"Hollywood and Vines" is an orchestral piece on the Season One soundtrack. It plays during jungle treks throughout the series, and is heard at least once each season, including every finale. The piece features a heavy bassline in the low strings while violins play a melody in counterpoint.
Main appearance
Sawyer reads his letter and sees some of the survivors going on a hike. He joins them. The survivors climb a hill. Sayid and Boone help Shannon with a particularly steep bit.
Full list of appearances
"Hollywood and Vines" and its variations play during the following scenes.
- The survivors begin their trek to pick up a radio signal. ("Pilot, Part 2")
- The survivors trek to the Dark Territory. ("Exodus, Part 1")
- The survivors leave the Black Rock with dynamite in their backpacks. ("Exodus, Part 2")
- Sayid and Charlie run to the pillar of smoke. ("Exodus, Part 2")
- The tailies scale a mountain, carrying Sawyer in a stretcher. ("Abandoned")
- The survivors leave camp for the radio tower. ("Through the Looking Glass, Part 1")
- Jack talks to Danielle about the radio tower. ("Through the Looking Glass, Part 2")
- Sayid leaves the Kahana in the Zodiac. ("Cabin Fever")
- Sayid returns to the Island on the Zodiac raft. ("There's No Place Like Home, Part 1")
- Daniel returns to take the second group on the Zodiac. ("There's No Place Like Home, Part 2")
- The Man in Black (as Locke) leads the Others to Jacob. ("Follow the Leader")
- The journey continues. ("The Incident, Part 1")
- They reach the statue. ("The Incident, Part 2")
- Jack tells Kate the island's the one thing he hasn't "screwed up". ("The End")
- Jack's group treks to meet the Man in Black. ("The End")
- They reach him. ("The End")
Sheet music
Variations
Variations on the theme from "Hollywood and Vines" appear in "Flying High", "Early Mourning Mystery", "The Good Shepherd", "JACK FM", "Just What the Doctor Ordered", "Kate Makes a Splash", "An Other Dark Agenda", "The Only Pebble in the Jungle", "Nadia on Your Life" and "Timecrunch".
Title significance
The title references the music style - cinematic scores - and the setting - a jungle. "Hollywood and Vine" is also the famous Los Angeles intersection of Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street.
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