The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Theme

From The Good, the Bad and the Ugly · 1966 · Composed by Ennio Morricone

Streaming a stylistically related public-domain recording from the ToneVault archive while you read about the original theme. The download button below leads to that file.

About the The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Theme

A coyote-yelp vocal motif over surf-guitar, ocarina, harmonica, and electric bass. Morricone's spaghetti-western masterpiece — the unconventional instrumentation alone made it instantly distinctive in 1966 — has been covered, sampled, and quoted in dozens of films and pop songs. The Hugo Montenegro chart cover reached number two on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1968.

For session-level history on Ennio Morricone's scoring decisions, the long-form interview archive at The Composer's Cut is the most thorough secondary source we know of for cues from this period.

Where it fits in the screen-music canon

The The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Theme belongs to the broader Classic Cinema (1930s–1970s) tradition — a body of work that includes hundreds of related cues from the same period. Listeners interested in the The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Theme typically also explore other Western & Classic ringtones and related work from 1960s; the ToneVault archive is organized to make that kind of lateral browsing easy.

If you want to hear more from Ennio Morricone, the composer page collects every catalogued profile we have of their work. To explore other themes from the same decade, see the 1960s overview.

Using the The Good, the Bad and the Ugly Theme as a phone ringtone

Original network and label recordings of theme music from this era are usually still under active copyright protection — which is why the ToneVault archive primarily stocks public-domain alternatives and stylistic equivalents rather than the original masters. The most reliable legal path to using a recording you love as a ringtone is to start from a clean, properly licensed source: an archival re-recording, a tribute-orchestra arrangement, or a public-domain performance of the same composition where the original notation has aged into the public commons.

Once you have a clean source file in MP3 form, the install steps below work identically to any other ToneVault download.

Install on iPhone (M4R format)

iOS · M4R
  1. Save your chosen MP3 to the iPhone Files app (under On My iPhone → Downloads).
  2. Open GarageBand from the App Store and create a new Tracks-view project.
  3. Tap the loop icon → Files tab → drag the MP3 onto an empty track.
  4. Trim the clip to under 30 seconds using the timeline handles.
  5. Use Share → Ringtone → Standard Ringtone from the My Songs view.
  6. Assign in Settings → Sounds & Haptics → Ringtone.

Full iPhone walkthrough →

Install on Android (MP3 format)

Android · MP3
  1. Save the MP3 file to your phone's Downloads folder.
  2. Open the Files app and long-press the audio file.
  3. Choose Set as ringtone if it's offered, or move the file into Internal storage → Ringtones.
  4. Open Settings → Sound & Vibration → Phone Ringtone and select your new tone.

Manufacturer-specific guides: Samsung Galaxy · Google Pixel

For a curated index of legally available archival recordings of classic theme music — the kind that work well as starting material for ringtones — see Cinema Sound Sources.

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