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1979 2014 A Alan Parsons Project Artists (by group or surname) Music Reviews Non-Soundtrack Music Year

Alan Parsons Project – The Sicilian Defence

4 min read

Order this CDSome albums become legendary because they were never released, and then the fan clamoring begins until someone, sensing a good opportunity to pay the mortgage for a month or two, relents, and puts out some kind of unfinished, compromised, or finished-after-the-fact-many-years-later version of whatever it was going to be (but hey, enough about the various versions of Pete Townshend’s Lifehouse or Brian Wilson’s Smile out there). (Sometimes something remains unreleased permanently, unless someone just straight up raids the vaults.) The fact that it couldn’t be heard, the fact that the fans were being denied their prize, becomes the main vector of attraction.

The Sicilian Defence was never actually intended to be released, though. Recorded in 1979 between Alan Parsons and his songwriting collaborator in the Project, Eric Woolfson, it was always a negotiating tactic between the two principals of the Alan Parsons Project and their label at the time, Arista. In short, Parsons and Woolfson wanted to alter their deal, and delivered the all-instrumental Sicilian Defence to Arista almost simultaneously with the released 1979 album Eve to give them leverage: they’d delivered the last two albums of the Project’s contract. They were either done with Arista and free to go elsewhere, or Arista could give them more time and money to work on the next album. The Sicilian Defence was disposable. It was Alan and Eric screwing around on pianos and synthesizers in studio downtime. It was a ploy designed to freak out their handlers at the label, not the Project’s great unfinished symphony.

The inclusion of a piano instrumental track from the unreleased album on the 2008 remastered reissue of Eve seemed to portend a change of heart, even though Parsons was public in his desire for the entire unreleased album to stay that way permanently. (As Sony/Legacy was now controlling the band’s back catalog, the label insisted.) And then in 2014, it was included as a bonus disc in a pricey, career-spanning box set. But now The Sicilian Defence has finally become available on its own in digital form, and it’s not without its charms. As the album is named after an aggressive set of chess moves, the tracks are named after moves in that sequence. The track from which three minutes were excerpted for the “Elsie’s Theme” track on the Eve remaster is “P-Qb4”, and is twice the length of the previously released excerpt. It’s a lovely solo piano piece, and “P-Q4” and “KtxP” follow in a similar vein (the latter with a very chintzy late ’70s drum machine in the background). “Kt-QB3”, another piano piece, has a more aggressive pace and feels like it’s threatening to develop into a proper song, but as it noodles on for over eight minutes, it lands as a piece that wouldn’t been well off calling it a day at the four-and-a-half-minute mark.

But the really interesting stuff is a handful of lo-fi synthesizer jams. “P-K4”, “Kt-KB3”, and “PxP” have a percolating, vintage synth vibe that I can be describe with the following ludicrous phrase: “early ’80s Weather Channel local forecast”. That may seem like the most obscure possible descriptor, and yet I can’t think of a better one. They’re not light-years away from “Hyper-Gamma-Spaces” or “Mammagamma”, but they are at least 273,600 miles from them – they seem more like demos than anything close to a finished product. “…Kt-QB3” and “Kt-B3”, the two shortest tracks, have strings and choral vocals probably recorded as warm-ups or outtakes from previous albums’ sessions and edited together. “P-Q3” is a synth piece with a pastoral, classical feel. Rather than building to anything significant, the album – such as it is – just…ends.

None of it was ever developed further for use on later releases, and in some cases that’s a pity, because there are some promising starts – but only starts.

3 out of 4The part of me that loves new wave and analog synths doing analog synth things loves those tracks on this album, but let’s face it: this album should probably be recused from getting a rating because we were never meant to hear it, and wouldn’t have, except that the studio-owned master recordings changed hands and the new label decided that it would be heard regardless of Parsons’ wishes (Woolfson died in 2009). As a standalone listening experience, The Sicilian Defence really doesn’t work unless you know its backstory, even though the Project was renowned for its instrumental pieces. But if you’re looking for that circa-1983 local forecast vibe? I can give this a hearty recommendation.

  1. P-K4 (5:06)
  2. P-Qb4 (6:22)
  3. Kt-KB3 (3:07)
  4. …Kt-QB3 (1:15)
  5. P-Q4 (3:55)
  6. PxP (3:28)
  7. KtxP (4:01)
  8. Kt-B3 (0:53)
  9. Kt-QB3 (8:16)
  10. P-Q3 (3:29)

Released by: Sony/Legacy/Arista
Release date: March 23, 2014
Total running time: 39:50

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2014 Music Reviews N Soundtracks Soundtracks by Title Television Year

NHK Special: The Explosion Of Comet ISON, Mystery Of The Solar System – music by Yasunori Mitsuda

4 min read

Order this CDSometimes a soundtrack reviewer just tries to keep up with the latest and greatest, and sometimes a soundtrack reviewer hits you betwixt the ears with something that, while not being the latest and greatest, is what they’ve been listening to in their downtime. This is one of those reviews.

Discovered by astronomers in 2012, Comet ISON (named for the series of networked telescopes used to observe it) caused a stir as it sped toward the inner solar system. Some astronomers, both professional and amateur, pondered the possibility that it might be observable by the unaided human eye, and that its brightness might be greater than the moon’s. But in November 2013, its path carried it into close proximity of the sun, whose heat and gravity shredded the comet into fragments so small that they could no longer be detected. Naked eye stargazers might have been disappointed, but all of this was of intense interest to the astronomical community. And in December 2013, Japanese television network NHK forged ahead with an already-planned television special about the comet, even though it had been destroyed.

Tapped to provide the music for this special was renowned video game and anime composer Yasunori Mitsuda, whose music had graced the likes of Chrono Trigger, Mario Party, Xenogears, Shadow Hearts, Xenoblade Chronicles, and many more. Mitsuda created a soundtrack befitting an epic movie, not a slightly dry but nicely-presented prime-time science special. Everything about this score is the very definition of “extra”. Did the show’s opening title theme need to feature a soaring, wordless female vocal that seemed to be something like the lost sister of the original Star Trek theme? Probably not. But that’s what it got, orchestral and near-operatic grandeur. The second track after that epic opening does some masterful mood-setting. “Distant Universe” creates a feeling of wistful wanderlust; “Human Evolution” is a track of quite, majestic mystery. This is for a science special? This music is making me feel things.

It’s not all orchestral splendor. There are some tracks of percolating synth music (“Comet Tour Of Dreams”, “Understanding The ISON Comet”, “Mission – Challenges”, most of the “Analysis” tracks) that are probably more like what one would expect a prime-time science educational special to sound like. But the sad fact is: Mitsuda composed and recorded everything prior to the special, which was scheduled to go out live so audiences could see Comet ISON’s brightest, closest approach to the sun and the inner planets in, more or less, real time. But that closest approach led to the comet’s destruction, leaving nothing to broadcast live except for a really elaborate obituary for a celestial body. Not all of the music was used in the special, because it no longer fit the subject matter. There’s absolutely sumptuous music here, recorded in advance, for an event that never happened. (One suspects that the bold, triumphant heraldry of “Amazing Huge Comet” is one of the unused cues.)

4 out of 4And it’s absolutely some of the best work Yasunori Mitsuda’s ever done. No joke, this blows away nearly all of what I’ve heard of his video game music. He was given real players and a real budget, an unrestrictive briefing on the subject matter, and was set loose to do what he wanted. This lovely soundtrack is the result, even more than the show it was meant to accompany could hope to be under the circumstances, and it’s definitely worth a listen.

  1. Large Comet ISON (2:23)
  2. 50 Million Year Journey (3:39)
  3. Thoughts Toward A Starry Sky (1:48)
  4. Comet Tour Of Dreams (2:21)
  5. Distant Universe (2:09)
  6. Human Evolution (2:41)
  7. Mystery Of The Unknown (2:07)
  8. Understanding The ISON Comet (2:05)
  9. Analysis, Part 1: Science (2:12)
  10. Analysis, Part 2: Puzzle (1:59)
  11. Analysis, Part 3: The Past (2:02)
  12. Analysis, Part 4: Clarification (2:40)
  13. Analysis, Part 5: Analysis (1:54)
  14. Mission – Challenges (2:33)
  15. Amazing Huge Comet (2:37)
  16. Yearning Toward The Skies (2:39)
  17. Large Comet ISON: Piano Version (2:17)

Released by: Sleigh Bells Records
Release date: April 27, 2014
Total running time: 40:06

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2014 A Doctor Who Music Reviews Soundtracks Soundtracks by Title Year

An Adventure In Space And Time – music by Edmund Butt

4 min read

Order this CDAccording to the liner notes, composer Edmund Butt was given one major instruction before embarking on the score for the 2013 one-off docudrama An Adventure In Space And Time: don’t let this piece about Doctor Who’s original star sound anything like Doctor Who. Oh, that simple, right?

Except that Doctor Who has run the gamut from electronic music to small chamber ensemble to electronic again and now orchestral-with-electronic. Anyone trying to avoid a category as broad as those will probably take off screaming for the hills. What the score for An Adventure In Space And Time does manage to do is land its musical style somewhere in an old-fashioned kind of timelessness, while occasionally trying on the more typical musical sci-fi trappings when the story calls for it. Starting things out with a waltz is not something that’s in the Doctor Who scoring playbook, providing the first signal that this isn’t “in universe”. (It’s also not entirely reality, but in a bit of a simplified uncanny valley in between the two, just enough to get some of the broad strokes of William Hartnell’s life across.)

You’re not too far into the album before the score does drop something that could easily fit into Doctor Who proper. “The Daleks” may accompany the first appearance of the Dalek props at the BBC, but it would work just as well in-universe, with a staccato synth bassline eerily hinting at the heartbeat-like signature sound associated with Dalek technology. Whether that was intentional or not, it’s a nice, subtle reference. (It’s also somewhat present in “JFK Assassinated”, a scene that appears adjacent to the Daleks’ first appearance in the movie; see notes below about the sequencing of the album.) The playful beginning of “What Dimension?” suddenly hangs a sharp left turn into a startlingly mysterious, almost foreboding passage accompanying the first glimpse of the TARDIS set transitioning from idea to a real place (existing on a soundstage), a theme also heard on its own in the track “The Tardis”.

But the heart of An Adventure In Space And Time, whether it’s the movie or just its score, is in sketching out a somewhat idealized version of Hartnell’s life. “Autograph Hunting” accompanies a montage of such scenes very effectively, just as “Piss & Vinegar” follows Verity Lambert and Sydney Newman’s thread through the story. Though there are some standouts that musically portend major developments in the mythology of Doctor Who, most of the score is concerned with the stories of the people making that mythology.

4 out of 4The one thing I really count any points off for with this otherwise wonderful release is that the tracks are wildly out of order with regard to how and where they appear in the show itself – the first piece of music heard in the show is literally the last track on the album. Only toward the end of the album do things start to appear in anything reasonably resembling their sequence as aired, with a loose suite of cues clustered around the theme of Hartnell’s decline and eventual departure from the role (“I’m So Sorry, Bill”, “My Successor”); the real stunner of this almost-a-suite at the end is “The New Doctor”, which includes the scene of Hartnell shooting his last scene, and the in-universe-or-maybe-not glimpse of Matt Smith that follows. I can’t fault any of the music, but the sequencing is a bit baffling.

  1. Main Title – An Adventure in Space and Time (00:36)
  2. The Right Man (01:15)
  3. The First Woman Producer (01:18)
  4. I’ve Got an Idea… (01:32)
  5. The Daleks (02:49)
  6. Kill Dr. Who (01:49)
  7. What Dimension? (01:23)
  8. This is My Show (01:49)
  9. Autograph Hunting (02:28)
  10. Sydney Newman (01:02)
  11. Scarlett O’Hara (01:02)
  12. Piss & Vinegar (01:23)
  13. Dressing Room (01:19)
  14. JFK Assassinated (01:48)
  15. The TARDIS (00:51)
  16. Goodbye Susan (02:29)
  17. 10 Million Viewers (00:56)
  18. The Fans (00:36)
  19. I’m So Sorry, Bill (02:39)
  20. Kiss Goodbye (01:05)
  21. My Successor (01:06)
  22. ISOP Galaxy (00:50)
  23. Irreplaceable (01:20)
  24. The New Doctor (03:54)
  25. Time’s Up… (01:16)

Released by: Silva Screen Records
Release date: March 3, 2014
Total running time: 38:23

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1979 1980 2014 B Music Reviews Soundtracks Soundtracks by Title Television Year

Buck Rogers In The 25th Century: Season Two

8 min read

Order this CDMost music takes quite a while to seep into someone’s head, and it usually takes repeat listening. Music for television didn’t really get much of a chance to do that. Theme songs heard week to week, sure, and in the days when shows were able to reuse music from episode to episode, such as the original Star Trek did (or, to name another whose instantly recognizable themes come to mind, Gilligan’s Island), would ingrain themselves in the memory. And I’m here to report that Bruce Broughton’s music from the second season of Buck Rogers In The 25th Century did the same, at least for young me.

Each episode’s opening credits still unrolled to the tune of Johnny Harris’ brassy arrangement of the Stu Phillips/Glen A. Larson theme tune from season one, but Broughton brought something different to season two; cute synthesized robot music and “something kinda funky” were off the table as the series tried desperately to graduate from its decidedly disco-era first season. Under a new producer who was trying to lend the show a new layer of credibility, Buck Rogers’ second season was somewhat ironically patterned after its cancelled NBC predecessor, Star Trek, with Buck & company exploring deep space rather than staying on Earth. Most episodes opened with a slow tracking shot of the Earth ship Searcher, Buck’s new home base, with a noble, widescreen, and not-at-all-disco-fied theme for the ship and its mission provided by Broughton… and though I had long since lost track of what it was from, when the series resurfaced on DVD, it all came back to me. This four-disc set allows it all to be heard without all of that pesky dialogue and the sound effects mix.

Also in the irony department is the fact that the shorter second season – which ran only half as long as the first season – gets a four-disc soundtrack collection as opposed to season one’s three-disc box set. Chalk that one up to the recognition that, at least musically, the show was trying harder. There would be no goofy scenes of Buck trying to convince anyone to boogie down; the music is painted from a more epic palette for season two’s eleven episodes (two of which were feature-length specials each split into two-parters in syndication), and stands up to more repeat listening than, well, “something kinda funky”. (Not that there’s anything wrong with something kinda funky, it’s just that this wasn’t that show anymore.)

Also getting his own theme from the opening moments of season two is Hawk, the stoic warrior who becomes the show’s #2 star (which led to Erin Gray being somewhat sidelined for the remainder of the show); the music for season opener Time Of The Hawk drives Hawk’s theme through minor and major keys, starting with a threatening sound and ending on a redeemed note as he joins the show as a regular. Broughton continues refining these new themes in The Guardians, which aired later in the season, and gets some marvelously mysterious music into the mix as well, with just a hint of Holst’s “Neptune” creeping into the “Janovus” 27 cue. The second of the movie-length species, Journey To Oasis, opens the second disc, with sweeping but slightly old school music from returning season one composer John Cacavas – not to say that it’s steeped in musical cliche, but it’s pretty much exactly the kind of music you’d expect from a trudge through the desert. It’s interesting that Journey To Oasis also gets its own unique end credit suite – was this an approach being considered for the series going forward? Broughton is back for The Golden Man, iterating his Searcher theme through some moody variations appropriate to its predicament in this episode (being wedged into an asteroid). The music for what’s nominally the episode’s “A” story, involving a wayward father-son alien team where the older of the two is played by a child actor, gets a more interesting musical treatment than it really deserved, but that’s why Broughton quickly graduated from TV scoring to the movies: he didn’t phone in even the most ridiculous assignments.

That comes in handy on the third disc, with Broughton’s scores for The Satyr, a borderline-goofy space western episode, and the hasn’t-aged-well slapstick comedy of Shgoratchx! (whose original title, Derelict Equation, was ejected at the last minute for reasons unknown, according to the liner notes, despite the fact that one can at least conceivably pronounce it). Neither are the show’s finest hour; Bruce Broughton gives them decent scores anyway, and yes, that theme for the Searcher continues to evolve to the point that I now think if someone was really smart, they’d track a Star Trek fan series just with Broughton’s music from this box set, because at this point he’s Buck Rogers’ Fred Steiner. Also on the third disc is Herbert Don Woods’ score for The Crystals, which again brings a slightly more old-school sound compared to the more modern sound of the Broughton scores. There’s nothing wrong with it, but it has a somewhat late ’60s/early ’70s sound to it.

Disc four features the return of Stu Phillips, composer of the Buck Rogers theme and one of season one’s house composers, for The Hand Of Goral, and it’s very much in line with season one’s better dramatic scores, with some real weight and menace to it. Herbert Don Woods’ old-school sound is back for The Dorian Secret (the last episode to air); the album closes out with another Broughton score, Testimony Of A Traitor, which has a heavier, darker sound than most of Broughton’s prior material, and doesn’t allow much development of the Searcher theme since the episode is, atypically for season two, Earth-bound, dealing with Buck’s actions prior to his fateful space flight.

4 out of 4In the end, what makes Broughton’s scores stand out on this set is that he was consciously developing themes that recurred whenever he got a scoring assignment. Naturally, the other composers contracted for different episodes were under no obligation to refer to his material. But Broughton’s work brings this sometimes silliest of sci-fi series the weight and heft of an ongoing saga – the almost-nautical recurring theme Broughton employs makes the show sound, frankly, more important and epic than it ever actually was. It might just be that the music of season two of Buck Rogers was the best thing we got out of the show’s renewal. Well, that and some Crichton one-liners. Sadly, this set is now out of print, with no apparent digital distribution afterlife for the material; an unfortunate fate for music that was better than the show it was meant to accompany.

    Disc One

    Time Of The Hawk

  1. The Massacre (2:40)
  2. Main Title (Version 2) (1:14)
  3. The Searcher (1:44)
  4. So Far Away (2:30)
  5. You’re Changing (0:36)
  6. Thordis (1:48)
  7. Gassed (1:16)
  8. War Against the Humans (2:05)
  9. Flight to Hawk’s Lair (3:15)
  10. Buck Looks for Wilma (2:34)
  11. Birdfight (3:22)
  12. Crash Landing (1:50)
  13. Koori Injured (2:10)
  14. The Trek (3:38)
  15. We Meet Again (1:56)
  16. Let My Spirit Go (6:06)
  17. Forget the Past (2:48)
  18. Bumper (0:08)

    The Guardians

  19. Janovus 26 (1:34)
  20. The Prophecy (0:46)
  21. The Messenger (2:53)
  22. Frozen Mission (1:51)
  23. I Wasn’t Dreaming (0:29)
  24. Hawk’s Vision (4:08)
  25. Vision in the Corridor (1:05)
  26. I’m Scared (3:32)
  27. Shuttle to Surface (1:47)
  28. Janovus 27 (3:41)
  29. End Credits (long) (0:51)

    Disc Two

    Journey To Oasis

  1. Main Title (Version 1) (1:14)
  2. Head and Body (2:49)
  3. Episode Titles (1:05)
  4. Wilma and the Ambassador (4:00)
  5. Abandon Ship (1:32)
  6. This Way, Doctor (2:34)
  7. The Doctor Trapped (1:31)
  8. You’ll Never Get There (3:43)
  9. Romantic Dreams (5:09)
  10. Moaning Wind (4:25)
  11. Unconscious Thoughts (1:38)
  12. Ezarhaaden (4:41)
  13. The Spires of Oasis (6:10)
  14. Journey to Oasis End Credits (0:54)

    The Golden Man

  15. Intercepting Lifepod (1:27)
  16. Wedged In (2:29)
  17. Caged (2:23)
  18. Too Much Weight (3:48)
  19. Certain Precautions (1:22)
  20. The Bait (1:23)
  21. Man in the Cape (4:37)
  22. Searcher Freed (5:04)
  23. Straight to Bed (0:50)
  24. End Credits (0:31)

    Disc Three

    The Crystals

  1. The Mummy (3:54)
  2. The Crystals Credits (1:03)
  3. Mummy Havoc (3:34)
  4. Meeting Laura (1:20)
  5. Mummy Hunt (0:48)
  6. Mummy Takes Crystals and Laura (3:23)
  7. The Mummy Is Your Mommy (4:23)
  8. I’m Frightened (1:55)
  9. Buck and Mummy Fight (1:54)
  10. Goodbye Laura (0:52)

    The Satyr

  11. The Satyr Attacks (1:25)
  12. New Corinth (3:40)
  13. Just the Wind (4:11)
  14. He’s Out There (0:47)
  15. Moon Wine (2:04)
  16. Pangor and Buck Fight (4:27)
  17. Buck Transforms (4:17)
  18. Woman and Wine (4:06)
  19. Buck Recovers (2:02)

    Shgoratchx!

  20. The Derelict (1:36)
  21. Lifeforms (1:33)
  22. Chaos Aboard (3:13)
  23. Power Plant Havoc (3:23)
  24. Poor Wilma (0:22)
  25. Locked In (0:31)
  26. Wilma Trapped (2:53)
  27. Last and Best Hope (0:59)
  28. Twiki’s Solution (4:31)
  29. Dog of a Ship (0:24)
  30. End Credits (vocal version) (0:31)

    Disc Four

    The Hand Of Goral

  1. Strange Flashing (2:37)
  2. Goral City (2:47)
  3. Cursed Planet (3:02)
  4. Suspicious (3:45)
  5. Searcher Calling (1:14)
  6. Snare-Beam (0:56)
  7. Gone Like the Others (5:18)
  8. Wrong Hawk (2:49)
  9. Laughter (0:15)

    The Dorian Secret

  10. Pursuit & Escape (1:56)
  11. Asteria (6:11)
  12. Unrest (3:16)
  13. Dorian Justice (3:54)
  14. Revelation (6:01)
  15. Look to the Future (1:08)

    Testimony Of A Traitor

  16. High Treason (1:10)
  17. Traitors and Mad Men (7:40)
  18. My Best Friend (2:12)
  19. Clandestine Meeting (1:51)
  20. Strategic Air Command (1:03)
  21. Escape to Earth (4:11)
  22. Mount Rushmore (0:56)
  23. President’s Bunker (3:50)
  24. A New Course (0:34)
  25. End Credits (long vocal version) (0:51)

Released by: Intrada Records
Release date: August 11, 2014
Disc one total running time: 1:04:45
Disc two total running time: 1:05:41
Disc three total running time: 1:10:23
Disc four total running time: 1:09:42

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2014 Artists (by group or surname) Non-Soundtrack Music R Royksopp Year

Röyksopp – The Inevitable End

4 min read

The Inevitable End isn’t the inevitable end of Röyksopp as a recording entity; the grimly titled album was their farewell to the album as the format in which they’d be releasing their work. That’s a very sad farewell indeed, because some of Röyksopp’s back catalog, including Melody A.M. and Junior, convinced me that maybe the album still had something to offer, and that the entire world wasn’t giving up to the whims of streaming and issuing singles only. And ironically, The Inevitable End falls into that category as well – an album so thematically cohesive that listening to it in one sitting is more rewarding than just hearing any one song from it in isolation.

The theme that recurs most often on The Inevitable End doesn’t become evident until you’re a couple of songs past the inevitable beginning. Beginning with “Sordid Affair”, whose subject matter is quite literally what it says on the box, the album seems to be chronicling different stages and perspectives of an extramarital relationship of some kind. (I always question this as subject matter for a song, especially since the songwriter’s going to be subjected to a lot of scrutiny afterward, i.e. “did you write this as a result of a personal experience?” “Sordid Affair” and “Compulsion” describe the rush of the illicit relationship while it’s happening, and “You Know I Have To Go” and “Save Me” explore the end of it from two perspectives. “I Had This Thing” mourns the relationship, and in a way, “Rong” does too, being an almost classically-flavored piece with a single repeating lyric (“what the f___ is wrong with you?”).

Röyksopp has become famous for its all-star line-up of guest vocalists, and while Robyn is all over the first two tracks of The Inevitable End, the real standout MVP who emerges is Jamie Irrepressible, vocalist on “You Know I Have To Go”, “I Had This Thing”, “Compulsion”, and “Here She Comes Again”. He’s got an incredible range and a great sense for dynamics, as his usual hushed delivery on “I Had This Thing” suddenly explodes into something more pleading and anguished toward the end of the song. (Spoiler: Röyksopp has continued as an entity that issues singles, and they continued to work with Jamie after this album, notably on the excellent “Something In My Heart”, so obviously they know a good thing when they hear it.)

“Coup De Grace” deflates the album’s somewhat steamy topic, filling the obligatory instrumental-only slot that’s become a tradition since “Röyksopp’s Night Out” on the first album. The album closer (and the farewell of Röyksopp as a duo that turns out albums) is “Thank You”, which works as effectively as part of the album’s storyline as it does without any of those trappings.

4 out of 4I’ll really miss Röyksopp as an “album band” – their best work has reminded me of the heyday of the Alan Parsons Project, both production-wise and as proponents of concept-based theme albums. It’s sad to hear them giving up on the latter. The singles that have arrived since The Inevitable End have been fantastic – “Never Ever” and “Something In My Heart” would be highlights of an album if they were on an album. But, I get it, album sales aren’t what drives iTunes…especially if no one wants to continue making them.

Order this CD

  1. Skulls (3:46)
  2. Monument (TIE Version)(featuring Robyn) (4:46)
  3. Sordid Affair (featuring Man Without Country) (6:19)
  4. You Know I Have To Go (featuring Jamie Irrepressible) (7:31)
  5. Save Me (featuring Susanne Sundfør) (4:38)
  6. I Had This Thing (featuring Jamie Irrepressible) (5:46)
  7. Rong (featuring Robyn) (2:32)
  8. Here She Comes Again (featuring Jamie Irrepressible) (5:04)
  9. Running To The Sea (featuring Susanne Sundfør) (4:52)
  10. Compulsion (featuring Jamie Irrepressible) (6:57)
  11. Coup De Grace (3:14)
  12. Thank You (6:15)

Released by: EMBAS
Release date: November 21, 2014
Total running time: 61:40

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2014 Artists (by group or surname) Non-Soundtrack Music Raymond Scott S

Raymond Scott Rewired

3 min read

So, stop me if you’ve heard this one already: three remix producers walk into a bar, suddenly gain access to the complete recorded works of the late big-band-leader and electronic music pioneer Raymond Scott, and go back to their studios to do their own thing. Actually, it’s not certain if there was a bar involved, but that minor detail aside, that’s how you get this album.

And what a fun album it is! From a near-nonsensical mash-up of Scott’s electronic music and his extensive work in the realm of commercial jingles (“The Night & Day Household Greyhound”) to a career-spanning mash-up that somehow manages to encapsulate everything Raymond Scott was about (“A Bigger, More Important Sound”) to truly tuneful remixes that almost transcend their source material (“Cindy Byrdsong”, “Hey Ray”), every approach from very light remixing to almost rewriting the DNA of the original music is tried out here. Piling the output of Scott’s legendary homemade analog synthesizer/sequencer, the Electronium, on top of most conventional acoustic sounds does wonders (“Very Very Very Pretty Petticoat”), but that’s no less enjoyable than a cut-and-splice treatment of Scott’s narrated notes on a new piece of recording gear (“Love Song To A Dynamic Ribbon Cardioid”). At the end of the album, it’s all hands on deck as all three producers pay tribute to Scott’s most enduring creation (thanks to its heavy use in Carl Stalling’s cartoon music), “Powerhouse”.

4 out of 4I can’t help but think that Raymond Scott would have approved. The man devised and implemented a new instrument combining the functions of analog synths and sequencers in one massive box, in a near-total vacuum of information as to how one would create such a beast, because these ideas were new to everyone at the time. (No less a later electronic music pioneer than Bob Moog himself would go on to say that Scott was a huge influence on him.) A mind that could jump from big band stylings to otherworldly sounds for which there was no frame of reference…one can’t help but think that, had he been born a bit later, Raymond Scott himself would be doing some remixes of his own.

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  1. A Bigger, More Important Sound by Raymond Scott & The Evolution Control Committee (1:38)
  2. The Toy Penguin by Raymond Scott & The Bran Flakes (3:12)
  3. Cindy Byrdsong by Raymond Scott & Go Home Productions (4:09)
  4. Ripples on an Evaporated Lake by Raymond Scott & The Evolution Control Committee (4:10)
  5. Sleigh Ride To A Barn Dance in Sorrento by Raymond Scott & The Bran Flakes (2:01)
  6. The Night & Day Household Greyhound by Raymond Scott & Go Home Productions (2:50)
  7. Love Song To A Dynamic Ribbon Cardioid by Raymond Scott & The Evolution Control Committee (2:25)
  8. (Serenade On) Carribea Corner by Raymond Scott & The Bran Flakes (4:08)
  9. In An 18th Century Discotheque by Raymond Scott & The Evolution Control Committee (3:35)
  10. The Sleepwalking Tobacco Auctioneer by Raymond Scott & Go Home Productions (2:10)
  11. Very Very Very Pretty Petticoat by Raymond Scott & The Bran Flakes (2:22)
  12. Hillbilly Hostess In Haunted Harlem by Raymond Scott & The Evolution Control Committee (2:28)
  13. Good Duquesne Air by Raymond Scott & Go Home Productions (3:06)
  14. Hey Ray by Raymond Scott & The Bran Flakes (2:54)
  15. Mountain High, Valley Higher by Raymond Scott & Go Home Productions (3:35)
  16. Siberian Tiger On An Ocean Liner by Raymond Scott & The Evolution Control Committee (2:35)
  17. Shirley’s Temple Bells by Raymond Scott & The Bran Flakes (2:12)
  18. Tick Tock Cuckoo On Planet Mars by Raymond Scott & Go Home Productions (1:56)
  19. Powerhouse by Various Artists (3:29)

Released by: Basta
Release date: January 14, 2014
Total running time: 54:55

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2014 2017 C Cosmos Soundtracks Soundtracks by Title Television Year

Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey, Volume 1 – music by Alan Silvestri

3 min read

Order this CDWhen the original Cosmos, hosted by Carl Sagan, premiered in 1980 on PBS, it was tracked with a hand-picked combination drawing from the classical orchestral repertoire and the synth-heavy works of Vangelis. It defined the show beautifully. Doing something even remotely resembling Cosmos in the 21st century, however, has a whole different list of demands. Photorealistic CGI allows actual images from space to be incorporated into beautifully choreographed and detailed simulations of space. It’s movie quality. The music should probably step up and meet that definition of epic as well.

With that in mind, it was no surprise to see veteran Hollywood composer Alan Silvestri selected to bring the new Cosmos to musical life. Silvestri’s score for the film version of Sagan’s Contact was one of the highlights of that movie, and if you understand the musical vocabulary of awe and wonder that his music brought to Contact, you’ll dig this, for that’s the same sensibility he brings to the 2014 series Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey. Four generous albums of music from the series have been available digitally for some time, but this is their first official CD release, and the discs bring previously unreleased material with them (the music from a sequence covering the planet Venus and an alternate version of the deceptively gentle main theme).

The 21st century Cosmos has a sense of awe and wonder worthy of the original, but its more filmic sensibilities get a wide-screen musical treatment that would do any sci-fi movie proud. It’s unapologetically bold and adventurous, and very much the real thing – a real orchestra and choir are embellished, but very seldom overtaken, by electronics. Each episode featured at least one lavishly animated tale of a pioneering scientific mind, and Silvestri deftly navigated the narrow strait between “music from the part of the world that person was from” and “ethnic musical stereotypes”, usually by erring primarily on the side of scoring it like straight-up live-action drama. This volume’s suite of music from the sequence depicting the life of Giordano Bruno is really its emotional center, an island of human drama in an album of what might otherwise be considered “space music”.

4 out of 4But there’s nothing bland here – every moment of music has mystery and drama propelling it, much of it originating from that first episode in which Neil deGrasse Tyson reminds us that we’re all starstuff. This soundtrack would be equally at home on the flight deck of Tyson’s “ship of the imagination”, or on the bridge of any movie or TV starship you care to name. Best of all, it accompanies a story much more grounded in reality. Just a beautiful listen, and if the existing downloads are any indication, the later volumes are even better.

  1. Cosmos Main Title (1:38)
  2. “Come With Me” (2:00)
  3. “The Cosmos Is Yours” (6:23)
  4. Virgo Supercluster (4:05)
  5. Multiverse (2:10)
  6. Giordano Bruno (2:39)
  7. Revelation of Immensity (3:57)
  8. The Inquisition (3:35)
  9. The Staggering Immensity of Time (2:11)
  10. Star Stuff (4:12)
  11. Chance Nature of Existence (3:27)
  12. New Years’ Eve (3:49)
  13. “Our Journey Is Just Beginning” (3:04)
  14. Venus (2:50)
  15. Cosmos Main Title – Alternate (1:54)

Released by: Intrada
Release date: June 13, 2017
Total running time: 48:31

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2014 D Doctor Who Soundtracks Soundtracks by Title Television

Doctor Who: Day Of The Doctor / Time Of The Doctor

5 min read

So it turns out I owe Murray Gold an apology.

As I watched Day Of The Doctor for the first time, I was mildly annoyed that its score seemed to be a cut-and-paste of “greatest hits” of themes from the modern series dating back to 2005. Not new versions of those themes, mind you, but the same recordings we’d been hearing for years now. It seemed like an uninspired choice, but as it was already known that the BBC had asked for an episode 30 minutes longer than the usual 45-minute shows, in 3-D, with big-name guest stars, without increasing the budget much beyond that of the typical 45-minute episode, it seemed likely that the decision had been made to edit together a score from the music of past episodes. After all, what’s a decadal Doctor Who anniversary special if it’s not a kiss to the past?

As it turns out, the truth is even sadder than that: Day Of The Doctor did have a brand-new score custom-made for its requirements, and a dandy one at that. In various interviews, Gold has hinted that the heavily-promoted special had more cooks in the kitchen than usual, resulting in Hollywood-style second-guessing of creative decisions that rarely occurs with the series’ weekly episodes. Reading between the lines, the answer is simple: some BBC suits, freaked out by a fantastic original score which not only brought back numerous musical themes but paid homage to the show’s long history by incorporating various vintage synthesizer sounds into the orchestral mix, insisted that Day Of The Doctor should largely be “tracked” with existing music, not unlike the original Star Trek. The result is a soundtrack which was either buried in the sound mix or, in some instances, not used at all.

Some of the most eye-opening fun you can have with the Day Of The Doctor half of this 2-CD set is to cue up the DVD to key scenes, turn your TV down, and let the music be heard as originally intended. “He Was There”, which takes us from outside the National Gallery into the three-dimensional painting of the Time War, is a knockout cue that works outstandingly well; the rising howl as we zoom through the painting until we settle on the War Doctor is hair-raising stuff. On TV, this material was dropped in favor of the choral Dalek music from The Stolen Earth, but in the original unused cue, Gold holds off on quoting that theme until the Daleks show up in person. His opening volley, meant to accompany Clara’s motorcycle ride into the TARDIS control room, is an electro dance piece omitted in its entirety. A great many of his more interesting, “radiophonic” sounding pieces were either savagely dialed down in the sound mix or covered/replaced with “whooshy” sound effects to emphasize the show’s all-important (for one night only before the BBC abandoned the technology) 3-D. Even the final scene – all the Doctors dreaming of home – was scored differently, building up to a triumphant flourish that quotes the Doctor Who theme itself as a heroic fanfare: all left on the cutting room floor.

The second disc contains the music from The Time Of The Doctor, and in this case, at least, what you hear is what was heard in the show itself – unless it’s just not on the album, such as the criminal omission of the haunting choral piece heard as Clara bellies up to the crack-in-the-wall that has follow the eleventh Doctor through his entire tenure, appealing to the Time Lords to help the Doctor survive. How that didn’t make the album, I’ll never know.

Highlights of Smith’s final episode as the Doctor include “The Crack” and the bite-sized but propulsive “Rhapsody Of War”. Even some of the more obscure cues, like the John-Williams-esque morsel “Papal Mainframe”, are fun. But the show is stolen by the solid wall of music that takes up the last 25% of the show; “Never Tell Me The Rules” is the accompaniment of modern Doctor Who’s extension of the “explosive regeneration” to ridiculous extremes, while “Trenzalore / The Long Song / I Am Information” – its title giving away that it’s a mashup of themes already established in the previous season of the show – accompanies Smith’s record-settingly long send-off speech. “Hello Twelve”, naturally, rings in the Doctor’s new face in the form of Peter Capaldi.

4 out of 4So it turns out I owe Murray Gold an apology. Here I thought that, out of budgetary necessity, he’d had to phone in one of the most pivotal installments in the entire series, but whether it’s the seventh Doctor’s straw hat, the eleventh’s Fez, or the first Doctor’s shapeless lump of an astrakhan hat, I hereby eat that hat – Murray Gold did his best to honor the show’s sonic history, only to be let down by the marketing department. At least this 2-CD set lets us hear it all in its original intended glory.

Order this CDDisc 1: The Day of the Doctor

  1. I.M Foreman (1:10)
  2. Will There Be Cocktails? (0:40)
  3. It’s Him (The Majestic Tale) (2:04)
  4. He Was There (4:22)
  5. No More (1:05)
  6. The War Room (1:42)
  7. Footprints In The Sand (1:42)
  8. Who Are You (4:37)
  9. England 1562 (1:02)
  10. Nice Horse (1:43)
  11. The Fez And The Portal (2:44)
  12. Two Doctors (1:01)
  13. Three Doctors (1:56)
  14. Somewhere To Hide (1:50)
  15. Rescue The Doctor (1:08)
  16. 2.47 Billion (4:28)
  17. Zygon In The Painting (1:34)
  18. Man And Wife (1:32)
  19. We Don’t Need To Land (2:27)
  20. We Are The Doctors (0:49)
  21. The Moment Has Come (3:06)
  22. This Time There’s Three Of Us (The Majestic Tale) (7:03)
  23. Song For Four/Home (3:41)

Disc 2: Time Of The Doctor

  1. The Message (1:15)
  2. Handles (2:07)
  3. The Dance Of The Naked Doctor (2:12)
  4. You Saved It (0:56)
  5. Papal Mainframe (0:44)
  6. Tasha Lemm (1:06)
  7. Bedroom Talk (1:48)
  8. The Mission (0:54)
  9. Christmas (2:26)
  10. The Crack (5:24)
  11. Rhapsody Of War (0:52)
  12. Back To Christmas (3:09)
  13. Snow Over Trenzalore (Song For Four) (2:45)
  14. Beginning Of The End (2:46)
  15. This Is How It Ends (3:06)
  16. Never Tell Me The Rules (3:11)
  17. Trenzalore/The Long Song/I Am Information (Reprise) (4:03)
  18. Hello Twelve (0:39)

Released by: Silva Screen Records
Release date: November 24, 2014
Disc one total running time: 53:26
Disc two total running time: 39:23

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1979 2014 M Soundtracks Television

Meteor – music by Laurence Rosenthal

MeteorI have a long personal history with this soundtrack – namely, up until Intrada re-re-re-issued it earlier in 2014, I had managed miss every opportunity to obtain it. When the soundtrack was originally issued on LP at the time this all-star TV disaster flick was shown in 1979, I was living in the wrong country (it only came out in Japan). When La-La Land Records gave the Meteor soundtrack its first domestic pressing in 2008, I didn’t have the funds free to partake of it until it was too late (it was a limited edition of 1200 copies). Thankfully, Intrada seems to have turned “reissuing stuff that La-La Land previously released in very limited quantities” into its own lucrative sideline, and so here I am, 35 years after Meteor premiered, holding the soundtrack.

The appeal here is that Meteor is, along with The Black Hole (also released on CD by Intrada), one of the most prominent appearances of the Blaster Beam prior to Star Trek: The Motion Picture all but appropriating the strange-sounding electric instrument for Star Trek purposes only. Laurence Rosenthal (of Clash Of The Titans and Young Indiana Jones Chronicles fame) uses the Beam sparingly as a sonic signature for the meteor as it approaches Earth (it’s really more of an asteroid, but there are probably valid reasons they didn’t call the movie Asteroid instead). The most interesting examples of the beam occur in “Meteor”, “Tatiana” and particularly “The Assault”, which has the Beam slurring notes around like crazy – it’s a fascinating and atypical sound for an instrument that, it must be said, has limited applications.

Rosenthal’s score for one of the last gasps of the Great American Disaster Movie is lush, far more of a big-screen sound than might be expected for television, except that this was “event television” featuring big-name stars like Natalie Wood, Henry Fonds, and a thankfully fully-dressed, post-Zardoz Sean Connery. This was a Big Deal for mere TV, and Rosenthal’s score reflects that. In fact, the liner notes point out that John Williams had originally been offered the job, but as he was so busy with his big screen music assignments, he personally steered the movie’s producers toward Rosenthal.

3 out of 4The only thing that even remotely has a whiff of cheese to it is the fleeting appearance of numerous “spacey” synth effects early on, which are easy to write off as novelty effects thanks to the flavor of the era. Other than that one element that dates the score, Meteor makes for a dandy soundtrack that sounds like it should’ve been on the big screen – and best of all, more than 1,200 copies are in existence now. (If you’re worried about missing out on a meatier Meteor, fear not – the track list is sequenced a bit differently from La-La Land’s release, but the material is the same between the two albums.)

Order this CD

  1. Main Title (4:26)
  2. Challenger Two (2:47)
  3. The Meteor (2:11)
  4. The Russians Arrive (0:57)
  5. Siberia (2:02)
  6. 30,000 M.P.H. (0:54)
  7. Dubov’s Rage (0:58)
  8. Prepare For Aligning Peter The Great (0:50)
  9. Realigning Peter The Great (3:51)
  10. Alpine Innocence (0:59)
  11. Tatiana (2:00)
  12. Countdown (2:34)
  13. Manhattan Splinter (2:27)
  14. Malfunction (2:57)
  15. The Assault (3:22)
  16. Meteor Band March and End Credits (7:03)

Released by: Intrada
Release date: 2014
Total running time: 40:59

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