http://www.boundarycreek.com/armageddon-soundtrack/
Armageddon Soundtrack
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Armageddon: The Album $4.93 There was a time when Aerosmith was a great rock band. Then, just a few years before vocalist Steven Tyler’s daughter, Liv Tyler, grew up and became a movie star, they transformed into one of the premier purveyors of power ballads–songs, in essence, that are as vapid as the big summer blow-’em-up movies, like, oh, say, Armageddon. In which Liv Tyler stars. Convenient, no? The soundtrack, which in… |
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The Science Fiction Album $17.41 All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed…. |
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Armageddon (Dig) $9.99 All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed…. |
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PlayStation 3 40GB Metal Gear Solid 4 Gray Kojima Bundle $449.99 As DVD playback made the PlayStation 2 more than just a game machine, hefty multi-media features make the Sony PlayStation 3 an even more versatile home entertainment machine. Features such as video chat, Internet access, digital photo viewing, and digital audio and video could make it the central component of your media set-up. Still, it is first and foremost a game console, and a powerful one at… |
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Worms Armageddon $18.50 Have fun with the Worms double pack together on one disc! Enter the bizarre and fantastic cartoon world where you wreak havoc on your rivals in a game of revenge and petty-minded cruelty. Get ready for an all out strategy game…are you up for the challenge for Worms Armageddon and Worms 2?… |

Artist Matthew Brannon’s Art Work and Paintings at the Saatchi Gallery
Matthew Brannon’s work explores the gulf between social ideals and personal crisis. Using screen printing as form of analogue reproduction, Brannon’s images carry both the suggestion of mass replication and aura of original artworks. Directly challenging the void between language and actuality, Brannon often combines text and image to illustrate the potential for dysfunction. In Police Officer Giving Up, Brannon juxtaposes a neutral symbol of a houseplant with a statement of desperation. Exuding the inadequate sentiment of greeting cards, Brannon offers decoration as a feeble mask for emotional depletion.
Matthew Brannon’s How It All Ends he creates an ironic game of semiotics, using an abstracted plant as a visual representation of the accompanied text. Reworking a subject associated with art historical religious paintings, he doesn’t present a fiery Armageddon or cherubic heaven, but rather a bland composition reminiscent of wall paper swatches or gift shop stamps. The image is compelling through its crafted elegance, creating a blithe meditative focus. In confronting the spiritual, Brannon offers a bereft philosophy, conceiving the human condition with disappointment and chagrin.
Matthew Brannon’s work investigates media imagery as a cultural interface, exploring the gap between expectation and inadequacy. Using topical problems such as substance abuse, body image, and class divide as metaphors for social and psychological fractioning, Brannon pits visual ‘ideals’ versus internalised corruption to create conceptual instances of breakdown. In Hair of the Dog, Brannon’s clip art-style motif reduces the idea of individuality to an infinitely replicable generic. Coupled with a cynical script typeset in ornamental font his blossoms become emblematic of disease, addiction, and futility.Matthew Brannon’s prints convey a poetic distillation. Conjuring a complete image from the most meagre information, the ‘messaging’ of Brannon’s images is transferred through their subtlety of form. Situated between luxurious refinement and divested replication, Brannon adopts the associations of design to comment on psychology as by-product of consumer environment. In Sick Whore, Brannon underscores a spindly plant with an abject description or insult. Embossed with the finality of an epitaph, Brannon sums up a totality of a frail, abused, and embarrassing existence.
Matthew Brannon’s HYENA is presented as a vinyl LP atop a plinth. Illustrating the effectiveness of packaging over content, the object exudes a precious quality as product and collectable. The recording itself, however is much more sinister. Featuring a caged hyena at a Berlin zoo, the soundtrack captures a disturbing symphony of clattering metal, audience rumblings, and breaking bones, beneath an aria of the animal’s frantic bark-laughter. In this discrepancy between outward appearance and contained turmoil, Brannon creates a haunting analogy for tenuity of human experience.Matthew Brannon adapts his eel motif as a logo of power and class divide. The image itself contains multiple symbolism: as loathsome viper, lowly animal, and revolutionary icon of early America. Rendered in black and white, the delicate pattern is reminiscent of both lace and tire tracks. Humorously recalling the colonial motto “Don’t Tread On Me”, Brannon’s snake supplants ideas of freedom liberation as an elitist decal of ‘good taste’.
Read Entire Article about USA Artist Matthew Brannon paintings and artwork at The Saatchi-Gallery http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/artists/matthew_brannon.htm
About the Author
View Matthew Brannon paintings, biography, solo exhibitions, group exhibitions and resource of Matthew Brannon. View art online at The Saatchi Gallery – London contemporary art gallery. Matthew Brannon
Where in the movie Armageddon is the Aerosmith song “I don’t want to miss a thing” played?
I know the song is on the soundtrack but in all the clips I’ve seen of the movie (I’ve never seen it in full) I never actually heard it in the movie. I did see a Youtube video where the song played over a scene of Liv Tyler’s character getting married with the credit, but that’s the only movie clip I’ve seen play it.
Is “I don’t want to miss a thing” actually in the Armageddon or is just on the soundtrack?
If it’s actually in the movie what scene is it played in? Wedding scene during credits?
It is in the movie and its right before they go into space. Ben and Liv are in a field together and he does the speech with the animal crackers.
aerosmith – i don’t want to miss a thing (armageddon soundtrack)
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