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As with other complete official cue lists I've posted for Goldsmith scores over the past couple days, this one also is sourced from the Academy's online listing of what they hold the written sketches for in their library. I have put apparently-unreleased cues in bold, though some might be on the expanded Intrada album under different titles (if anyone can match those up, let me know and I'll correct this): http://collections.new.oscars.org/Details/Archive/71302970 1-4 "Night Swim," 4 page 2-6 "The Morning After," 2 pages 3-1 "Silent Enemy (A track)," 8 pages 3-1 "Silent Enemy (B track)," 8 pages 4-1 "Positive Identification," 4 pages 4-3 "Relieved of Duty," 7 pages 6-1 "Like Father, Like Son," 13 pages 6-3 "Table Talk," 2 pages 6-5 "Family Talk," 3 pages 7-2 "Serious Talk," 1 page 7-3 "Come Again," 1 page 7-4 "The Long Goodbye," 6 pages 7-5 "Welcome to Toulebonne," 5 pages 9-1 "Do Not Disturb," 4 pages 10-1 "Torrey's Arrival," 10 pages [9-2 crossed out] 11-3 "Change of Orders," 5 pages 12-1 "Night Visit," 3 pages [11-2 crossed out] 12-2 "Rice and Sake," 2 pages [11-1 crossed out] "Intermission Music," 6 pages 12-3 "Mac's Arrival," 7 pages 13-2 "Old Sway Back," 3 pages [12-1 crossed out] 13-1/14-1 "One Way Ticket," 9 pages 14-2 "Man to Man," 4 pages 15-1 "Task Force," 5 pages 15-2 "Out of the Fog," 2 pages 15-3 "Out of the Fog (part II)," 1 page 15-4 "30 Minutes to Go," 1 page 19-1 "Bad News," 3 pages 19-2 "And So to Sleep," 2 pages 19-4 "He Can Talk," 1 page 19-3 "Main Title," 6 pages Even IF a number of these cues are on the album and were simply re-titled, I must say that it looks like there's a lot more unreleased music from this score than I expected! Maybe some of these cues were written for but not even used in the film? I'll have to watch it and see how things match up with this. But for now, sign me up for a new recording of this one, if the full original tracks can't be uncovered! (I guess even if they were, Sony's moratorium on licensing out their album programs pretty much kills the chances of another expansion.) Yavar
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A. Someone from a label (who shall remain nameless) said the score was well-represented on CD when I suggested it be rerecorded. This cue list determines that was a lie. Well, I am compelled to point out that some cues on the album have titles which aren't represented here in this official cue list, so I think there is less unreleased than what I bolded, but someone would have to figure out which of those differently-titled album tracks corresponds to the titles on these written cues. Yavar
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Posted: |
Oct 25, 2019 - 7:03 PM
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By: |
DavidCorkum
(Member)
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I never heard that Preminger actually destroyed the tapes. Wow! Double wow ! In an interview Goldsmith was asked about working with Preminger, but he refused to comment, other than stating that Preminger "was not a nice person". But supposedly Preminger became enraged by the score, took the recording tapes in his arms, and dumped them on the other side of the highway where the studio was, or something to that effect. A capital offense if the folks here were the jury. I'm theorizing that Preminger was not very interested in film scores, and perhaps didn't actually hear the music until the premiere. In the last third of the score, during a sequence where Japanese warships traverse a minefield, Goldsmith's score gets a little avant-garde, a little more unconventional than most of the score, with a synth effect I think. This material is not represented on the LP. Maybe Preminger thought it was weird, since I can't imagine what else in the score he might have objected to. But he was sent into a rage, not out of character for him. And now we pay the price.
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Otto Preminger... Now THAT'S who deserves to be called a " hack" Right, Thor? Btw I wish that minefield music you mentioned was available to be Included on.INTRADA Had it been, I woulda snatched it up.
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Weren't the original tapes personally destroyed by director Otto Preminger, to show his contempt at Goldsmith "ruining his movie"? P Preminger was a schweinhund! More like a ' Deutsche bag' Lol.
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I've shared this before - but circa 1964 I sent Maestro Goldsmith a fan letter (C/O 20th Century-Fox). I was 13. I was raving about his score for 'Rio Conchos'. His theme was the first piece of music I learned to play as a performing musician. (I stlll have the music sheet). Lo and behold, he responded! I remember vividly that he hardly mentioned 'Rio' but he was almost giddy with glee to tell me about the new score he was working on: 'In Harm's Way'. (His first 'biggie'). Preminger may have hated it, but the man himself loved it. I wish to God I'd kept that letter. 'Mom-threw-it-all-away', methinks.
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I love this early Goldsmith score, and hope a new recording can be made in the future, perhaps as an possible Kickstarter. Does the existence of the written scores at the Academy bode well for this possibility, i.e. are they accessible? Intrada successfully accessed the written sketches at the Herrick for their new recording of Black Patch — that’s how they were able to include the previously-unheard glorious logo music Jerry wrote for the opening of the film. Yavar
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