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Posted: |
Sep 19, 2013 - 7:47 AM
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By: |
bdm
(Member)
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Here are the deets: Label Universal Japan "Jaws [Limited] [9/24]: Release Notes: Muze Composed by John Williams. The 25th Anniversary edition contains the original music cues from "Jaws" and various previously unreleased tracks. Original score composed by John Williams. Includes liner notes by John Williams & Steven Spielberg. All tracks have been digitally remastered. John Williams' first film score to capture the imagination of the public, and the first hit movie score of the 1970s not to involve a love theme (a la Love Story), Jaws has been on CD for more than a decade, but this is the first release that really does it justice. The centerpiece of the music is the bump-bump-bump-bump theme associated with the movements (usually unseen) of the shark, which became so well known that it was used as an essential part of various comedy sketches in a multitude of media at the time (Williams himself quoted it comically in his scoring for Steven Spielberg's 1941). It does reappear in numerous forms (many of them veiled) throughout the score, along with a handful of additional memorable musical phrases associated with Williams' score, many involving the hunt for the shark. The anniversary edition of the score not only features the familiar portions of the original album, which didn't amount to 40 minutes of music, but 15 minutes or more of Williams' score from the actual film, and also music that was written and recorded for the movie but dropped from it. Little is totally unfamiliar, but the 24-bit remastering off of the original tapes adds fresh luster to the recording and the music. It's doubly interesting, hearing the music uncut and remastered, to realize anew just how many of the effects that turn up at key points in this score Williams reused in his music for Close Encounters of the Third Kind and other scores of his. This was not only where Williams' career as a superstar soundtrack composer began but also where he first started using the musical attributes that would identify that phase of his career. ~ Bruce Eder" Looks like a re-release of the Decca.
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Wow. Decca reissue or new issue, I hope that in no way derails a real edition from Intrada.
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Intrada also posted about the original tapes of Delerue's Something Wicked, so hopefully they are working on that as well. was it slated for release this year or just whenever? I hope the tapes sound better than Herrmann's ITS ALIVE. They've not said. But a few months ago me and another user there were talking about the score and I brought up that it's likely not going to happen since the rights are probably tied up with that overseas label that paired some of the score. Roger chimed in with a posted that was obviously a nudge to read between the lines, that it's going to happen.
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Roger stated in October, 2011, this: Interesting factoid: the rejected score was recorded in the same format as the Horner score: 3M 32-track digital.
So, when we do get it, it will sound as beautiful and clear as the horner release.
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Surely if it doesn't come this year on the 40th anniversary then it's never coming?
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Surely if it doesn't come this year on the 40th anniversary then it's never coming? Does the label have much control over that? From what I understand, a label needs to wait for studio approval before releasing, which can take some time.
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