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Lilo & Stitch (Alan Silvestri) (2002)
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Average: 3.3 Stars
***** 18 5 Stars
**** 29 4 Stars
*** 27 3 Stars
** 17 2 Stars
* 9 1 Stars
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Composed, Co-Conducted, and Co-Produced by:

Co-Conducted by:
Lynell K. Bright

Orchestrated by:
Mark McKenzie
William Ross

Co-Produced by:
David Bifano
Regular Album Tracks   ▼
Promotional Album Tracks   ▼
2002 Disney Regular Album Cover Art
2002 Disney Promo Album 2 Cover Art
Walt Disney Records (Regular)
(June 11th, 2002)

Walt Disney Records (Promotional)
(December, 2002)
The primary Walt Disney Records album was a regular U.S. release. The score-only promotional album from Disney later in the year was distributed to Academy Awards voters only and bootlegged thereafter.
The insert of the regular album includes no extra information about the score or film. The promotional album contains only minimal packaging.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,297
Written 5/25/25
Buy it... only on a longer presentation of Alan Silvestri's score than the one provided on the commercial album, his approach substantially intelligent despite the overall work's brevity.

Avoid it... if you would have preferred that Silvestri infuse his conservatively pleasant orchestral score with the Hawaiian culture that he helped address with a pair of supplemental songs.

Silvestri
Silvestri
Lilo & Stitch: (Alan Silvestri) Long an interest for animation filmmaker Chis Sanders, the concept of the quirky blue alien creature now known as Stitch launched a successful franchise with its realization in 2002's Lilo & Stitch. Its animated style restricted to two-dimensional renderings by budget but suiting the director's sketching style anyway, the film tells of the escape of the little, weird-looking pet-like alien and its landing on Earth in Hawaii, where it is adopted by two sisters struggling to survive after their parents' deaths. When the galactic police and the creature's creator come looking for Stitch, the girls get involved and the chase begins. More importantly, the presence of the main characters together influences each for the good, Stitch realizing that family is more important than its bred purpose of chaos and the sisters brought closer together as they protect their new friend. While there is some suspense to the custody aspect involved on both sides, Lilo & Stitch is an innocuous expression of light drama highlighted by its Hawaiian setting, and the movie delighted audiences to significant profits and spawned several film sequels, television series, and video games. The unique calling card of the music related to its soundtrack, which launched to the top of the charts in 2002, is the story's extensive use of Elvis Presley songs in its narrative. The younger sister, Lilo, is an enormous Elvis fan, so humor abounds in the placement of that singer's works throughout the picture. Beyond that use, however, Sanders hired composer Alan Silvestri for the film's original music. Although Disney was in the middle of a contract with James Newton Howard to provide the scores for their flagship animations at the time, Silvestri was no slouch in the genre, having started to prove his chops with several such entries in the 1990's and still to enjoy a period of success outside of the live-action realm. For the setting of Lilo & Stitch, Silvestri and Sanders worked to incorporate Hawaiian music into the soundtrack in ways that paved the way for Moana. They brought hula musician Mark Keali'i Ho'omalu into the fold, along with 15 to 20 child singers, to lend some authenticity to key sequences of the soundtrack.

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