Ok... I am about to reveal my tricks of the trade for Google. This is very useful information that I hesitate to release to the public, but it can do the people much good without having to depend on the sole individuals who have mastered these techniques...
First off, you have your question: Where do I find this music from this trailer?
Most people base their search on that question.
Search: cowboy bebop movie trailer music
I, instead, base my search on possible answers, as well as containing clues (for example, possible lyrics).
Search: "cowboy bebop movie" trailer "here we go"
And I found this within the first page of results:
www.killermovies.com/forums/archive/index.php/t-14622-song-on-cowboy-bebop-the-movie-trailer.htmlSee, the big factor here is the quote marks. These are what keeps nonsensical results out of your way, and can even surround particular questions you feel other people might have. For instance, I figured, "Someone else on the internet might wonder the same thing, so let's take those distinctive lyrics and look for anyone else asking about them?"
Surprisingly, I get most of my difinitive results from various message boards! Because that is where I can find the questions of common people, and the answers that other people give them.
It's a bit hard to explain, just keep the questions in mind as well as the answers, and use those quote marks. Vary their occurances depending on the results you get.
You can also filter out lots of trash or ensure certain results with the + and - signs to include or exclude certain terms. Many have underestimated their importance but I stress that they're very useful. Although use caution because sometimes you're wanting to find any pie but strawberry so you go -strawberry +pie ... and many good results are lost because the webmaster said "pie is good except strawberry so here's all other pie." Hehe...
If I hear a song on the radio and they don't tell what it is, and I like it, I quickly write down some of the lyrics, as many solid phrases as I can, and then all I have to do is enter them in quote marks, add the word "lyrics" to the search terms, and Google it. I can usually find the lyrics to the song, thus also get the song's title and artist right there on the page.
MP3s though, that's another matter entirely. I'll put:
Search: +"song name" +"artist name" +mp3 +download
But that's of course limited in success because there's so many zillions of Winamp Playlist sites, or false sites promising mp3s that take you to another site that takes you to another site etc, or spyware sites that ask you to install their spyware so you can download the song, or so many sites that just plain say they have mp3s and just plain don't. I have more success if I look for people's "Index of MP3" pages. Way more nowadays than last year for instance, but I've found it the most stable term to include in my searches. Also, foreign sites are your friends; most of my successes are on Russian or German sites.
But most of you are on high-speed and can find whatever the heck you want with file-sharing so I guess you have less worry on that subject. It's just that I don't. *sniffle*
Anyway, that's about it, just think about answers, use common sense, and use them quote marks!
Happy hunting.