Stock Music track: Some Other Time

Inspiring and cinematic, this epic orchestral piece is full of hope and emotion. Great for adventure / fantasy film, television, personal stories and more. Moving yet uplifting.

Shockwave-Sound.com T23379 14.95 57.95

Track details

Track ID number: 23379
Genres: Film & Soundtrack: Amazement / Wonderment / Enchanted
Moods/Emotions: Amazement / Wonderment / Awe -- Heroic / Patriotic / Valiant -- Regal / Majestic / Honorable
Suggested Production Types: Documentary / Culture / Art -- Fantasy / Fantasy World -- Historical: Older History / Ancient -- Nature / Natural World -- TV Commercial - Luxury / Style
Prominent Instruments: Bells / Glockenspiel / Celeste -- Brass section / Horns -- Drums (Big, Epic or Marching) -- String Section
Keywords / Hints: epic, cinematic, adventure, fantasy, film score, filmscore, glory, grand, hope, hopeful, inspiring, inspire, journey, landscape, landscapes, orchestra, orchestral, emotion, soundtrack, storytelling, story-telling, instrumental
Tempo feel: Slow
Tempo Beats Per Minute: 115
Artist: Beanstalk Audio
Composer: Mick Parks
Publisher: Beanstalk Audio (Track not PRO registered)
SRCO (Sound Recording Copyright Owner): Mick Parks
PRO / Non-PRO Track? PRO (What's this?)
WAV file bit depth: HD / 24-Bit (What's this?)
Stem files available for this track: No
Album containing this track: (None)
About the Artist
Beanstalk Audio Beanstalk Audio

Beanstalk Audio is a project started by Lee Prichard. His involvement in music started at the age of 11 when he started trombone lessons at secondary school. Throughout his teens and early twenties he played hundreds of shows with the Ashton-on-Mersey Showband and numerous other brass groups throughout the Manchester area, UK and abroad. Later in life he started a music licensing business and focussed mainly on audio production and licensing before making a return to composing in his forties. Technologies have changed but Lee’s passion for music is as strong as ever. Although, these days his method of expression is through plastic black and white keys rather than blowing a raspberry through a long piece of brass tubing ;)