The Dune soundtrack was done by the soft rock band Toto, which was something incomprehensibly weird to me at the time, but makes some sense when you realize that one of the band’s members was the son of composer John Williams. It’s actually good, standard orchestral music with the exception of the guitar power chord moment you linked to, which actually made me laugh out loud when I saw/heard it in the theater for the first time. Personally, I would have preferred this as the soundtrack; it was created by the band Jade Warrior as an attempt to get the gig for Lynch’s movie.
The only part of the movie which made me laugh harder than the guitar was Sting’s appearance. Just wildly out of place in a movie that was at least a visual masterpiece. And you can’t go wrong with Joergen Prochnow.
The Dune soundtrack was done by the soft rock band Toto, which was something incomprehensibly weird to me at the time, but makes some sense when you realize that one of the band’s members was the son of composer John Williams. It’s actually good, standard orchestral music with the exception of the guitar power chord moment you linked to, which actually made me laugh out loud when I saw/heard it in the theater for the first time. Personally, I would have preferred this as the soundtrack; it was created by the band Jade Warrior as an attempt to get the gig for Lynch’s movie.
The only part of the movie which made me laugh harder than the guitar was Sting’s appearance. Just wildly out of place in a movie that was at least a visual masterpiece. And you can’t go wrong with Joergen Prochnow.
I think it is ironic that most of Villeneuve’s Dune Soundtrack by Hans Zimmer has a ton of heavily processed electric guitar.