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 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 7:04 AM   
 By:   haineshisway   (Member)

Kritzerland is proud to present a new limited edition soundtrack to one of the most iconic science fiction films ever made:

THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL

Music Composed by Bernard Herrmann
Conducted by Bernard Herrmann, Alfred Newman and Lionel Newman

To say that the 1951 film The Day the Earth Stood Still is a benchmark of its genre is an understatement. Along with The Thing From Another World, released earlier that same year, The Day the Earth Stood Still ushered in a steady flow of pictures where flying saucers and monsters reflected the Cold War paranoia of the atomic age. But director Robert Wise’s film stands above them all. It’s no surprise that every fantasy filmmaker—including Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, John Carpenter, Peter Jackson, James Cameron and Christopher Nolan—has cited the influence of this picture upon their own. The film did everything right – from a superb screenplay by Edmund H. North (from a story by Harry Bates), to the beautiful cinematography by Leo Tover, to the stellar cast of Michael Rennie, Patricia Neal, Hugh Marlowe, Sam Jaffe and Billy Gray (having a cast of great actors playing the reality of the story is what helps ground the film and make it timeless). The Day the Earth Stood Still, simply put, is a masterpiece and one of the most important science fiction films ever made.

Deserving of equal credit for the film’s uniqueness and success, is, of course, the music score by Bernard Herrmann. The Day the Earth Stood Still stands among Herrmann’s most memorable achievements (in a career filled with them), and may possibly be his most innovative. At the fore, of course, is the use of the theremin (two, actually, one “high” and one “low,” played by Samuel Hoffmann and Paul Shure). But that’s not all that makes this score unique – in contrast to Herrmann’s famous strings-only score for Hitchcock’s Psycho, The Day the Earth Stood Still utilizes none—unless one counts the meticulous punctuations of harp, piano (two of them) and cinema’s first use of the electric violin (performed by Felix Slatkin). Also absent are woodwinds, a choice that allows the score’s evocative brass clusters to take center stage. The sound field is further dominated by the versatile resonances of the Wurlitzer pipe organ, offset by percussion instruments sitting in the extreme high and low ends of the frequency spectrum.

The Day the Earth Stood Still was previously available on Arista over twenty years ago. That edition is obviously long out of print. A complete version of the score was available briefly as an extra in the laserdisc release of the film, and that version was also included in the multi-disc and very expensive Bernard Herrmann at Fox box on Varese Sarabande – that release sold out instantly. Given the limited availability of the box, we felt it was very important to make this classic score available again for the fans who missed out on it. It has been given a new, fresh mastering and sounds absolutely incredible in that wonderful early Fox stereo sound that was as unique as the Herrmann score. New liner notes by Mike Matessino.

The Day the Earth Stood Still is limited to 1200 copies only and priced at $19.98, plus shipping. CDs will ship by the first week of January, although our hope is to get it shipped before Christmas. To place an order, see the cover, or hear audio samples, just visit www.kritzerland.com.

 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 7:16 AM   
 By:   Adam.   (Member)

What a nice surprise. I think I'll get it.

 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 7:18 AM   
 By:   Deadwalker   (Member)

Ordered.

Thank You Kritzerland.

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 7:19 AM   
 By:   Limmerine   (Member)

Please reserve me a copy, Mr Kimmel.

Email is just sent.

 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 7:27 AM   
 By:   Amer Zahid   (Member)

Good to see this classic back in print. For those who missed the opportunity or were not able to procure the expensive Varese Box set this serves a great opportunity to get that remastered score once more. Good luck before this sells out. BTW Bruce Great Cover!

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 7:36 AM   
 By:   haineshisway   (Member)

Good to see this classic back in print. For those who missed the opportunity or were not able to procure the expensive Varese Box set this serves a great opportunity to get that remastered score once more. Good luck before this sells out. BTW Bruce Great Cover!

It's been freshly remastered for this release by Mike Matessino - everyone will have their own opinion about how much difference it makes, but Mike went back to his original mixes and did some work - i encourage everyone to listen to the audio samples - when I heard it I was pretty astonished by it.

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 7:50 AM   
 By:   Last Child   (Member)

are there any mastering notes on scores that guide the mixing, or is it always up to the individual? I noticed enough difference on the Herrmann Box version of Ghost&Muir that I kept the earlier release (which I prefer).

 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 7:51 AM   
 By:   RoryR   (Member)

I bought that boxed laserdisc edition signed by Robert Wise back in the mid-nineties. The laserdiscs are long gone now (so last century!) but I still have the "24K Gold CD" of the complete score that was included. Glad to see this score re-issued, though I'm going to pass on it. But if Kritzerland has any plans to reissue Herrmann's JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE EARTH, remastered of course -- because it needs it --, that I'll buy.

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 8:12 AM   
 By:   mik91   (Member)

It has been given a new, fresh mastering and sounds absolutely incredible in that wonderful early Fox stereo sound that was as unique as the Herrmann score. New liner notes by Mike Matessino.




stereo release ?
Varese's 2011 edition of the day the earth stood still was in mono or in stereo ?

 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 8:16 AM   
 By:   Amer Zahid   (Member)

Good to see this classic back in print. For those who missed the opportunity or were not able to procure the expensive Varese Box set this serves a great opportunity to get that remastered score once more. Good luck before this sells out. BTW Bruce Great Cover!

It's been freshly remastered for this release by Mike Matessino - everyone will have their own opinion about how much difference it makes, but Mike went back to his original mixes and did some work - i encourage everyone to listen to the audio samples - when I heard it I was pretty astonished by it.


Oh God! You guys pulled a Conchos on this one too ;-)

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 8:23 AM   
 By:   haineshisway   (Member)

Good to see this classic back in print. For those who missed the opportunity or were not able to procure the expensive Varese Box set this serves a great opportunity to get that remastered score once more. Good luck before this sells out. BTW Bruce Great Cover!

It's been freshly remastered for this release by Mike Matessino - everyone will have their own opinion about how much difference it makes, but Mike went back to his original mixes and did some work - i encourage everyone to listen to the audio samples - when I heard it I was pretty astonished by it.


Oh God! You guys pulled a Conchos on this one too ;-)


To my ears, absolutely, which is why everyone should take the time to listen to the samples.

 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 8:53 AM   
 By:   Mike Esssss   (Member)

It's been freshly remastered for this release by Mike Matessino - everyone will have their own opinion about how much difference it makes, but Mike went back to his original mixes and did some work - i encourage everyone to listen to the audio samples - when I heard it I was pretty astonished by it.

Just want to be clear - when you say "how much difference it makes," you're talking about the difference between this release and the Varese box set, correct, and not this and the old Arista release? In other words, is there a substantial upgrade in sound between this release and the old Arista release? I have the Arista album but not the Varese set. I'll check out the samples of course, just figured I'd ask.

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 8:57 AM   
 By:   haineshisway   (Member)

It's been freshly remastered for this release by Mike Matessino - everyone will have their own opinion about how much difference it makes, but Mike went back to his original mixes and did some work - i encourage everyone to listen to the audio samples - when I heard it I was pretty astonished by it.

Just want to be clear - when you say "how much difference it makes," you're talking about the difference between this release and the Varese box set, correct, and not this and the old Arista release? In other words, is there a substantial upgrade in sound between this release and the old Arista release? I have the Arista album but not the Varese set. I'll check out the samples of course, just figured I'd ask.


The Varese set was a substantial upgrade in sound from the Arista and this is, for me, a step up from the Varese box. There are also additional tracks on both that weren't on the Arista. It's a major upgrade from that twenty-one year-old release.

 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 9:03 AM   
 By:   Mike Esssss   (Member)

The Varese set was a substantial upgrade in sound from the Arista and this is, for me, a step up from the Varese box. There are also additional tracks on both that weren't on the Arista. It's a major upgrade from that twenty-one year-old release.

Great, thanks much for the info.

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 9:12 AM   
 By:   JB Fan   (Member)

Already reserve my copy from Bruce (thanks again!).
Samples are - WOW, I can't find right words even on my own language! big grin

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 9:28 AM   
 By:   haineshisway   (Member)

Already reserve my copy from Bruce (thanks again!).
Samples are - WOW, I can't find right words even on my own language! big grin


The right words are Klaatu Barada nikto.

 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 9:55 AM   
 By:   Amer Zahid   (Member)

Already reserve my copy from Bruce (thanks again!).
Samples are - WOW, I can't find right words even on my own language! big grin


May I add: Ne Plokho? or perhaps Mala deatz wink

 
 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 10:05 AM   
 By:   D. Glet Ovrosco, Jr.   (Member)

What a welcome return!
Gort! Baringa!

 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 10:31 AM   
 By:   Jerry Horne   (Member)

Ordered and appreciated!

 
 Posted:   Nov 24, 2014 - 10:41 AM   
 By:   rjc   (Member)

Thank you so much for this release, Bruce! I have the Arista CD, was late on the Varese and admittedly disappointed about missing out on so much terrific Herrmann music. This release tempers that let down, and with one of my favorite Herrmann scores, which my Dad introduced me to.

Kritzerland delivers yet again!

 
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