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Film Noir!
 
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Film Noir! [Soundtrack]

Matthew Herbert , Terence Blanchard , Angelo / Lynch, David Badalamenti , Edward Artemiev , Cyril Morin , Frederick [Composer] Rousseau , Alex Wurman , Bernard Herrmann , Howard Shore , Angelo Badalamenti , John Ottman , Hans / Badelt, Klaus Zimmer , Andre Hossein , Pino Donaggio , John [Composer] Morris , Claire David , Joe Hisaishi , Howard Shore , Natale Massara , John Morris Audio CD
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

Price: $13.55 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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MP3 Download, 17 Songs, 2009 $9.99  
Audio CD, Soundtrack, 2005 $13.55  

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Music

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Biography

Angelo Badalamenti is an American composer, born in 1937. He has worked closely with director David Lynch and produced soundtracks for projects like Blue Velvet, Mullholland Drive, and Twin Peaks.

Visit Amazon's Angelo Badalamenti Store
for 32 albums, photos, and 16 full streaming songs.

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Film Noir! + Crime Scene USA: Classic Film Noir Themes & Jazz Tracks + Crime Scene: Ultra Lounge 7
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Product Details

  • Conductor: Howard Shore, Natale Massara, John Morris
  • Composer: Matthew Herbert, Terence Blanchard, Angelo / Lynch, David Badalamenti, Edward Artemiev, Cyril Morin, et al.
  • Audio CD (May 24, 2005)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Soundtrack
  • Label: Milan Records
  • ASIN: B00081U78G
  • In-Print Editions: Audio CD  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #264,588 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 
1. Turning Pages
2. Godfather
3. Silencio (for the film Mulholland Drive)
4. They Go Long
5. Don't Be Worried
6. Suspense
7. Chop Shop
8. Theme
9. Sympatico / Misterioso (Thelonious Monk)
10. House of Silence
11. Mansfield Crash
12. Verbal Kint
13. The Swing
14. Blues for Guylaine (used in the film Le Jeu De La Vérité)
15. Buckets of Blood
16. Theme
17. Mourning
18. Ballade
19. Night Piece, suite from "Taxi Driver," for saxophone & orchestra (arr.

Editorial Reviews

Film Noir, a genre created by French film critics to describe the en vogue Hollywood film of the ‘40s and ‘50s, has become part of film pop-culture. Sixty years later, naked cities, lonely detectives tormented between love and duty, doomed femmes fatales, cigarettes burning in a New York hotel at 3am, a half empty bottle of gin laying next to a bed at dawn, a gunshot in the middle of the night... all of these strong images are eternal icons of a genre that beautifully expressed the anxieties of Western societies after World War II. The album Film Noir captures these snapshots of lives lost in the big sleeping cities by compiling the most powerful musical pieces to create an imaginary film noir screenplay. Throughout these excerpts of legendary soundtracks, some famous, some yet to be discovered, listeners can travel back to a time where ugliness and darkness became visual beauty. With pieces by Matthew Herbert, Howard Shore, Angelo Badalamenti, Bernard Herrmann and many others, Film Noir is the compilation to accompany you through endless sleepless nights. Warner. 2005. --This text refers to an alternate Audio CD edition.

 

Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Perhaps not *quite* what you want..., April 26, 2007
By 
Wesley Clark (Springfield, Virginia) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Film Noir! (Audio CD)
If you're like me and you have a hankering for "film noir music," you're probably thinking of a lonely sax playing an urban, 3 AM melodic line, backed by some bluesy chords from a small jazz ensemble. Like John Barry's excellent theme from "Body Heat," for example, or something like Jerry Goldsmith's theme for "Chinatown."

Never mind the fact that the great majority of films noir from the classic period (1941-1955) didn't have jazzy background music like that at all, but was usually scored with quasi-classical romantic string music (with a solo violin) or bombastic, brass-heavy instrumentals.

Anyway, this CD isn't the 3 AM sax stuff.

Not to say that there isn't some of that on here. You might like "Godfather" (not, however, the theme you're thinking of from the Francis Ford Coppola Godfather films), or "Blues for Guylaine," or even the bluesy passages from Bernard Herrmann's "Taxi Driver" suite.

But there's some odd stuff on here that causes me to wonder how, precisely, it qualifies as "film noir."

For instance, the dreamy carnival music from "The Elephant Man," or the angular string music in "Buckets of Blood" (from "Carrie," not the Roger Corman film). Seems like a reach. The first cut, "Turning Pages" had me unpleasantly surprised, and triggered my I've been ripped-off alarm. And "Chop Shop" has a wah guitar that sounds a lot more like a 70's blaxsploitation film than film noir.

The inclusion of Angelo Badalamenti helps redeem the collection; his music for "Twin Peaks," "Fire, Walk With Me" and "Mulholland Drive" redefines what a noir theme should sound like.

This CD is odd, no doubt about it. "Godfather," which sounds decidedly noirish, is from a comedy/drama film about a man who's paid to impregnate lesbians. "The Wrong Man" music is relentlessly perky but comes from a bona fide noir. (Okay, a Hitchcock noir, not quite the same thing.)

The key here, I guess, is to enlarge the scope of what you think noir film music ought to be... But perhaps a better title for this collection of music might have been "Neo-Noir!"

Still, credit must be given to liner notes writer Eddie Muller and his Film Noir Foundation for at least directing the current noir wave. His book "Dark City" turned me - and probably many others - to noir. Long may his tribe increase!

Summary: If you're looking for classic/sterotypical, 3 AM wet-pavements-in-the-Dark-City noirish stuff, try John Barry's "Body Heat," which I enthusiastically recommend. Barry practically *owns* that silky/sexy slow sax genre.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Nice imaginative collection, August 3, 2006
By 
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Film Noir! (Audio CD)
A collection of musical cues from various film noir scores, but imaginatively assembled to constitute a new score for a nonexistent movie. Cleverly done, choosing from excellent sources, and not going for the easy or the obvious. It's exciting to hear someone making a connection between Bernard Herrmann and Angelo Badalamenti.
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