For you Originals fans out there, I was fooling around on my keyboard and did a VERY simplified version of the ‘Always and Forever’ theme from the TVD score
Have a listen, if you’d like!
You can also check it out on IGTV 🙌

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
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seen from China
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seen from Germany

seen from United States
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seen from Uzbekistan

seen from Finland
seen from Tunisia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany
seen from Russia
seen from Türkiye

seen from Australia
For you Originals fans out there, I was fooling around on my keyboard and did a VERY simplified version of the ‘Always and Forever’ theme from the TVD score
Have a listen, if you’d like!
You can also check it out on IGTV 🙌
I know I CAN’T be the only one who is totally in love with some of the original instrumental music, most of which was composed by the amazing Michael Suby, on PLL. So I’ve started removing the vocals as best I can from certain scenes to provide the music that goes along with them! I hope you check out my new channel that was made for this purpose, and give it a subscribe if you want to see more!
smileyrhi asked: Hello! I've been trying to finish TVD for a while now, and I'm trying to find the score where in Season 6 Episode 12, Jo is trying to revive a plant when Elena walks in and they begin talking. The background music sounds similar to Stefan's Theme, but a little bit different. I was wondering if you could do that score please! That would be amazing! And I know it's a late comment, but I just started watching TVD this year. Thanks again! :D
(I don’t know why but tumblr isn’t letting me post my reply with your original ask so here it is...)
Hi! That score was also used in 1x04 and 4x07. Because it’s only about 15 seconds long in 6x12, it’s not really worth extracting from that scene, but I hope you enjoy the other two scores I linked to :)
Klaus' Theme (Michael Suby cover) on piano by TNaPKI - Unedited
This is my piano version of this beautiful piece I heard on 'The Vampire Diaries' in the iconic scene where Klaus goes to see Caroline on her 18th birthday. (pretty sure this is the precise point that the Klaroline ship set sail). I truly enjoyed playing it, hope you enjoy it too. . The video's pretty basic (thank you CW for the images, NOT mine) because it's mostly about the music ;)
A Man With a Past Best Forgotten Goes to All Lengths to Remember
By Dave Kehr Jan. 23, 2004
Even by the lax standards of January film releases -- this month is the traditional dumping time for studio films that didn't quite work out -- ''The Butterfly Effect'' is staggeringly bad.
Starring Ashton Kutcher, the shaggy-haired young actor best known for ''Dude, Where's My Car?'' and for dating Demi Moore, ''Butterfly'' is a supposed thriller that mines the memory loss theme that has been turning up with striking regularity in American movies, from ''Memento'' to ''Paycheck.'' Mr. Kutcher's character, Evan Treborn, is an earnest college student whose life has been marked by a series of blackouts surrounding traumatic events. Majoring in psychology (he keeps a rat maze in his dorm room), he hopes to discover the reason behind the mysterious black holes in his mind.
Simple self-protection might be one possible explanation, given that his repressed memories include, as the film reveals in a spiraling series of flashbacks, being nearly strangled to death as an 8-year-old by his criminally insane father; being forced to participate in a child pornography video directed by the abusive father (Eric Stoltz) of the little girl, Kayleigh, he has a crush on; watching as a young woman and her baby are blown to bits in a practical joke gone wrong; and watching as the neighborhood bully, Tommy (who also happens to be Kayleigh's brother), ties Evan's beloved terrier up in a canvas bag and sets it on fire. That's a lot to handle right there, but the film's writing and directing team, Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber, have some even more appalling atrocities in store for Evan as a young adult.
For reasons the film does not trouble to explain, Evan discovers that, if he reads a few lines from his childhood journals, he will be projected back in time to his traumatic moments, where he can change his behavior in small ways that will make a big difference later on. (This is where the title comes in, with its reference to the old canard about a butterfly flapping its wings in China and producing a tidal wave in New York.)
Sometimes Evan's adjustments seem to work out, as when he awakes from a time-travel session to find himself sharing a sorority house bed with Kayleigh, now grown into a radiantly happy 18-year-old (played by Amy Smart). But mostly his changes just lead to greater disasters, including one alternate reality in which Kayleigh is a scarred, drug-addled prostitute, living in what looks like Jodi Foster's old digs in ''Taxi Driver,'' and another in which Evan loses his arms and the use of his legs.
The complicated plotting soon spins wildly out of the control of the filmmakers (their last credit: ''Final Destination 2'') and begins producing unintentional laughs, as when Evan wakes up to find himself the newest and prettiest resident of a prison full of predatory neo-Nazi homosexuals.
But if the storytelling induces brain cramp, the imagery brings on a bad case of acid indigestion. The filmmakers return again and again to their movie's most repulsive visuals: the two naked children standing before a video camera, the dog squirming in the flaming bag, the mother, with her baby in her arms, approaching the mailbox in which Tommy has planted a lighted stick of dynamite. ''The Butterfly Effect,'' which opens nationwide today, is inhabited by a genuine spirit of cruelty, both toward its characters and its audience.
''The Butterfly Effect'' has been rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). It includes several scenes of graphic violence, many directed against children and animals.
THE BUTTERFLY EFFECT
Written and directed by Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber; director of photography, Matthew F. Leonetti; edited by Peter Amundson; music by Michael Suby; production designer, Douglas Higgins; produced by Chris Bender, A. J. Dix, Anthony Rhulen and J C Spink; released by New Line Cinema. Running time: 113 minutes. This film is rated R.
WITH: Ashton Kutcher (Evan), Amy Smart (Kayleigh), Eric Stoltz (Mr. Miller), William Lee Scott (Tommy), Elden Henson (Lenny), Ethan Suplee (Thumper) and Melora Walters (Andrea).
The Originals 3x03 Score
YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5L_W0MuTuLPK1KUX8ICOng
(via https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CqhP8JW1bJ4)
Hey hey! Okay so I know there’s been some serious radio silence on my behalf these last couple of months – I apologise! To my TVD followers, please consider this a peace offering! I am slowly getting back into the fandom saddle.
I apologise for any little hiccups in this recording, when I have more time I’ll redo it. It’s all done by ear so no sheet music sorry – and recorded on my phone so there is a little background noise! But nonetheless enjoy! ;)