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Posted: |
Oct 16, 2017 - 7:23 PM
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By: |
SBD
(Member)
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 LADY IN WHITE/FRANKIE GOES TO TUSCANY Composed and Arranged by FRANK LaLOGGIA INTRADA Special Collection 392 There are certain films that embody the essence and imagination of Halloween. The Disney film Hocus Pocus with its magical score by John Debney is certainly one of them. Another film is the 1988 ghost story Lady in White. Frank LaLoggia’s Lady in White transcended its modest budget with an impressive cast and startling visual beauty, combined with the heartfelt nostalgia of a memoir. LaLoggia’s film has gained an increasingly devoted cult following in the three decades since its original release, with the filmmaker’s own unusually lush and melodic orchestral score a key component in its popularity. On Halloween of 1962, Frankie Scarlatti (Lukas Haas), an imaginative nine-year-old, is locked all night in his school’s spooky cloakroom by bullies. Frankie is terrified by the sight of two unexpected visitors—the ghost of a murdered girl and the murderer himself, who nearly kills the boy while hunting for a piece of incriminating evidence. An African-American janitor is falsely arrested for the series of child murders that have plagued the area, while Frankie investigates and learns the deaths may be tied to the “Lady in White,” an apparition that haunts the nearby cliffside. As Frankie comes closer to solving the mystery, he discovers that the innocent are sometimes punished for the actions of the guilty, and that evil may be closer to home than he ever dreamed. The ambitiously melodic score pays homage to the composers who had filled LaLoggia's soundtrack collection as a teenager. The greatest influence can be heard in the music of Elmer Bernstein, as Lady’s themes and orchestrations have the distinctive warmth of a classic Bernstein score, and yet he evokes the master so clearly without ever copying from Bernstein’s own masterpiece of childhood wonder and terror, To Kill a Mockingbird, a film clearly echoed in Lady’s subplot of racial injustice. The score is dominated by bright and playful themes that reinforce the lighthearted mood of the early sequences and make the film’s surprisingly dark turns even more effective. The later parts of the score are dominated by a simple, literally “haunting” choral theme for the murdered girl, whose heart-breaking innocence serves almost as a siren song as young Frankie pursues the mystery; for the finale, LaLoggia provides a waltz as the ghostly girl and her grief-stricken mother are reunited in the heavens. As an added bonus, a second disc featuring LaLoggia's concept album, Frankie Goes to Tuscany, adds a spirited and entirely different musical experience from the ghost story on the first disc. LaLoggia created, almost entirely, the recording with digitally sampled instruments via computer, and while this is in sharp contrast to the 70-piece orchestra that recorded Lady in White, it clearly boasts LaLoggia's melody-driven, film-score inspired ideas. As LaLoggia comments in the notes, "Frankie Goes to Tuscany is a film score in search of a movie. In fact, I’d say that just about every track has a movie idea behind it in varied stages of development." Enjoy these two sides of Frank LaLoggia. His brilliant score to the haunting Lady in White is everything we at Intrada love about film music. And it's perfect for the Halloween season. INTRADA Special Collection 392 Barcode: 7 20258 53920 5 Retail Price: $19.99 SHIPPING NOW For track listing and sound samples, please visit: http://store.intrada.com/s.nl/it.A/id.11291/.f CD 1: LADY IN WHITE 01. Suite #I (20:10) 02. Suite #II (18:19) 03. Suite #III (13:52) 04. Suite #IV (8:46) Total CD 1 Time: 61:17 CD 2: FRANKIE GOES TO TUSCANY 01. Gridlock! (3:03) 02. Fantasia Al Mare (4:50) 03. Miro / Miranda! (Italian) (6:03) 04. Lamar (3:41) 05. Ritual (2:49) 06. You’re Just A Figment Of My Imagination (2:26) 07. Zingara Tango (3:00) 08. La Pellicola Fra Le Dita (4:40) 09. Shall We Dream? (3:15) 10. I’ll Take The Grand (3:05) 11. At The Zoo (4:01) 12. Voyager (2:56) 13. Una Rondine Non Fa Primavera (2:35) Total Time: 47:45 The Extras 14. Miro / Miranda! (English) (Frankie Goes To Tuscany) (7:04) 15. Electronic Version Of Suite #III (Lady In White) (1:56) 16. Electronic Version Of Suite #IV (Lady In White) (1:27) Total Extras Time: 10:31 Total CD 2 Time: 58:23
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Two discs for $20? Generous!
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Less than 150 copies available. Get it before it's gone. I did and it's a great listen.
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I still marvel at this score. Such beautiful and nostalgic melodies, evoking that classic Elmer Bernstein vibe, while still being its own beast. It's heart-breaking, at times, with the theme/lullaby for chorus and orchestra being one of the saddest I've heard (especially when heard in conjunction with the film). I loved the film too. One of my all-time favourite horror/ghost stories (I was fortunate to see it at the London Film Festival, back in the day, sitting quite close to writer/director/composer Frank LaLoggia, who did a Q&A after the film had ended). Such a wonderful and innocent atmosphere on display, but not without some stunning bone-chilling/goosebumps moments too. I think it's due a re-watch.
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