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I was looking at this post on Cartoon Research about the pre-CD releases for Snow White and it appears that there was an LP containing the complete score released in 1975. Anyone else know anything about this? It also raises the question of why it wasn't issued on CD complete, unless I'm misreading this and it's actually the whole film on this (dialogue and all). Walt Disney’s SNOW WHITE AND THE SEVEN DWARFS Complete Original Soundtrack Buena Vista Records #102. (Three 12” 33 1/3 RPM LP Records) Released in 1975. Running Time: 85 minutes. The Star Wars of its day is also the only Disney animated feature to be released in its entirety on vinyl records. To be able to listen to Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, from start to finish at home on two LP records was nothing short of fantastical, back in the days before home video when Disney films were shown theatrically every seven years or so. Like Buena Vista’s 1977 complete soundtrack of The Rankin/Bass Production of The Hobbit, the Snow White soundtrack set was sold in the U.S. in a three-record boxed set. International versions were produced in such countries as Australia in Japan (the Japanese edition was issued on two Buena Vista discs in a gatefold cover instead of a box). http://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/disneys-snow-white-and-the-seven-soundtrack-albums/
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Thanks for the clarification. The "complete" label through me off guard when I saw that section of the article. On another note, the article indicates that the 56 LP has music that is not on the current CD, such as the Prayer at Evening cue and that alternate chorus on the finale (much like how the LPs for Bambi and Sleeping Beauty had music not on their respective CD's), which I find really confusing.
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These so called alternate choruses are misconstrued as being alternate pieces written for the film. Not Quite. the international prints would often be dubbed with the shorus oohing and aahing instead of singing actual English Words. So it's sort of like what they did for the various bits of text in the film (the dwarfs' beds, the Queen's spell books, etc.) for the international prints where they were redone in different languages.
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No, the various finales are not in different languages. To avoid that and rerecording of these over and over, these just hum and ooh and aah. as you can hear on the Disneyland lps. the Snwo White prayer at Evening is not the music track, but its the prayer off of the film with Snow white saying the prayer. Very interesting. I did not realize that the Prayer at Evening track was just the prayer off the film. As for international prints, I came upon this article about the French dub at the time the film was restored in the 90's. I bring this up because there is a section that talks about what went into the creation of the current CD and it also seems to reveal why the music for the dwarfs' pursuit of the Queen was not there (apparently it only survived on the music-and-effects track). Of course, things may have changed since then as it also mentions that a short section of the finale was missing, though I think they found that section when the CD was reissued. Here is the relevant section of the article: To tie in with the release, a CD comes out in 1993 with the original American soundtrack remastered from newly discovered elements. Restorers worked from seven different sources: restored final mixes, international tracks (a music and effects mix used to make foreign versions) and especially a few optical tracks of the original recordings of the music which had survived on nitrate film. On the CD booklet, the "huge" size of the sound files is given as 3.6 gigabytes. The CD offers monaural sound and the two last tracks are two songs deleted from the film: Music In Your Soup & You're Never Too Old to be Young. Unlike the 1938 album (a temporary mix of vocals, music and effects), reissued on CD in 1988, and the one from 1957 (where the character voices were included only in songs), this time the disc contains more incidental music. The final chase is noticeably absent as it only exists in a version mixed with effects which a quite intrusive in the scene (storm, rain, etc.). Moreover, a short segment of the final cue is also missing. http://www.alostfilm.com/2015/02/snow-white-in-france-chapter-7-1994.html?m=1
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