Hi, I'm wondering if this has already been discussed, I hope no. Lately, I have seen amazing japanese films with delightful music. I'm wondering what do you think of the soundtracks genre and your favorite albums or composers. In case of Morricone I purchased sometime ago il malamondo/la tarantola del ventre nero. The first soundtrack was ok but I loved much more la tarantola. I also like Krzysztof Komeda, the stuff on tzadik by Ribot ( I'm going to buy Ikue Mori B/Side, what about other filmworks to pick up on tzadik?), Nino Rota or Jerry Goldsmith's Chinatown. Cheers Rafa --------------------------------- Antivirus #8226; Filtros antispam #8226; 6 MB gratis ¿TodavÃa no tienes un correo inteligente?
In the liner notes to the Flaming Lips's "Hit to Death in the Future Head," there is a picture of one of them wearing a Sonic Youth t-shirt playing this really strange looking guitar. It is shaped like an arrow head. It has an F hole, big single coil pickups, and a very small pick guard. Any ideas what that guitar is? Thanks. Zach
The other night I noticed a distorted sound on some of the higher and lower frequencies on an mp3 I made of the Soft Bulletin (note: these distortions don't appear on the CD). I tried two different encoders (musicmatch and easy cd-da extractor) at all different bit rates (even at 320). It was persistent. Then I noticed it on mp3s I made of the Jack Johnson box-mostly on Miles's trumpet. The connection: they are both HDCDs. So, is this an issue of chopping off the extra 4 bits from the 20-bit HDCD? Has anyone else noticed this? Zach
Hi Rafa and all, --- ahleucha ahleucha <ahleucha_79@yahoo.es> escribió: >
Hi,
I'm wondering if this has already been discussed, I hope no. Lately, I have seen amazing japanese films with delightful music. I'm wondering what do you think of the soundtracks genre and your favorite albums or composers.
Morricone is certainly amazing, particularly until the late 70's, imho. His discography is full of classics, so you better not get into it unless you want to invest some big money! I love the spaghetti western stuff: "The Good, the bad and the Ugly", "A fistful of dollars", "The Big Gundown", the Mondo Morricone compilations (except for the third volume; I'm not sure if they're still in print but they've been reissued on vinyl); Dagored has reissued lots of Morricone material from the 70's, mostly low-budget thrillers and loungey stuff (you can find tones of that in Barcelona in Wah-Wah records on cd or vinyl at good prices) Lalo Schifrin has very good soundtracks. I particularly like "Bullitt" (who was the guitar player on that?) and "Dirty Harry". From the latter there's a good compilation on Warner (not the one on Aleph!!) and I also saw a very cheap 2cd box including "Bullitt" and "Enter the Dragon" some years ago. I recently found Burt Bacharach's "After the Fox" on MGM. It's a great record, imho, but unfortunately it's out of print (you can also find that at Disco 100. Sorry about the local info!). And one of my most-listened-to soundtracks last year was the reissue of Bernard Hermann's "The Day the Earth Stood Still", in the event you're into sci-fi/theremin stuff. RCA Spain is issuing very good old sountrack works by Henry Mancini, Hugo Montenegro, Neal Hefti, etc at ridiculously low prices with good remastering work (Discos Balada in this case, 7-9Â)
I also like Krzysztof Komeda, the stuff on tzadik by Ribot ( I'm going to buy Ikue Mori B/Side, what about other filmworks to pick up on tzadik?), Nino Rota or Jerry Goldsmith's Chinatown.
In Ribot's case, I prefer the first volume, "Shoe String Symphonettes" to the latest. I found "B/Side" to be quite minimalistic and I ended up getting bored. Evan Lurie's "How I Spent my Vacation" is a lovely record, nothing challenging at all, just beautiful music: smooth jazz, piano solos, classical guitar, ... Fred Frith's "Eye to Ear" is amazing, much better than the second one, imho. Some stuff in the vein of "Pacifica", noise, etc. Great, great album. I also like Steve Beresford's "Cue Sheets". I don't know his work very well, but according to what I had listened to, I was expecting something in the vein of free-improv or something, but it's actually a mish-mash of styles ranging from tango to cabaret to jazz. And anything from Zorn's Filmwork series, of course! Sorry about the lenght and local information. Best, Efrén del Valle n.p: JZ "Hemophiliac" (Tzadik) ___________________________________________________ Yahoo! Messenger - Nueva versión GRATIS Super Webcam, voz, caritas animadas, y más... http://messenger.yahoo.es
Hi gang: And don't forget that Schifrin is one of the few soundtrack composers with major league jazz credentials. He was the pianist in Dizzy Gilelspie's quintet in the early 1960s (preceding Kenny Baron) and did some fine work on LPs such as the big band session Gillespiana on Verve. Today's fascinating factoid. Ken Waxman --- Efrén del Valle <efrendv@yahoo.es> wrote: > Hi Rafa and all, Lalo Schifrin has very good soundtracks. I particularly like "Bullitt" (who was the guitar player on that?) and "Dirty Harry". From the latter there's a good compilation on Warner (not the one on Aleph!!) and I also saw a very cheap 2cd box including "Bullitt" and "Enter the Dragon" some years ago.
--- ahleucha ahleucha <ahleucha_79@yahoo.es> escribió: >
Hi,
I'm wondering if this has already been discussed,
I
hope no. Lately, I have seen amazing japanese films with delightful music. I'm wondering what do you think of the soundtracks genre and your favorite albums or composers.
Morricone is certainly amazing, particularly until the late 70's, imho. His discography is full of classics, so you better not get into it unless you want to invest some big money! I love the spaghetti western stuff: "The Good, the bad and the Ugly", "A fistful of dollars", "The Big Gundown", the Mondo Morricone compilations (except for the third volume; I'm not sure if they're still in print but they've been reissued on vinyl); Dagored has reissued lots of Morricone material from the 70's, mostly low-budget thrillers and loungey stuff (you can find tones of that in Barcelona in Wah-Wah records on cd or vinyl at good prices) Lalo Schifrin has very good soundtracks. I particularly like "Bullitt" (who was the guitar player on that?) and "Dirty Harry". From the latter there's a good compilation on Warner (not the one on Aleph!!) and I also saw a very cheap 2cd box including "Bullitt" and "Enter the Dragon" some years ago. I recently found Burt Bacharach's "After the Fox" on MGM. It's a great record, imho, but unfortunately it's out of print (you can also find that at Disco 100. Sorry about the local info!). And one of my most-listened-to soundtracks last year was the reissue of Bernard Hermann's "The Day the Earth Stood Still", in the event you're into sci-fi/theremin stuff. RCA Spain is issuing very good old sountrack works by Henry Mancini, Hugo Montenegro, Neal Hefti, etc at ridiculously low prices with good remastering work (Discos Balada in this case, 7-9)
I also like Krzysztof Komeda, the stuff on tzadik by Ribot ( I'm going to buy Ikue Mori B/Side, what about other filmworks to pick up on tzadik?), Nino Rota or Jerry Goldsmith's Chinatown.
In Ribot's case, I prefer the first volume, "Shoe String Symphonettes" to the latest. I found "B/Side" to be quite minimalistic and I ended up getting bored. Evan Lurie's "How I Spent my Vacation" is a lovely record, nothing challenging at all, just beautiful music: smooth jazz, piano solos, classical guitar, ... Fred Frith's "Eye to Ear" is amazing, much better than the second one, imho. Some stuff in the vein of "Pacifica", noise, etc. Great, great album. I also like Steve Beresford's "Cue Sheets". I don't know his work very well, but according to what I had listened to, I was expecting something in the vein of free-improv or something, but it's actually a mish-mash of styles ranging from tango to cabaret to jazz. And anything from Zorn's Filmwork series, of course!
Sorry about the lenght and local information.
Best,
Efrén del Valle n.p: JZ "Hemophiliac" (Tzadik)
___________________________________________________ Yahoo! Messenger - Nueva versión GRATIS Super Webcam, voz, caritas animadas, y más... http://messenger.yahoo.es
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http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/zorn-list ===== Ken Waxman mingusaum@yahoo.ca www.jazzword.com - Jazz/improv news, CD reviews and photos ______________________________________________________________________ Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca
On Jan 31, 2004, at 6:09 AM, Ken Waxman wrote:
And don't forget that Schifrin is one of the few soundtrack composers with major league jazz credentials. He was the pianist in Dizzy Gilelspie's quintet in the early 1960s (preceding Kenny Baron) and did some fine work on LPs such as the big band session Gillespiana on Verve.
But isn't he the musical director for the Three Tenors today? (not-so-amazin-and-maybe-even-wrong factoid) Julien
Julien (et. al): Just checked www.schifrin.com, not exactly a regular stop for me, and found this: "He was commissioned to write the Grand Finale for an event which took place in Caracalla, Italy, July 7th, 1990, to celebrate the finals of the World Cup Soccer Championship. In this concert, the Three Tenors, Luciano Pavarotti, Placido Domingo and Jose Carreras sang together for the first time. The orchestras of the Rome and Florence opera companies were conducted by Zubin Mehta. The record and videotape of this event have gone on to become the biggest sellers in the history of classical music. Schifrin also was engaged to arrange the sequels for July 1994, also for Carreras, Domingo, Pavarotti and Zubin Mehta, which was performed at Dodger Stadium, again on the eve of the World Cup Soccer Championships; the Three Tenors event that was held in July of 1998 in Paris, France, and the latest one for the World Cup Finals in Japan." Considering all the other things LS has done -- see the site -- playing up his associatio with the Three tenors (--And I always thought they were Trane, Newk and Bean --) is like dwelling on Rhoderi Davies' gig backing up Charlotte Church :) Ken Waxman --- Julien Quint <pom@graougraou.com> wrote: > On Jan 31, 2004, at 6:09 AM, Ken Waxman wrote:
And don't forget that Schifrin is one of the few soundtrack composers with major league jazz credentials. He was the pianist in Dizzy Gilelspie's quintet in the early 1960s (preceding Kenny Baron) and did some fine work on LPs such as the big band session Gillespiana on Verve.
But isn't he the musical director for the Three Tenors today? (not-so-amazin-and-maybe-even-wrong factoid)
Julien
===== Ken Waxman mingusaum@yahoo.ca www.jazzword.com - Jazz/improv news, CD reviews and photos ______________________________________________________________________ Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca
"Dirty Harry" is Schifrin's BEST!!! creepy, funky jazz! one of my all-time fav's! Andrew -----Original Message----- From: zorn-list-bounces+andrewm=mail.selc.com.au@mailman.xmission.com [mailto:zorn-list-bounces+andrewm=mail.selc.com.au@mailman.xmission.com] On Behalf Of Ken Waxman Sent: Saturday, 31 January 2004 8:10 AM To: Efrin del Valle; ahleucha ahleucha; zorn-list@mailman.xmission.com Subject: Re: Soundtracks/Lalo Schifrin Hi gang: And don't forget that Schifrin is one of the few soundtrack composers with major league jazz credentials. He was the pianist in Dizzy Gilelspie's quintet in the early 1960s (preceding Kenny Baron) and did some fine work on LPs such as the big band session Gillespiana on Verve. Today's fascinating factoid. Ken Waxman --- Efrin del Valle <efrendv@yahoo.es> wrote: > Hi Rafa and all, Lalo Schifrin has very good soundtracks. I particularly like "Bullitt" (who was the guitar player on that?) and "Dirty Harry". From the latter there's a good compilation on Warner (not the one on Aleph!!) and I also saw a very cheap 2cd box including "Bullitt" and "Enter the Dragon" some years ago.
--- ahleucha ahleucha <ahleucha_79@yahoo.es> escribis: >
Hi,
I'm wondering if this has already been discussed,
I
hope no. Lately, I have seen amazing japanese films with delightful music. I'm wondering what do you think of the soundtracks genre and your favorite albums or composers.
Morricone is certainly amazing, particularly until the late 70's, imho. His discography is full of classics, so you better not get into it unless you want to invest some big money! I love the spaghetti western stuff: "The Good, the bad and the Ugly", "A fistful of dollars", "The Big Gundown", the Mondo Morricone compilations (except for the third volume; I'm not sure if they're still in print but they've been reissued on vinyl); Dagored has reissued lots of Morricone material from the 70's, mostly low-budget thrillers and loungey stuff (you can find tones of that in Barcelona in Wah-Wah records on cd or vinyl at good prices) Lalo Schifrin has very good soundtracks. I particularly like "Bullitt" (who was the guitar player on that?) and "Dirty Harry". From the latter there's a good compilation on Warner (not the one on Aleph!!) and I also saw a very cheap 2cd box including "Bullitt" and "Enter the Dragon" some years ago. I recently found Burt Bacharach's "After the Fox" on MGM. It's a great record, imho, but unfortunately it's out of print (you can also find that at Disco 100. Sorry about the local info!). And one of my most-listened-to soundtracks last year was the reissue of Bernard Hermann's "The Day the Earth Stood Still", in the event you're into sci-fi/theremin stuff. RCA Spain is issuing very good old sountrack works by Henry Mancini, Hugo Montenegro, Neal Hefti, etc at ridiculously low prices with good remastering work (Discos Balada in this case, 7-9
participants (6)
-
ahleucha ahleucha -
Efrén del Valle -
Julien Quint -
Ken Waxman -
SELC - Andrew Mortensen -
Zachary Steiner