Assuming the following quote is the actual quote from Del Rey...
The word "where" gives implication. Not possibility as you just defined. "Where" certainly allows for a reasonable conclusion that can be drawn and not just merely may be drawn.
Again, this is on the assumption that the actual quote was provided.
The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles (every episode)
I don't have any grails left from any other non-JW composers. Field of Dreams and that 4 CD of Robin Hood Prince of Thieves pretty much completed those grail quests.
Nevermind @Edmilsonreminded me of King Kong by JNH.
Next in my series is another JW masterpiece, based on LLL's wonderful new expansion, which revealed lots of previously unknown unused tracks, alternates, and filled in major gaps in the soundtrack album as well as restoring the proper order of cues revealing a structure of a wide range of seemingly disconnected musical elements converging and coming together satisfyingly, mirroring the movie's theme of distant cultures growing to understand each other. As usual I will explain the cues' film usage where it's fitting.
The spotting is certainly not wall to wall, though since I didn't restore even the source music found on the LLL set, let alone all the "needledrop" recordings used in the film, it's a tiny bit misleading if we'd want to look at purely music, not score:
The state court scenes are mostly left unscored, but nearly all of the final 40 minutes are scored all the way through.
Starting with this project, I'm doing something some previous ones like Presumed Innocent could've benefited from: burning subtitles into the video to help with cues for dialogue-heavy scenes where the sync points aren't necessarily for shot changes or physical actions but for a specific line that changes the tone or topic, of which there are several in this movie.
Syncing up cues helped me appreciate many cues in a new light or a deeper way - like Discovering the Bible, really seeing how the initially 2 disparate textures start melding and come together by the end; or Adams' Address to the Court, where I was initially confused by the usage of obvious synth voices in this fantastically varied choir-heavy score - the first one scores Isabella's complaint letters about American courts, probably illustrating her "unnatural" views of courts as mechanical toys to play with, to do as she says, instead of idealistic independent entities, the second, darker one scoring Adams reading aloud the article about how slavery is the natural order of things, hopefully no need here to describe why the usage of "unnatural" synth voices instead of a real choir could be appropriate.
Thanks to @Jay for helping with the selection and answering some background information questions!
Introduction is actually a wild vocal take the music people used here, but I included it because why not.
Retribution is fully unused, and to be honest I can see why, even if it's a great piece. If synced up to the final film footage (the opening may have been extended), the percussion and flute scores Cinque's struggle as it's starting to bear fruit, the male choir scores him lifting the nail, the choral Cinque's theme scores his newfound chance, and things start to escalate as he frees himself. The rhythm kicks up as the captain picks up his musket and Cinque approaches him, then it fades out when the new captain removes his Excalibur from the old captain's body like he removed the nail. I removed the second wild humming take that's included in the film and LLL since it would overlap with the next cue,
July 4, 1839, which is mostly unused. The dark soundscape scoring the uncertainty (unused) temporarily clears up as the helmsman states he'll head for Africa. JW's emotional shot-specific scoring for the night scene was replaced by a choral take of Cinque's theme, dropping the twinkles for the stars, its descending variant scoring the turn, and the Seven Years in Tibet/RotS strings with added choir scoring Cinque desperately taking over and correcting the course himself.
Steering East is again unused, and in my opinion should be here where the title doesn't describe it very well, for the scene of the new crew landing on what they think are African shores, gathering water and coming across a man on a proto-bicycle. (For an alternate sync idea that might actually work better, see this post.)
The Capture is mostly used, only a small portion was edited out when the ship lands (the film was edited down a bit at this point too), and the ending was replaced with one of the wild solo humming takes, removing the only musical representation of the Queen of Spain coming from JW, since the rest of her scenes contain source music at most.
Introducing John Quincy Adams is used as is.
Meeting of the Minds is a strange case - it's more like semi-wild mood music than specific scoring adhering to sync points, and it runs longer than the scene, where it's only partially used.
Counsel Meets Client, The Ship Remembers, Visiting Adams and What Is Their Story? again are used as is, but Learning To Count is the same case as Meeting of the Minds - not really specific and runs a lot longer than its scene.
Tale of the Lion's Tooth is used as is.
The Capture of Cinque and The Crossing are complicated - for this video I had to shorten the storm/birthing scene and entirely remove the feeding scene between the suicide/lashing and the mass drowning scenes. In the film, parts of Capture of Cinque are looped over these and other parts of the same track, and even mostly in place of or over The Crossing - only the opening minute and the Spanish guitar part remains from it, edited, then the ending's replaced by solo humming again.
Tales of Horror remains untouched except for a percussion overlay coming from The Ship Remembers (if you don't count that the original take's ending was replaced by the second revision, replicated here instead of sticking with the LLL edit), same with Discovering the Bible.
After a long unscored section, including the victory on state level, The Letter to Massachusetts and Cinque's Legal Mind are used as is.
The footage for African Violet had to be edited very slightly.
Adams' Address to the Court and Adams' Summation are used as is.
The Verdict is edited slightly in the film.
Liberation of Lomboko is used as is, Going Home starts with the choir only mix, the soloist only comes in starting with the Civil War shots. The film starts the credits with a third solo humming take, then used Dry Your Tears, Afrika as is on the LLL, with more obvious Lomboko tracking edit points and the ending cut short - if we use only it and The Long Road to Justice like I did here, they fit the credits' length well.
The Capture (alternate) is basically a different mix of the main program version.
The Ship Remembers (alternate) is a slightly different take with different percussion overlay usage.
What Is Their Story (alternate) is the original take, featuring another Adams rendition in place of the revision's DYTA.
The Crossing (alternate) was written for an even shorter cut, I couldn't really come up with a good way to edit it down.
Tales of Horror had an original take with Cinque's theme scoring his outburst, more as a low moment where he can't hold in his despair any longer - I had to shorten this footage for this original ending. The first revision doubles down on this idea and utilises the longer edit to add in another statement that helps the theme climax, still scoring Cinque's despair. The second revision, ultimately used in the film, takes the first revision's structure but pulls Dry Your Tears, Afrika onto it, making it a moment of uplifting triumph, where Cinque stands up for himself and demands the justice he'll ultimately receive. The third revision keeps the DYTA idea, but tones it down significantly, more as a quiet release than a triumphant climax.
Discovering the Bible (alternate) is a different original approach - while the revised film version starts with representing the Africans with percussion, the Bible discussion with harp and Cinque on flute, and the church scenes with semi-religioso strings and brass, and eventually starts melding them, moving Cinque to different instruments and stops changing styles with the latter back and forth cuts, this version represents the Africans with sad strings (probably coming off of one of the Cinque versions of Tales of Horror), the Bible scenes, while still prominent in harp, are also scored with strings and multiple kinds of woodwinds while the church is mostly brass-based - they still meld but the cutting back and forth is not so obvious. I had to extend the ending a bit so Cinque's theme entering would sync up with the cut back to the jail.
Cinque's Memories of Home, a revision of Cinque's Legal Mind, sets the "communication" theme on cello, solo vocal humming and percussion - IMO moving the material a bit too far to the east from the US, possibly why it wasn't used.
Going Home (alternate) is the choir take without the solo vocal, as it is partially used in the film.
And finally, an idea by @BrotherSound: Cinque's Theme (solo flute) is also 2:06 long, like Going Home, why not try to see if it fits. In my opinion, it kind of does, many of the percussion hits and phrase borders match with shot changes.
"Where they align leaves open room for where they don't. That is, of course, very different from employing the phrase "only what is identical" which the statement does not imply.
Amistad (25th Anniversary) by John Williams
The Fabelmans by John Williams
The 'Burbs by Jerry Goldsmith
Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation by Joe Kraemer (now they can release the expansion)
Paycheck (Deluxe) by John Powell
Ferdinand by John Powell
The Call of the Wild by John Powell
Star Trek III (Intrada) by James Horner
Black Patch/The Man by Jerry Goldsmith (a really great re-recording)
Lost in Space (40th Anniversary) by John Williams & Various
For some reason I thought Goldsmith's First Knight was a Black Friday release? I just checked and it was an April 2011 release My god, how did 11.5 years pass so quickly?
My hopes etc. For the Williams - and I assume that's a safe bet, an expanded Amistad would be my first hope, after that JFK.
I have no idea what's possible or not, so just a few other hopes without any thought or care about rights, companies, etc.
Other releases. I've seen Gladiator mentioned. I've always wanted that, especially since the dialogue-ridden secound soundtrack album, as much as I like a lot of that dialogue.
Jerry Goldsmith: LA Confidential or Medicine Man. Medicine Man was the first movie I saw after becoming interested in him as a composer. I think at that point, I just had a few of his tracks on some compilation albums. I remember being captivated by "The Trees" track and then buying the soundtack either later that day or within a few days. Apparently, about 15 minutes from the film didn't make the CD, and that's enough for me to want an expanded release.
Bear McCreary years ago talked about an eventual hope to release more BSG music. Yes please. Although I can't imagine he's had time to work on that recently!
In 2009, Joel Goldsmith talked about wanting to release more Stargate Atlantis and a first release of music from Stargate: Universe, but they never eventuated.
And Rocky, I always hope for expanded Rocky scores.
I don't know if there's any interest for Black Panther or not. I just don't follow the marvel crowd. I've never liked Marvel.....but Despite the fact that it's foolish to vote against Jim Cameron I don't see any excitement for Avatar
I always kind of want to agree with that, in that I think the original is the only actually good movie in the series. But I wouldn't give up Lost World. Classic score, classic suspense/action sequences.
The other 4 movies can be flushed down the toilet though.