Top Gun | ||||
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Soundtrack album by various artists | ||||
Released | May 15, 1986[1] | |||
Genre | various | |||
Length | 38:38 | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Producer |
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Top Gun soundtracks chronology | ||||
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Singles from Top Gun | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [3] |
Top Gun is the soundtrack from the film of the same name, released in 1986 by Columbia Records.
The album reached number one in the US charts for five nonconsecutive weeks in the summer and autumn of 1986. It was the best selling soundtrack of 1986 and one of the best selling of all time.[4][5] The song "Take My Breath Away" by Berlin went on to win both the Academy Award for Best Original Song[6] and the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song.[7] According to Allmusic, the album "remains a quintessential artifact of the mid-'80s", and the album's hits "still define the bombastic, melodramatic sound that dominated the pop charts of the era."[5]
In 1999, the album was reissued as a "Special Expanded Edition" with additional songs, and in 2006, it was reissued again as Music From and Inspired by Top Gun: Deluxe Edition, containing additional songs not in the film. In March 2024, soundtrack specialist label La-La Land Records released a limited edition (5000 copies) double CD containing Harold Faltermeyer's entire original score with the second disc containing all the songs from the classic soundtrack, the additional songs featured in the film but not released until the Special Expanded Edition and, for the first time since its appearance on the B-side of "Take My Breath Away", "Radar Radio" by Giorgio Moroder and Joe Pizzulo, briefly heard in the film's final scene playing on a radio before Maverick and Charlie are reunited while "You've Lost That Lovin' Feelin'" plays on the jukebox.[8]