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Prospectors Arrive
Jonny Greenwood Lyrics


Instrumental
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Most interesting comment from YouTube:

@galacticgam3r105

I’m an oil man,
These are my sheep;
Let them flock to you
And they’ll take your meat;
And with this flesh
An empire is born,
While no aubade,
Becomes my score.

I’m a religious man,
These are my sheep;
Let them flock to me
And I’ll take their meat;
And with this flesh
An empire is born,
While many aubades,
Become my score.



Aubade: a piece sung or played outdoors at dawn, usually as a compliment to someone.



All comments from YouTube:

@Jasonificatiation

It's impossible for me to express how empirically well-done this is.

@azzyclark3860

There Will Be Blood. The greatest film of the 2000s hands down.

@garymitrovic2503

Harrison Clark Whole heartedly agree. I'm slightly obsessed with this film. This is my favourite composition on the album as well.

@SteveJobzz

Alongside No Country for Old Men.

@slimithy12

1.City of God 2.There Will Be Blood 3. Downfall, that's how I would rate it. All three movies had me thinking about them for weeks after, especially There Will Be Blood. I can't put my finger on it but the movie had me hooked from start to finish and even when it ended I still wanted more.

@2545poc

100% agreed! 2007 was a benchmark for film in general - There Will Be Blood & No County For Old Men. Ironically,
both films were filmed at the same time and in the same location. Both of those films have been 2 of the best films in the last 25 years, arguably. Jonny Greenwood is a genius, and this score is a testament to that.

@leodouble3922

Mulholland Drive not bad though, but I agree There Will Be Blood kicks asses

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@JarodRebuck

One of the best music pieces I’ve ever heard. I get extremely emotional—to the point of weeping—in listening to this. I think of deceased loved ones, precious memories, and weep. Such an emotional piece.

@velislavkovatchev7240

This was played in the most powerful scene in the whole movie. Before the scene, Daniel tells his son that he is not his real father and stats insulting him. From that it becomes apparent that he will never see him again. And after H.W. leaves. the camera focuses on Daniel who tries to remember something. This is where the greatest scene of the film is shown - just a small, happy memory of Daniel and his son fooling around. Nothing too special. But it is when Daniel realizes that he won't see his son ever again, that he recalls this beautiful memory. I think the scene shows that even though he mainly used H.W. as a way to make more money, Daniel actually loved him, somewhere deep down. I guess this scene shows that it's the little things that matter the most.

@ProjectMayhem4Chaoz

Not to mention immediately after, Daniel is shown slowly climbing down to the basement, his face clearly showing distress, where he proceeds to get blackout drunk and later murder a fool, knowing full well it would be the end of him, clearly stated by the man himself "I'm finished". He loved his son. He was just too pigheaded to realize it

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