The original sountrack of the movie can be downloaded here in different file formats, depending on what kind of device you will use.
You will also find a brief explanation of the different formats.
Would you like to listen to samples? Click the button below!
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MP3 is a lossy compressed audio format which means that certain harmonics are missing from the spectrum. The original audio quality degrades in relation with the amount of compression. If you are planning to edit the songs or burn an audio CD, do not chose this format, because repeated coding will produce a muddy sound.
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Ogg Vorbis is an open-source, patent-free audio encoding and streaming technology, offering lossy compressed audio files of small size but with comparatively high audio quality.
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FLAC stands for Free Lossless Audio Codec, meaning that audio is compressed in FLAC without any loss in quality. Neither the FLAC format nor any of the implemented encoding/decoding methods are covered by any known patent. FLAC codec is freely available and supported on most operating systems, including Windows, Linux, *BSD, Solaris, OS X, IRIX, BeOS, OS/2, and Amiga.
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WAV is the most common audio format of PC-based applications. In most cases this format contains uncompressed audio data. Audio CDs use this format with a sample rate of 44 kHz and a word length of 16 bits. Download this if you want to edit the songs, or burn an audio CD.
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CD-image is a format that most CD-burning software can handle to burn the Audio-CD instantly. if you choose this format you won't have to deal with various wav files or edit the tracklist, you'll only have to open the .cue file and click on 'Burn'. You will also find a .jpg picture of the inlet included in this package.
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5.1 is the most common surround sound format. The system itself contains two front speakers, two rears, one for the center and one dedicated to the low frequencies. By downloading this you will get a DVD-image with the encoded sound. Please note that this format only works with a proper 5.1 setup and due to certain industry limitations, it's lossy compressed. If you have a stereo system (even if it's fed by a DVD-player) you'll get much better results if you download and burn the stereo Audio CD-image.

