Published On Jun 8, 2019
Although the Fast and Furious franchise is well-known for its popular songs such as ‘See You Again’, ’We Own It’, ‘Get Low’, ‘Bandolero’ and ‘Teriyaki Boyz’, it is not well-known at all for its scores, even though they are quite good.
The main theme / family theme was not introduced until Fast and Furious (2009), composed by Brian Tyler. Although it was mostly an action score, it was far less techno-based than its predecessors, featuring a main theme, a love theme, and an orchestrated suite for the end credits.
The ‘family theme’, which bares a slight resemblance to ‘The Ecstasy Of Gold’ by Ennio Morricone, was used in Fast and Furious (2009), Furious 6 (2013) and Furious 7 (2015). If it was used in Fast Five (2011) and The Fate of the Furious (2017), then it was used too sparingly to notice. Fast Five and Fate of the Furious opted for an alternate, more upbeat, staccato main theme over the family theme.
The songs used in this suite are:
Farewell - Brian Tyler
Through the Flames - Lucas Vidal
The Fate of the Furious - Brian Tyler
Fast Five - Brian Tyler
The Tunnel - Brian Tyler
Letty’s Cell Phone - Brian Tyler
Judgement - Brian Tyler
| Albums |
Fast and Furious - Brian Tyler - https://www.amazon.com/Fast-Furious-B...
Fast Five - Brian Tyler - / fast-five-original-motion-picture-score
Furious 6 - Lucas Vidal - (UNAVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE)
Furious 7 - Brian Tyler - / furious-7-original-motion-picture-score
Fate of the Furious - Brian Tyler - / the-fate-of-the-furious-original-motion-pi...
The footage in this video is from The Fast and the Furious (2001) and belongs to Universal Pictures. I own nothing in this video.