The total of 178,000 copies sold from the ten days of sales made it the tenth best-selling soundtrack album of 2012. The soundtrack topped the Billboard 200 in its third week on the chart, selling 92,000 copies. The following week, it sold 136,000 copies to jump to number two on the Billboard 200.
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Upon its release, Les Misérables debuted at number thirty-three on the Billboard 200 and at number one on the Billboard Soundtracks chart, selling 43,000 copies in less than three full days of release, according to Nielsen SoundScan. However, like the highlights album, many of the songs are still cut short due to time.
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Songs included on the album are often also incomplete in comparison with the movie itself (for example, At the End of the Day on the album is missing Fantine's explanation.)Ī 2-Disc Deluxe Edition, released on March 19, 2013, comprised 42 tracks, including several of songs omitted on the highlights album as well as a few instrumental pieces. The famous anthem " Do You Hear the People Sing?" does not appear on the album except for its reprise in the "Epilogue". The Highlights album doesn't contain all musical numbers in the film, with traditional show highlights such as "Who am I?" and "A Little Fall of Rain" being omitted. Orchestral recording sessions for Les Misérables began in London on 10 October 2012 with a 70-piece orchestra. The cut was greeted with "extreme excitement", and Russell Crowe tweeted that he received many excited emails. On 9 September 2012, Universal Studios executives were granted a viewing of the rough cut of the film without the orchestra. Despite the film's creative team claiming this live recording method "a world's-first", several film musicals have utilized this method before, including the At Long Last Love (1975), The Fantasticks (1995) and Across the Universe (2007). Tom Hooper explained that this would eliminate the need to recapture "locked" performances and allow more creative freedom. The film's vocals were recorded live on set using live piano accompaniments played through earpieces as a guide, with the orchestral accompaniment recorded in post-production, rather than actors lip-syncing to a pre-recorded musical soundtrack. In February 2012, Cameron Mackintosh revealed a newly created song, " Suddenly", that "explains what happens when Valjean takes Cosette from the inn and looks after her." In an interview with BBC Radio 4's Front Row, Tom Hooper the film's director, revealed that Claude-Michel Schönberg would be composing one new song and additional music.