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Intrada Soundtrack Forum • View topic - Five Guilty Pleasures

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 Post subject: Five Guilty Pleasures
PostPosted: Fri Apr 28, 2006 5:21 pm 
Here we go...
Mr. Baseball J GoldsmithWhenever I'm in a discussion about this man's music and the participants get all hot and bothered in the heat of argument...I just mention this is my favorite Goldsmith and the room gets real quiet...real fast.
Land Raiders Bruno Nicolai
Red Sonja Ennio Morricone
Two From the Italian Camp...Two unwatchable movies ...two great scores.
King Kong Lives John Scott
On of the Dumbest plots on earth...but fine music
Hoffa David Newman
Nothing is harder, that talking up a movie no one wants to see...let alone listen to Michael Kamen's Reinventing The Abotts and Lalo Schifrin's Vovage of The Damned also fit in this catetogy


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PostPosted: Fri Apr 28, 2006 5:45 pm 
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PostPosted: Sat Apr 29, 2006 12:54 am 
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I thought of Mr. Baseball too reading Doug's column. Certainly not my favorite nor one my favorite scores of his, but really a good little score.
The only real problem is that cheesy fanfare; the score features a really nice love theme.


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PostPosted: Sat Apr 29, 2006 4:51 am 
A smaller Goldsmith score that has always gotten respect, from me, is FIERCE CREATURES.

b.


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PostPosted: Sat Apr 29, 2006 7:00 am 
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A couple years back I had occasion to cleanup a friend's copy of MARCO THE MAGNIFICENT by Georges Garvarentz. Now Garvarentz is someone I just basically ignored back in that short period in the late 60's to late 70's when he was an in-demand composer.

in working with the Columbia soundtrack, I ended up with the main theme running through my head for days. Since then, for another friend, I've worked on copies of KILLER FORCE (aka, THE DIAMOND MERCENARIES), THE SOUTHERN STAR, and (my own personal gulity pleasure) TRIPLE CROSS, and have come to really appreciate Garavrentz's melodic sense. KILLER FORCE is even fun in it's "dying days of disco" cue. "The Old Fashioned Way."

That over-the-top title song from TRIPLE CROSS has always be a guilty favorite of mine and, recently, Dr. Alex Zambra down in Houston, nicely provided me with a version of the song rendered by Tom Jones, which was amusing as it always sounded like it was intended to be a followup to THUNDERBALL. I must admit that the Jones version is taken at a somewhat slower tempo than the LP version by Tony Allen (and whatever else did he do?) and is not backled by the punchy Roland Shaw orchestral backing of the original soundtrack, so, in balance, i must admit to being mildly disappointed by the Jones version--although I must thank ALEX again for giving me the chance to hear it.


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PostPosted: Mon May 01, 2006 3:20 am 
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 Post subject: Five Guilty Pleasures
PostPosted: Mon May 01, 2006 10:32 am 
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Well, since Doug already took "How to Murder Your Wife" (which I listen to frequently, along with several other nifty Hefti tunes from the 60's like "Synanon" and "The Odd Couple" and yes, "Batman"), here are some of my favorite guilty pleasures:

"The Great Race" (Mancini), especially "Push the Button, Max!"

"Companieros" (Morricone) - the title vocal. This came up on an FSM thread recently. It's so over-the-top it's impossible to justify liking it, but I sure do, every time I play it.

"Popi" (Dominic Frontiere); contains a truly great piece called "Rita's Theme."

"Donkey Skin" (Michel Legrand); a sappy, silly follow-up to "Umbrellas of Cherborg," this is still one of my favorite Legrand scores. Full of great melodies and lush orchestration.

"Star Crash" (John Barry). What can I say? I like it...

There are more ("Fantastic Plastic Machine," "Kaleidoscope") but I've gone past my alloted 5 titles.

Mark T.


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PostPosted: Mon May 01, 2006 11:28 am 
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I also like How to Murder Your Wife. Funny movie too.

Yavar


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PostPosted: Mon May 01, 2006 2:21 pm 
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PostPosted: Tue May 02, 2006 12:30 pm 
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I too started collecting in the 60's, so besides the Bernstein's and the Goldsmith's available in those days, there were two guys I really dug, so to speak, and in thinking about this topic for a second, I came up easily with 5 guilty pleasures I'd like to share.

THE BIG KNIFE (1955) Columbia ZTST-23721/4
A grizzly tale of backstage machinations in Hollywood by the ever reliable Clifford Odets, master translator of pain and anguish, directed by Robert Aldrich, in his usual vulgar style, and scored by his favorite composer (and one of mine) Frank Devol, or as I remember from TV, just DeVol.

The main title set against the Saul Bass credits is ballsy and tough and so full of agony that the credits explode at the end, a lot of source music, lounge-style tunes arranged for small combos, and suspense cues very similar to his later work on Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? and, of course, Hush, Hush . . ., (Thank you, Doug)


SEX AND THE SINGLE GIRL (1964) Warner Bros. W-1572
Totally forgettable 60's sex farce with some old Hollywood vs. New Hollywood performers identifying moral slippage for a laugh, for an audience that was in on the joke, she can't get laid.

Okay, Mancini got there first and there was just no one who could out rank him, except Neal Hefti, who never wrote a bad score in his life. I think this is his finest, and the soundtrack album plays as a great listen, with two fantastic vocals by Fran Jeffries coming in at just the right sequencing. I love it.


LORD LOVE A DUCK (1966) United Artists UAS-5137
Writer/Director George Axelrod tries to make a comedy and pretty much kill's his career with this savage take on America's sacred institutions. No one dared to think so hard at the movies, not back then, still numb from Kennedy's assasination, but even today, the film reeks of overstatement.

Not the music, however, again by Neal Hefti, composing another of his brilliant main titles, this time sung by a real recording group from the Sixties, The Wild Ones, with lyrics by Ernie Sheldon, of Hallejulah Trail fame. The score is mostly mono-thematic, which is fine since the song Hefti came up with is brilliant, right up there with the Batman television theme.

TOPKAPI (1964) United Artists UAS-5118
Exiled director Jules Dassin continued his successful collaboration with wife/actress Melina Mercouri in this internationally cast heist film set in the famed Turkish Museum. The movie is bright and cheery while the actors
seem to be having fun playing noir-ish subject matter for laughs.

Manos Hadjidakis seemed to fall out of the sky when he scored the super-hit Never On Sunday for Dassin, and though they collaborated on other films, Topkapi has a very chunky kind of sound, thick and brassy and very foreign, almost like music from another planet. It's up-tempo throughout, and one album I've had to replace because I just wore it down to licorice.

MURDER, INC. (1960) Canadian-American 1003
Brilliant New York City wide-screen black and white photography off-set the overall 'B' look of the film, but the lurid tale of a snitch who rats out his gangster friends and pays with the life of his show-girl firlfriend under the boardwalk in Coney Island is never to be forgotten.

Frank DeVol returns after winning an Oscar nomination for Pillow Talk, turns 180 degrees and mixes it up with his percussion heavy main title, cabaret-style scoring for showgirl Mai Britt and legendary Sarah Vaughan singing two dreadful songs written for film, but not by DeVol. The album only has flashes of DeVol's work, but what's there is choice.
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Jerry Goldsmith, Joel Goldsmith, John Williams, Elmer Bernstein,Michael Giacchino,Scott Glasgow,Alan Silvestri, Bernard Herrmann, Christopher Young, Bruce Broughton,Ennio Morricone and a host of others.


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