Aug 21st, 2008 by John Mansell
This soundtrack is for a Jess Franco erotic mystery that was released in 1970; the story tells of two dancers who begin to have a relationship, and this friendship begins to take a turn for the worse when both of them start to have nightmares in which they engage in killing people. Things begin to get out of hand when the fine line between reality and fantasy starts to become hard to define.
The score by composer Bruno Nicolai was never issued in an official form before, and this compact disc is the world premiere of Nicolai’s haunting and atmospheric work. Nicolai wrote a soundtrack that was very much in the category of experimental music for this movie, which gave great depth and an ambience of fear and to an already harrowing and realistically violent film.
Nicolai’s score is one that I would not say is easy to listen to, but at the same time it has an attraction about it that one finds enticing. His use of organ, atonal sounding strings and solo violin, Spanish guitar and also an interesting utilisation of percussion is masterful. It certainly works well within the context of the movie, whether or not it stands alone as a musical work away from the images is another matter. Nevertheless, any self respecting Nicolai collector should not be without this release. It does actually show off the composers ability to be versatile, as he not only provides the soundtrack with atonal and largely un-melodic cues, but includes compositions that do have a certain melodious quality about them.
The track GIOSTRA which is one of the longest tracks on the CD running for just over 6 minutes; it has an almost fairground sound to it, or maybe the sound of a barrel organ, which is a complete contrast from the majority of the rest of the score. The track INFRAROSSO is also somewhat different from the remainder of the score, and boasts a jazzy almost steamy sounding saxophone which is suitably accompanied by brushed and laid back sounding percussion which is supported and interspersed with jazz organ, that eventually takes on the principal theme of the cue.
As I have said there is a great deal of atonal material present on this compact disc, but please do not let this deter you from buying it, this is a Nicolai score of distinction that although a little more complicated and complex than other works by this Maestro, will still please and be enjoyable, have no doubt of that. As always packaged wonderfully by Digitmovies.
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Aug 17th, 2008 by John Mansell

This is a great collection of cues and library tracks from De Wolfe music in the U.K. These cues are just some of the music that De Wolfe licensed to the Shaw Brothers for use in their over the top and exciting Martial arts movies. The collection boasts 43 tracks, some being literally 5 second stabs and others being full blown compositions that are developed fully and run for up to 5 minutes. I think the attraction of this compact disc is that it is so diverse and varied, well with music included here from composers such as Paul Ferris, Reg Tilsley, Jack Trombey, Ivor Slaney, Peter Knight, Paul Lewis, Peter Francklyn, Derek Scott and others how could it be anything else but varied and interesting.
As we all know De Wolfe have one of the biggest if not the largest collection of library music in the world and have always been a respected name within the music business. I suppose it is the score for WITCHFINDER GENERAL that we normally associate with the music publishers from London, and its funny that a short 7 second stab from Paul Ferris,s score turns up here on this collection in the form of track number 6 Drama sting no 1 which was used in the movie SHAOLIN MANTIS in 1978. There is also another cue from WITCHFINDER included this time a little longer running for 1 minute 47 seconds, track 35 IN THE SHADOWS is a dark and ominous sounding cue which was utilised by the Brothers Shaw for their 1981 production HOUSE OF TRAPS.
This collection will not fail to appeal to everyone, as there is literally something for all tastes here, atmospheric cues, fast paced almost pop sounding tracks in the style of Laurie Johnson etc, and also quieter interludes that are pleasing and haunting. I as a soundtrack collector welcome this release, as I often wondered when sitting watching the latest martial arts movie in the cinemas of the 1970,s and 1980,s what the music was that was being played on the soundtrack. The CD is packaged very well and is full to overflowing with information on the music and also the history of how Shaw Brothers and De Wolfe began to work together. An interesting collection and one that I recommend to all.
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Aug 17th, 2008 by Tim Fife

A good Christmas present for the Italian soundtrack fan in your life just might be the limited edition MGM Soundtrack Treasury box set Film Score Monthly is releasing this month. The 12 CD set includes 20 scores from the United Artists Film Library, including rare Ennio Morricone and Riz Ortolani material. Some of this material has never been issued (one being a Lalo Schifrin score), and many of the CDs include previously unreleased bonus tracks. This release is limited to only 1200 copies and includes a 48 page booklet of original album art.
Here’s what’s included:
Disc 1) THE APARTMENT (Adolph Deutsch)
THE FORTUNE COOKIE (Andre Previn)
Disc 2) HOW TO MURDER YOUR WIFE (Neal Hefti)
DUEL AT DIABLO (Neal Hefti)
Disc 3) THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING,THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING (Johnny Mandel)
THE FUGITIVE KIND (Kenyon Hopkins)
Disc 4) A RAGE TO LIVE (Nelson Riddle)
GOODBYE AGAIN (Georges Auric)
Disc 5) THE HAPPY ENDING (Michel Legrand,)
Disc 6) THE HAPPY ENDING (Michel Legrand, additional cues)
Disc 7) BILLION DOLLAR BRAIN (Richard Rodney Bennett)
SHAKE HANDS WITH THE DEVIL (William Alwyn)
Disc8) THE CHARGE OF THE LIGHT BRIGADE (John Addison)
THE HONEY POT (John Addison)
Disc 9) PUSSYCAT, PUSSYCAT, I LOVE YOU (Lalo Schifrin)
Disc 10) THE HILLS RUN RED (Ennio Morricone
HORNETS’ NEST (Ennio Morricone)
Disc 11) THE 7TH DAWN (Riz Ortolani)
THE GLORY GUYS (Riz Ortolani)
Disc 12) HANNIBAL BROOKS (Francis Lai)
THE FINAL OPTION (Roy Budd)

In September Film Score Monthly will also be releasing a 3 CD set of previously unreleased music from the Shaft movies and TV show. Titled Shaft Anthology: His Big Score and More it includes the original soundtrack Issac Hayes composed for Shaft (not the rerecorded for LP version that has been available), as well as Gordon Parks’ Shaft’s Big Score and Johnny Pate’s music for the short lived Shaft TV show. FSM claims that the release is coincidental to Hayes’ recent death, and has been in the works for the last three years, and that music from Shaft in Africa had to be omitted due to licensing issues. The set will be limited to 3,000 copies.
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Aug 9th, 2008 by Tim Fife
Piero Umiliani not only had one of the greatest names in Italian soundtrack history (honestly I’m still not completely sure how to say it) but also composed some of its most energetic and lively music. The Florence born composer began his career in the 1950’s where he left a career in law to become a pianist, arranger, and orchestra director in Rome. His first score was for the comedy I SOLITI IGNOTI (aka Big Deal on Madonna Street) in 1958, and has the notoriety of being the first Italian score to exclusively use jazz music.
Umiliani continued to compose scores using jazz music, and ultimately began to be lumped in the category of Exotica. He had a huge hit in 1968 with his composition “Mah Na Mah Na,” a tune he wrote for the controversial mondo movie SVEZIA, INFERNO E PARADISO (aka Sweden, Heaven and Hell) and sung by longtime collaborator Alessandro Alessandroni (another great composer with an equally great name). The song became popular in the 70’s as Jim Henson used it for the Muppet show.
In 1970 Umiliani was asked to compose music for the Mario Bava stylish thriller 5 BAMBOLE PER LA LUNA D’AGOSTO (aka Five Dolls for an August Moon, Island of Terror), and made one of his most memorable scores. The score uses a decidedly exotic feel in the composition, using Hammond organ, harps, vibraphones, plenty of brass and wind instruments, and also include amazing percussion work that recalls the work of Martin Denny or Les Baxter.
Maestro Alessandroni is also to be given much credit for the score, as he plays a rambling sitar (as he did for the Nicolai score for TUTTI I COLORI DEL BUIO) and conducts his vocal choir I Cantori Moderni for the title song. The title song is a great little composition you could find yourself humming around the water cooler at work, and even has a little “Mah Na Mah Na” scat moment amongst the horn blasts and organ whirls.
Piero went on to compose over one hundred scores in his career in soundtracks. He was also notable in the world of early electronic music, as he released many great library records using early modular synthesizers (as documented on the great Musica Electronica compilations released by Easy Tempo). He also was a friend of Chet Bakers and released a very memorable album with him. Piero died in 2001 in Florence and left behind a legacy of great, classy records in the annals of Italian soundtracks.
BAMBOLE PER LA LUNA D’AGOSTO was first issued in 1970 on Cinevox. In 2001 Cinevox reissued the album with seven unreleased cues and unfortunately the record seems to have gone out of print (at least at this moment it’s not available). Cinevox released a great compilation of his work (Piero Umiliani Deluxe Edition), which is sort of a greatest hits collection of his work. Another great release is the Easy Tempo collection of Umiliani library music called To-day’s Sound (which includes the great theme he composed for Baba Yaga).
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Aug 9th, 2008 by John Mansell
The film music and sounds of composer Bruno Maderna are few and far between and to see a compact disc of this soundtrack released was a little surprising. I must admit that Maderna’s modern, experimental and futuristic sounding work for LA MORTE HA FATTO L’UOMO is anything but easy on the ear or the brain for that matter. It is at times very difficult to listen to and I found myself thinking maybe the director or producer of the movie was drunk when he agreed that the composers score was suitable for the film. Obviously it was, and has made a lasting impression on many a collector or fan of giallo pictures and music from them.
The composer supplies us with a somewhat disjointed sound throughout the work, by this I mean if you are looking for nice melodies and easy listening passages you have certainly come to the wrong place. It is a score that will require 100% concentration to appreciate the composers musical solutions to the films requirements. Although saying this on the second listen, I did find some attractive pieces which are performed in the main on solo violin, that is supported by classical guitar and interspersed with male voice which speaks rather than attempts to be musical in any way.
This is an interesting score because it was so far ahead of its time, after all most of the other giallo movies during this period were being scored by the likes of Cipriani, Morricone and Nicolai etc with haunting melodies and dramatic sounding compositions, which at times were themselves reffered to as experimental by critics, so Maderna has to congratulated for enhancing the images of this particular motion picture with music and sounds musical and otherwise which are certainly innovative if nothing else. This is a soundtrack that should be added to ones collection, because of its rarity and nothing else really. Sound quality is very clean and crisp, and the disc is packaged well, and has accompanying notes that at times become as difficult to read as the score ids to listen to.
Saying all of this, maybe the score might prove too modern sounding for Italian soundtrack collectors who are used to haunting melodies and soaring female vocals from the pens of Morricone, Cipriani, Micalizzi and Nicolai etc, so maybe this is an acquired taste, and one that should be listened too first before one purchases. No slight on fin de siecle releasing this one, but I do not envisage it being a great seller for them and if they should continue to release items such as this I can see them having a lot in stock.
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Jul 31st, 2008 by Tim Fife
Chances are, when you think of Italian horror, the first name that comes to mind is Dario Argento. Like all great filmmakers, the director is often complimented with a collaborator who helps bring form to their art. Kurosawa had Mifune, John Woo had Chow Yun Fat, Scorcese had DeNiro and Dario Argento had Claudio Simonetti. Yet, unlike the aforementioned directors, they worked with actors and while Argento certainly has his actors and actresses, one of the strongest characteristics of an Argento film is often the soundtrack, Where most Italian filmmakers got in line to have Ennio Morricone score their films and for good reason, Argento took a decidedly sharp left turn and instead employed the synth heavy sounds of one of Italy’s premier progressive rock bands, Goblin. Cinema Suicide’s Tim Fife speaks with Claudio Simonetti about his realtionship with Dario Argento and his career in soundtracks that spans over four decades.
Claudio Simonetti was born in February 19, 1952 in Sao Paulo, Brazil. His father, Enrico Simonetti, came from Italy to have a successful career as a composer and became a popular TV host in the 1960’s and 70’s. Around the age of 8, Claudio wanted to walk in his father’s footsteps and began to play the piano. Claudio says that his father never pressured him into being a musician, but stressed that he should study classical if he was interested. “Even though my father played a genre completely different from mine, I think he influenced me especially in the way of playing the piano,” says Simonetti. “I was very lucky to have a father like mine; he was also a great friend.”
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Jul 25th, 2008 by Tim Fife
Italy’s Beat Records are planning on releasing two unreleased poliziotteschi, slated for release in September.
The first is Gian Franco Plenizio and Enrico Pieranunzi’s great soundtrack for Romolo Guerrieri and Fernando Di Leo’s 1976 cop thriller Liberi Armati Pericolosi (aka Young, Violent and Dangerous). The title track was recently issued for the first time on the recent Cinedelic Tomas Milian compilation, but this is the first time the soundtrack has been released in its entirety. The CD will be limited to 1000 copies and includes a booklet that shows the original lobby cards. The disc also works as a CD-ROM that includes an interview with Plenzio.
Also being released is the much anticipated Milano Rovente score. Also known as Gang War in Milan, it was one of Umberto Lenzi first polizio movies and features a beautiful score by Carlo Rustichelli. Also limited to 1000 copies and a great booklet, it also has an interview (with English subtitles) with Lenzi on the CD-ROM portion of the album.
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Jul 25th, 2008 by John Mansell
Right from the offset one instinctively knows that this is going to be a work of high standards full of well thought out compositions with precise orchestrations and flawless performances that all combine to make up a soundtrack that oozes quality and class.
The opening cue ROOFTOP, which was unfortunately not utilised in the film, is an interesting mix of electronic beats and solo trumpet interspersed with fleeting piano flourishes and low sounding strings in the background, it is a short lived cue but none the less one that is memorable and infectious. Track 4, CAR CHASE is an up tempo swift paced cue, it begins quite subdued but soon builds into a composition that is suitably tense and exciting, again short lived but an exhilarating listen. Track 5, AMBULANCE is far more laid back and down tempo, a trumpet solo in jazz style is heard over synthesised piano and electronic sounds creating an almost urban feel and sound, it’s the sort of music one expects to hear as the camera spans the skyline of a large metropolis.
TRACK 7, ARRESTED, is for the most part synthesised and has the sound of Vangelis about it, the electronics being interspersed with piano and trumpet, which creates again a very atmospheric sound. Track 9, EVICTED is an interesting composition, almost spaghetti western sounding to this reviewer. It is again a fusion of electronic and conventional instrumentation, with trumpet once more taking centre stage supported by what I think could be a fuzzy sounding guitar laced with bass guitar that supports throughout. Track 15, SOLS STORY, is most certainly a stand out cue, performed by piano, it is a poignant and emotive sounding cue.
Also RESSURECTION track 36, is a cue that captivates when listened to, it runs for just over 6 minutes, the composer drawing together many of the colours and elements of the score to create a composition that builds slowly but surely into something that I deem to be very accomplished and special, with trumpet making a fleeting appearance and also effective use of soprano I guarantee this is a cue that collectors will return to many times.
Without a doubt Vincent Gillioz is a composer of note, a composer who is full of wonderful compositions and innovative musical ideas and a composer who I predict will graduate to A list movies very, very soon. In Gillioz I see and hear a younger version of Marco Beltrami, Thomas Newman, Christopher Young and their like. Watch out for him at the Oscars sooner rather than later.
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Jul 17th, 2008 by Tim Fife
Guido and Maurizio De Angelis are probably the most prolific songwriting duo in Italian cinema; the two brothers have worked on over 160 movies throughout their career under several deferent guises (mostly as Oliver Onions). They are probably most famous for their work on the Bud Spencer and Terrence Hill buddy films of the 70’s and 80’s, and their film themes were incredibly popular in Italy. The two not only had pop sensibility, but also knew how to make the perfect musical backdrop for whatever movie they were scoring.
The De Angelis brothers composed music for almost every kind of genre, but arguably their work for poliziotteschi movies are some of their best work. And possibly their best score for that genre was for Enzo Castellari’s 1974’s Il Cittadino Si Ribella (aka Street Law). The soundtrack truly only has three themes with each theme having several variants, but never gets dull and is a great, solid album.
The first of the themes is the title theme, which is a crawly bluesy track complete with harmonica, wah guitar, and a really great bass groove. Although it’s the weaker track of the three, it is has a great 70’s cop movie feel to it, and is perfect for the mood of the overall record.
The theme that appears the most is the amazing composition “Goodbye My Friend,” the track that opens and closes the movie, and appears in all the moments that have high tension. The main version of the theme features screaming vocals by Guido De Angelis and is also sung by a woman simply known as Suzy (who also sings on some other De Angelis scores), and it is easily one of the most memorable songs in poliziotteschi films. A booming vocal chorus (probably made with a mellotron) accompanied by a whirling Hammond organ and distorted adding dense layer and creating a great feeling of tension. Some of the versions of the song are instrumental, and the different versions include added synth or flute lines that mimic the lyrics.
The third theme is another great De Angelis composition simply titled “Driving all Around.” This song has a great police film feel, complete with synth stabs and tight drum beats. The main version of the song is sung once again by Guido, and like most of the songs he sings on, the lyrics are nearly incomprehensible due to his accent (which ultimately gives it a certain charm). I think in one part he says “traffic light sweat,”but honestly I can’t really tell. Two instrumental versions are also included with either a bass or guitar mimicking the vocal line.
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Jul 14th, 2008 by Tim Fife
Nora Orlandi was an invaluable figure in the 1960’s and 70’s era of Italian film music. Orlandi scored notorious giallos like Sergio Martino’s The Strange Vice of Mrs. Wardh (1971), the Edgar Wallace inspired Kinski film Double Face (aka A Doppia Faccia, 1969), and The Sweet Body of Deborah (1968) as well as several spaghetti westerns. Nora also sang with Alessandro Alessandroni’s group I Cantori Moderni which provided the choral work for many inportant scores, and she eventually formed her own important vocal group. John Mansell talks to Nora in a rare interview to find out the history behind an important figure in Italian cinema.
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