Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Though "silent," it was released with a Movietone music and sound effects track.
Mars Single Record 4, with the same content of single records 1 and 3, except it didn't include the sound effects track.
Shorts marked with an asterisk (*) were originally released with a synchronized music and sound effects track.
Cat, Dog, and Co. was released with a synchronized music and sound effects track on phonographic disc.
This release includes all the music featured in the film, as well as a remix of the main theme and two sound effects tracks from the film itself.
Once the dialogue editor has completed the dialogue track, the re-recording mixer then mixes it with the music and sound effects tracks to produce the final soundtrack.
It was shot in December 1928 and released March 23, 1929 by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer with a synchronized music and sound effects track in theaters equipped for sound.
Two scripts were written, and one episode, entitled "The Man From the Past", was fully animated with a music and sound effects track, but the voice-overs were never recorded.
It will an atmospheric art design and style, as well as a atmospheric sound effects track and a score composed by Lee-Darkin Miller, inspired by Irish folk music.
Although technically a silent film - having intertitles and no synchronized dialogue - it was the inaugural Roach film released with a synchronized music and sounds effects track for theatres wired for sound.
Wrong Again is one of the several silent Laurel and Hardy short films that were made with a synchronized music and sound effects track; after its initial theatrical run in 1929, it was rarely seen and overshadowed by the sound films.
Initially the dialogue, sound effects, and music in a film each has its own separate track (dialogue track, sound effects track, and music track), and these are mixed together to make what is called the composite track, which is heard in the film.
Cosmos had long been unavailable after its initial release because of copyright issues with the included music, but was released in 2000 on worldwide NTSC DVD, which includes subtitles in seven languages, remastered 5.1 sound, as well as an alternate music and sound effects track.
The name is taken from a sound effects track from Blake's 7 on BBC Sound Effects No. 26 - Sci-Fi Sound Effects called "The Core, A Huge Evergrowing Pulsating Brain which Rules from the Centre of Ultraworld".
Although there were complaints that it spoiled the feel of the show, it remained for the rest of the show's run, with the exception of the Season 6 Episode "Oh Brian" (written by Tony Gardner (Brian)) which saw Brian & Sophie creating their own comedy show with audience sound effects tracks.