehow transmit this mixed feelings of self and universal consciousness...
Wonderfully said
You talk like a Tool fan
With all due respect to Zimmer, the soundtrack of the 1984 film is something that can't be topped
parts of the Zimmer soundtrack had hints of the 1984 soundtrack... so I kept expecting to hear it, and was sadly disappointed. There is no comparison... I searched for years to find the 1984 dune soundtrack in stores.... I only had a tape recording I made from a record I borrowed from the library. Oddly enough, I listened to the tape recording so much, I missed hearing the the little ticks from the record recording mixed in with the soundtrack when I would listen to the CD.
I really hope someone re scores the new Dune with the 1984 soundtrack if possible. Best of both worlds.
Agreed
the 1984 music is wonderful glorious and also to me evokes the terrifying vastness and mystery of the universe
Listen and let yourself drift through eternity
Genius
Well, the Toto parts were fucking HORRIBLE...
It simply cannot be topped 😁
When this music started in the film it was like it was making me think of prophets from the Bible like lynch set it up with eno to hit like something new you recognize as familiar. Like the total insane power of being chosen by destiny to be the messiah of a people is such a crazy thing that this weird eerie foreboding and scary music is the only way to communicate that power coming to fruition.
I'll miss the sea, but a person needs new experiences. They jar something deep inside, allowing him to grow. Without change something sleeps inside us, and seldom awakens. The sleeper must awaken.
i agree, moving away from the coast, i remember this , having said that, if you have ever been taken away from the shore, you will empathise with the atreides
Dang, that was on the money. Bravo.
Holds true in life doesn't it...
I feel this more than ever.
Deepest quote from any movie in my opinion...and to have it said by Jurgen Proknow!
I didn't realize just how much I liked Brian Eno until I found out he wrote this Prophecy theme. I've watched the original Dune movie so many times and, to this day, this theme is still mesmerizing to listen to and adds so much depth and fascination to Paul's messianic destiny. Just beautiful and timeless.
Indeed
you haved find the Way :=)
Time is irrelevant and so iz the hadaric ,balance no more y all bring the colours 😊
@@desgrangesjean-marie5397only what I can overstnd ,a birds feather can be many colours in the same moments 😊❤
This is the sound of pure loneliness in the universe.
you have a good ear and imagination.
@@kronoscamron7412 Thanks.
It was used by Troika for a post-apoc game that was never developed. They made a demo using this theme and the track fit like a velvet glove (ruclips.net/video/NvgSGxNTADI/видео.html). I think I want this track to be played at my funeral, together with Rhubarb by Aphex Twin. I want everyone to feel bad and cry their guts out. I'm worthy.
@@repentantsinner2213 very well put.
The Lord God Leto *was* alone, with precious Hwee his only salvation.
This movie was a musical and visual masterpiece.
It was also damn boring
koalabrownie lol yep it was not perfect
@@erifkind Denis Villeneuve is gonna deliver something amazing though
David Lynch
It might be visually stunning but it’s woke. Lynch’s Dune was flawed but has something no one can touch upon.
I live 20 Minutes away from the NAMIB DESERT/NAMIBIA.....when I listened to this Song right in the Dunes,I SWEAR I saw WORMSIGNS !!!! (Greatings from Swakopmund)
By far the best track out of all the movies, and Hans Zimmer knocked it out of the park for the new ones
I really, *really* hope Zimmer makes use of this track (a cover likely) for Part Three, it’s just *gotta happen.*
I have stood deep in the Libyan Sahara listening to this. It was curiously eerie and yet beautiful all at once.
...a person needs new experiences.
Shock the mind and awaken the soul.
I would love nothing more than to go to the eye of the Sahara and listen to this
You mean "both" at the same time, Ben the Ignorant.
The perfect setting.
Wow that's really cool .!
I love this theme. It captures the universe of Arrakis (Dune). It’s dreamy and eerie maybe even beautiful. A great piece of work by Brian Eno he definitely captures the whole atmosphere of it and the concept in general.
Fell asleep listening to this; then a commercial came on and behold the sleeper has awoken.
that is too funny
Lmao. The sleeper must awaken!
In each of us there is a sleeper that must be awakened!
Brilliant! I don’t think Eno would like his creation interrupted by garbage for sale. It’s unbelievable.
AdBlock Plus, protect yourself from such damage..
There's such an ethereal essence to this song, but also a sense of determination and sheer willpower to overcome fear.
80s ambient music ALWAYS hits the spot
Absolutely, and Brian Eno is the master of the genre ! :)
@@StephenDedalus74 Love him
Lynch's version is a work of art. Absolutely timeless.
Denis version is semi woke trash in a pretty wrapper.
I’ve always found it very dated, even when I saw it in ‘84.
@@Tommii38 you are looking at it from the wrong perspective. You have to look at it from a Lynch perspective. He tries to bury into your subconscious, which he does really well in this version of Dune.
100%. I absolutely love Dune 1984. I can watch Dune 1984 a million times and never tire of it. Lynch captured Dune's weirdness arguably better than Denis Villeneuve's version.
Villeneuve's movies are good, but not quite as good as the fan edit of David Lynch's DUNE from 1984.
One of the simplest, yet brilliant and haunting pieces of music ever made!
nothing simple about it
Evokes a lot
I agree
k v - Yes it is.
@@kv7164 actually it is quite simple and that is the brilliance of Eno.
Strange how this film(original) isn't shown anymore on TV . So underrated . Beautiful music ✨
netflix
Stop watching TV channels.
The extended version is on youtube in HD. Watched it last week
It's the fucking CIA, I've been telling people about this, they don't want us to watch this gem.
@@usoppgostoso yeah, hits too close to home, like how we got completely routed in the middle east but are still an energy based economy.
Eno's works will live in eternity, as long as we remember the prophecy.
Agreed
The child that learns nothing
Brian Eno is a true artistic genius. Music for Airports is mindbogglingly hypnotizing.
ye^p and none
dude !
Also Music for installations!
One of the most beautiful pieces of music, takes you away to another place.
One of the most underrated sci-fi movies ever made. So good
The movie itself wasn't really good. Let's hope Villeneuve makes something out of this masterpiece
The longer directors cut that's four hours long is the best!!! They should have made this into two movies, movie exec's are sooooo stupid. Best Lynch ever..... He really did this story justice.
@@spiritwardiaries They are making it into 2 movies and its being done by Denis Villeneuve so its in good hands.
@@Yiroooo like it reads below...the 4 hour version is a whole different experience. ..
@@Yiroooo
the movie for its time was very good
but many of the interesting parts for depth of characters were not done unfortunately
a big loser at the box office
I truly doubt anyone currently worldwide could do better
dialogue isn't governing filmmaking anymore cgi is tragically
the best sci-fi with complex characters and action scenes is EXPANSE
Brian Eno should have been asked to compose the entire soundtrack of DUNE.
This piece is PERFECT for the film!
TOTO composed as well a wonderful soundtrack masterpiece
Legend has it he did but it was replaced by Toto's score, there are some bits of music in the film not composed by Toto that sound very similar to Brian's work, it's believed to be from that score.
I find it hard to believe that Dune was written in the 60's. It looks to the future on so many levels and covers such a wide expanse in the human story. Frank Herbert must have been a visionary genius no less!!
He extrapolated the political Situation on Earth. So for nearly everything in Dune there is a real World Counterpart. One of the Things that amazed me though was his Idea about Mentats - so he forsaw that Robots/AI will be developed, will stage a War against Humanity, Humanity will win that War (kinda the Scenario from Terminator) and all sorts of AI will be forbidden afterwards so Humans have to become as competent in Mathematics as AI was before...
I thought for a while if he is in the same League as a SciFi-Prophet as Philip K. Dick. While he surely had an unusual Brain and great Thoughts and was highly intelligent he might have not forseen the Future like Dick did. So I value his Work very high yet Dick seems to be the greater Prophet to me.
Carlos Fandango. He was most definitely operating on a higher level than most of us but is smart enough to dumb himself down enough to write something like we mere mortals can understand. You should just read the book man. Before the movie
@@michaelscott7916 i only listened to the audiobook, but oh boi was it a ride. its just so full of wisdom
@@Ezekielepharcelis It's not that simplifies. There was no war against the machines Terminator or even Matrix style . Our technology has simply reached a tipping point where we were really no longer needed for much of anything so upon becoming a type unnecessary, redundant afterthought to our technology, humanity began to fall into a state of complete apathy but lucky for humanity a segment of humanity saw what was happening, that being human extinction and what started as a philosophical, then political agenda exploded into violence and bloodshed.The Buliterian Jihad, the fanatics & their cause spread throughout the imperium and when it was all over the fanatics had won and said there's going to be new commandments if you will. The 1st and biggest, NO THINKING MACHINES. No A I. Which negated an enormous amount of our technology, including the highly advanced supercomputers that made the nano second course corrections on any given jump through space time or when they 'folded' space. Without that our empire would be lost, isolated from one another by vast distances of space. I mean you could chance it. We had already created the engine that did the actual space travel but it fell to computers to get us there safe. Without those computers you might run into a sun or some great rock in space
@@Ezekielepharcelis There's one gigantic, notable exception though, and I love what Phillip k. dick did for scifi but most of his work takes place in s not too distant future that is just a nudge or 2 from where we're at now. In the world of Dune we were supposed to have passed the technological state of most of the cyberpunk era literally thousands of years before the events of Dune rolls around. Herbert isn't writing about the year 2049 or 2160 . Herbert is writing about the year 10,1 91 and beyond. That's a pretty big difference
Resignation, sense of loss, sweet and sad nostalgia. I have never heard anything better evoke these feelings
The soundtrack held the movie together and elevated Dune to an ethereal mystique place in cinema.
Friggin Brian Eno.
One of the most fitting pieces of music to a film/scene ever.
... check this ....ruclips.net/video/DRiNpVslI_c/видео.html
@@estebanposadaduque6415 100%, this is also the perfect soundtrack to listen to whilst reading the book too!
Never could understand people's dislike for this movie.
many people have a limited ability to imagine alternatives that could exist elswhere, maybe, hopefully :))
They were grossed out by the, let's say, earthier elements. It requires a higher sensibility that sees the beauty of meaning even in the arbitrarily meaningless and disgusting. Furthermore, one comes to appreciate the contrasts Lynch was trying to portray aesthetically. Lastly, there remains a camp of people who simply do not get it at all. Why? Because Dune is a religious movie that rests on certain philosophical premises that you can't understand if you weren't raised with them. For example, the people of the religious traditions that make sense out of Lynch's actual messianic Muad'dib (very very different from Herbert's largely politically fraudulent Muad'dib) are used to thinking about life as, 1) evolutionary, that humanity is evolving teleologically; and 2) that the human being is evolving toward divinity -- the convergence of the will with the natural laws of nature. This is an easy leap for someone raised in a Christian environment with the god-man Jesus archetype everywhere in their lives, it is even easier when you superimpose that image on a multicultural scientific society much concerned with universality and science fiction and material possibilities and progress. And yet even easier when you combine that with a sense of totally comprehensive natural destiny imparted by a meditative practice. Well, that was America in 1984, and it was David Lynch's deep personal experience, and those are the cultural prerequisites to understand the film. I have watched the movie with adult people who literally asked at the end, "How did he make it rain?!" They don't know what they don't know.
@@kevbridges3387 Such as Gene Siskel, who also gave a thumbs down to Silence of the Lambs. Yikes.
It's not a mystery it's a bad film. It murders the story of Dune. The film opens with a wall of text and multiple inner monologues. That's completely mental. Not even the director likes it. It's visually wonderful though.
@@GrimJackal IMHO it's a better story than the novels, and inner dialogue storytelling is excellent.
Brian Eno is a music wizard.
Used to watch this movie a lot with my father before he passed away. Naturally when I listen to this now it makes me feel sad plus the current situation as well only amplifies that feeling of sadness.
Our memories etched into song is such an incredible ability. Your father will always be with you because music can never be taken away from us. This made me cry reading your words and I want you to know how touching it was for you to share such a raw memory paired with emotion.
@@cassattack Thank you for your warm kind words :)
My father was the one who gave me the book. And then VHS with the movie. He's gone now for two years, but his water is still with me. Sending virtual hug and hold on... they never really leave. One day we'll meet again.
@@cassattack "....music can never be taken away from us."
This is sooooo true. My mother suffered with dementia for years. She lost skills, ability to perform tasks, names and faces, eventually even the ability to form coherent sentences, then her vocabulary was reduced to a three year old's. But MUSIC! A lifetime of music listening, playing and appreciating was literally bonded in her essence so well that it was the only thing not lost.
Our last visit was Christmas Day. We took family photos and sang Christmas songs and played classical music. She knew all the verses better than me, still. She passed in January, and the music and memories are forever.
@@vendingdudes Such a beautiful life she had, friend. What a great way to remeber her too.
This is the film that deserves *not* to be lost or forgotten, even when the delayed-but-soon-expected one comes out. I'm sure it will be good. But *this* film from 1984, especially its music, should *not* be just cast aside! It was perfectly cast... *yes* including Kyle MacLachlan as Paul! {Look, he might not have looked *exactly* like he was 15 years old, like in the novel, but so what? He *did* look young enough to be a Duke's son, and he *did* act the role to absolute perfection.} And it was *also* perfectly scored. Who here can honestly say they remember much of anything from the music of that gawd-awful miniseries? *Either* of them? Yeah, well, not me either.
I regard *this* 1984 production as one of the 10 best Science-Fiction films of all time; even with its two large flaws of 1.) The syrupy-sweet ending, ignoring Paul's anguish at his prescient knowledge of the bad things that would be done in his name, and 2.) It being almost impossible to take the Harkonnens seriously. It's still a fantastic film. Everything from the cinematography to the acting was otherwise splendid. Critics who disliked it were biased by their training and education. And I wouldn't change that for anything. They *have* to be educated in "the classics" to do their job properly. But that background makes them hopelessly biased against the entire genre of Sci-Fi, since it's oriented in the *other* direction, the future. Therefore, they should *never* be listened to when it comes to any work of that genre. Instead, refer to the counsel of true Science-Fiction fans.
I do want to see the eventually-to-be-released updated movie. And I hope it's good, and that its music is good. But even if it's phenomenal, even if it's 10 times better than Director David Lynch's work from 1984, I *still* will always *also* want to steer peple towards *that* one every bit as much as this soon-expected one...or any other that may come after.
Timelord You're right in that many critics at the time, especially Gene Siskel, just didn't give the film negative reviews,they went far above and beyond their job description in their hatred for this film which tells me they had agendas. Be personal or financial or whatever, they had them. I loved this film when I was 11 or 12 & that was because I craved something more than Star Wars or Star Trek. I wanted hard sci fi, like ALIEN or
Look for the SpiceDiver's DUNE REDUX fan edit. It will blow your mind!
The production was a little bit cheesy, but the actors were superb. Kyle MacLachlan, Francesca Annis and Sean Young are perfect. Having read the book just before the film was released, I could have been disappointed, but I wasn't. The special effects were clearly behind, but it didn't matter too much because the actors' performances largely made up for it.
@@fixups6536 Actually some of the fx in the 1st hour were mind blowing. That shot of the entire House Atreides fucking with that massive heighliner was incredible and though dated now, those shield fx were actually one of the 1st digital cgi fx ever . Toward the end they were running out of money. I know 45 million was alot back in 84. Idk what it would be in today's dollars. My guess is something close to 110 to 125 million , but Villeneuve is getting 200 million to tell half the story. Quite a bit different situation.
I love Lynch’s version, yet it frustrates me at the same time, the first half is amazing, especially the set pieces. The second half feels like a highlights reel, the scenes are clipped and it feels like vital details are skipped over.
Ce morceau de Brian Eno pour Dune reflète parfaitement le voyage dans la solitude de l'univers.
I was lying in the Desert listening to this and fell asleep.
Upon awakening I found myself covered in Sand Trout.
My Skin is not my own.
I burrowed deep into the Sand and dreamed of Past, Present and Future Times for the rest of Eternity.
I recorded this on a shitty cassette player off of Hearts of Space in, I dunno, 84 or 85 on a Sunday night? And went to sleep listening to it until I was old enough to drive. It's one of the top tracks on "The Soundtrack of My Life."
Hearts of Space. Was that in the same period as that other program, "Musical Starstreams"?
I had a hard time with that show every time the host/announcer Forest came on with his ridiculous electronically manipulated voice. I kept asking, "Why?"
Same here, I still have the tape!
I was truly hoping this piece of music was in the new Dune film.
Unfortunately not.
Such a masterpiece 👏
I join your with a wish they use this theme in new version. Maybe in Part 2? Lets hope. :)
This is really one of the best "Eno" songs ever! it really makes me feel like if I was really entering into another whole new dimension! 👍
Haunting. I love this type of stuff especially while driving late at night or raining.
Do you know any other types of songs that you would put into this genre? O:
probably some church shit
@@dinosaurcj Tangerine Dream produced some good tracks, just need to look between the bad ones.
@@snowmansid I've actually listened to a few of their songs, nowhere near all, I know 5 I think, and thanks for telling me of the bad ones, I sometimes get discouraged or convinced that the music is not for me. Thanks :D
@@snowmansid Out of curiosity, what are your thoughts on "The Big Sleep in Search of Hades - Stratosfear" ?
this is perhaps the most calming and comforting piece of music ive heard. its like a breathing, deeply and slowly
Experiencing original Dune and Prophecy Theme, as a young boy all those years ago, had a profound impact on me, almost as the spice itself.
This movie made me want to become the Quizat Hadarat! And this beautiful tune inspired me to believe that it was possible!
After seeing some of the comments below, I think many of Dune's viewers got the point. And this theme, from Brian Eno, is one of the most mystical/spiritual sounding pieces. It always brings tears to my eyes, as if I am listening to a lost song from ancient of ancient times.
So true
This is a world class piece.
with Brian Eno soundscape sci fi is a pleasure to travel with , the fear is etherised
Ancient Music from 10,000 years into the Future.
@@RIXRADvidz Same feelings
Transcendental. I am in awe of this music and it’s impact on my thoughts, soul and spirit.
this music reminds me of the time i flew in a starship past Orion and the Tennhauser Gate, with moonbeams from Plexus bouncing off the iridium light waves.I was with a small crew including an alpha replicant called Roy Batty. He later escaped to Earth.
I wonder what happened to him
I was followed by an iridium light in central australia. It was about the size of a bowling ball but chrome. It would change directions like lightning and track your speed. Your story is great imagery imaginary however mine was not. The aborigines call the min min lights, I call it a vehicle from beyond earth.
@@justus7650 He was lost in time. Like tears in rain.
@@Agustin_Leal Like tears of time...in the rain of tomorrow...one angel flies...
hey, seems you mean mission from - Homeworld : Tenhauser Gate ? yes, its divine !
Brian Eno once again the greatest of all time, no one can make soundtracks as beautiful and chilling as this master
Enigmatic... Thought provoking... and profound...hauntingly beautiful as well...
Absolutely majestic! The soundscape created here is beyond comprehension!
So much I love about this movie that keeps bringing me back. Imagine the solar system in 30,000 years if we manage to live off world! Races of people forging their own cultures and evolving separately. Eno encapsulates the sheer vastness of space and the suffering of the future generations.
When I close my eyes and listen to this, I can feel myself travelling through space without moving.
THIS is the SPICE.
Brian Eno 's music is always so beautiful, evocative and atmospheric! I've listened to the new album which is amazing.
My wife and will be watching the movie again, cant get enough. the music is sureal.
This was way way better than thr modern soundtrack..
For me the old adaptation is a true masterpiece in all levels. When Lynch and Eno join their artistic minds and create this unforgettable rare moments while you simply watch a film ..
Like being taken to the edge of the universe and learning a terrible secret.
+Thomas Claughton
You can't since the edge goes faster then light.
And the other edge is too smale to be seen.
@@darksidedelta That's freaking fascinating.........
You are all great thinkers and feelers...you ain't seen nothing yet friends...
Or smelling a terrible stench.
@@brandonbentley8532 To what are you referring? O:
it had been years since I saw Dune, and had forgotten how awesome the music was.
Growing up listening to late night Ambient radio on Double J back then, this bring back so many memories The Sleeper has awoken.
Yep, the Ambient programme with Arnold Frollows on JJ .... it was the high point of the week, a couple of hours of Astral travelling every Sunday night. Loved it!
@@Maclabhruinn wow, two other people who know and remember this! You are awesome!
@@brandonbentley8532 And I am the third one ....thanks guys
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Frolows
It was tripple J by the time I was listening to his brilliant ambient program.
I live in the UK now but I'll never forget lying in my bed letting his selection wash over me.
Listening this after seeing Dune 2.
Bro... that was apotheosic 😭
Damn, I had to search the meaning for that word. I AGREE
That moment the bassiness (can't think of a better term) comes in at 0:47 gives me shivers and enraptures me, especially while listening with quality headphones
"Tolerating oneself can be the hardest task in the universe" or so is what Duncan Idahos ghola repeated to Alia after saying it to Paul. For me this piece seems to reflect Pauls (and Alias) thought process of being trapped in the state of mind of knowing that no one can ever really understand you.
Travelling without moving...
For me one of the best OST (and movies of course) existing!
This is the place they can not look.
Genuinely one of the best pieces of music ever created imo.
Grandiose, magical, mystical, cosmic, in a few musical phrases, Brian Eno, one of the most famous travelers in time and space, folds the universe for us and brings Arrakis to life before our eyes and in our hearts. Dune and its procession of cruelty, drama, and mortal splendors. Zimmer is so far behind that it almost becomes disloyal to try to compare them.
Dune makes me feel so small. Just the ideas behind it, the philosophy, it warps my mind. This music perfectly conveys that floating feeling, my own lack of understanding.
Apollo, atmospheres and soundtracks, is another gem by Eno.
Klaus Schulze made an album inspired by and called Dune and a song called Frank Herbert in the album X.
Yes, this very much reminds me of parts of Apollo.
This piece is just one of the (if not the) most powerful, yet ethereal art piece, and as said below he managed to say it all in one piece. Brian Eno is practically the inventor of Shimmer reverb, which he achieved by serializing around $30.000 of hardware. Now you can find excellent quality software shimmer reverb plugins (ex: Valhalla Shimmer), for fifty bucks... 😁
Goosebumps!
Loved this movie. No one else could have carried off the theme so well.
matt, straight to the point - ahead of time - generations!
Extraordinary Eno work, I've listened many many times; it has unexpected melodic-harmonic movement yet completely inevitable...
brian eno is like vangelis in a sense, they are gifted with music and sound, they are the gods of the electronic sound..., this piece is so special, this music is the sound of arrakis desert.... you know that the spice giant worms are below you as you walk in the sand......
This is so beautiful and timeless.
this is such a spiritual piece. stunning, something that makes you wander the universe and meaning of life
One of the most beautiful themes ever 🧡... I love reading the Dune book while listening to this and also great for relaxation ☺.
I listen to it also while reading. It complements some of the chapters in Dune so well
Africa and into Dakar where I felt ALIVE.
Every time I hear this music it takes me back to then, a time where I felt so free from anything ever, a feeling of peace and tranquillity and more that is just indescribable in words, I am so happy to experience it with my best buddy, something that we will take to the heavens and beyond when our time is up. Live Life, Love Life...LIVE.
The music must flow!
lol
Yes ,agreed comin from a atheist
This is an epic movie great cast, visually very realistic raw... nice music, great story
"FATHER, THE SLEEPER MUST AWAKEN!"
It's amazing how, after watching Dune: Part One and Two, I immediately went on to watch the David Lynch version. It feels like time unfolds differently in his film, the Lynch version is truly mesmerizing!
One of my favorite ambient pieces. Used to listen to this as a kid, playing the record (I still have it!), with my headphones on. So layered, dreamlike. Gives me a floating feeling...
Try his Apollo, atmospheres album.
SvenTviking yeah I know, thanks. Do you know The Pearl, with Harold Budd? Amazing...
It's fascinating to think Eno would have composed this right after, or maybe even during, his first time working with U2. That album, The Unforgettable Fire, was recorded ca. May-July 1984 (and released at the end of September/beginning of October). Dune came out in December 1984. The prophecy theme would most likely have come about between those two events
This is a stunningly beautiful piece of music. Absolutely love it.
good man ,you have a good taste in music
This soundtrack didn’t age at all. Still as awesome as ever. Gave me blade runner 2049 vibes. Good stuff
TOTO and BRIAN ENO
Great for reading.
@@bricharloe6146 haha, some would say that about the movie as well
Some of the eno stuff is cool but scenes of paul and Stilgar vigerously climbing upon and harnessing the power of the biggest cock...er phallic symbol in the universe set to TOTO' heavier tunes rock guitars was ridiculously out of place and should've been redone
blade runner 2049 is gay
Blade Runner 2019 not 2049
this sound make me nostalgic from a time for ever disapears .... ahhh the 80's
One of my favorite pieces of music ever. Don't underestimate
Great music. And I love the image you picked from the movie to go with it. Yah, the old Dune was much more transporting and deep than the new one. Zimmer has done some good stuff, but his Dune music doesn't have the magic that Eno's did. Eno nailed it. Zimmer's treatment has too much sampled percussive effects and sound design that sounds just like the other stuff he has done. Best Zimmer was on Rainman, Gladiator, Interstellar and Inception IMO. But his treatment of Dune and Blade Runner fell short for me. The 80's had more soul. Music and cinematography were not so homogenized. I'm just glad we have the likes of Jonny Greenwood to make interesting film music now. But yah, this Eno track is great.
Legendary song for a legendary movie!
Akin to the brilliance of tears in rain.
thats it! thats the feeling this song inspires EXACTLY. how did you do that?
@@RickOConnell327
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe.....
Not even comparable..
@@R3VICTION State why.
@@JPJMando It’s a beautiful piece, don’t get me wrong, but it’s an ambient cinematic drone that repeats a theme and a narrow set of tones for 12 minutes. Tears in Rain is an orchestral synth masterpiece. The intricately arranged dynamics, musical progressions, diverse tone, and production quality are just on an other level entirely. Not even in the same universe.
Emotional reaction to music is entirely subjective so I can’t compare them in that regard. Personally though, I find that this piece (along with lots of Enos music) gives me more of a zoned out and relaxed feeling while Tears in Rain has my eyes welling up for 3 straight minutes.
Timeless ... and always inspiring .
I've loved this piece since the first time I saw the movie
Greatest sci fi movie ever .. Epic ... Eno is the God of Ambient & Atmospheric music &.... Perhaps the most influential person in music the last 50 years
I've been looking for this track for more than 20 years, without knowing its name nor its composer's name!
This music will be eternal.
This reminds me of working at a laser games centre when I was 17 in the early 90s. My dad had the film on vhs took me several watches to understand what was f was going on and I kept returning to it like a novel. Still by far amongst the most sublime cinema ever made in my life time (along with blade runner and apocalypse now..) in how image and sound can be combined in art. For all their sham drudgery and broken dreams these films are perfect as they ended up imho.
Bifar?
Brian Eno's music pulls me to a place from I just don't wanna return. Just a pen,notebook and a few thoughts.
Absolutely beautiful piece of music. Both evocative and serene in equal measure.
Great choice of tracks and I really appreciate the extra effort you've put into including images/video too. Top notch stuff.
It is rumored that Eno did an entire score for the movie, but it was all tossed out except for this bit.
Well after years of memes and "the sleeper must awaken" stuff i finally decided to watch it. Wow. Its weirdly fantastic. I don't think the atmosphere of dune can ever be recaptured.
this music is ageless and captures the spirituality and essence of dune. The spice must flow!
This song gives me the Weirding Way!!