|
|
|
Return to FSM CDs |
Previous CD | Next CD |
Dead Ringer (1964) |
|
Music by Andre Previn |
|
|
|
Click to enlarge images. |
|
|
Line: Golden Age |
CD Release:
October 2006
|
Catalog #: Vol. 9, No. 15 |
# of Discs: 1 |
|
|
Dead Ringer (1964) is one of the most delightful scores in the career of legendary composer, conductor and pianist André Previn. A macabre tale of identical twins (Bette Davis)—one of whom kills the other and assumes her identity—the film was given a gloriously over-the-top score by Previn, with notable use of harpsichord for sinister effect.
The early 1960s were a time of transition for Previn. A wunderkind prodigy at M-G-M in the 1950s, he won widespread acclaim for his stellar music direction on musicals such as Gigi (1958) and Porgy and Bess (1959). As the '60s arrived, he composed some of his finest dramatic scores, such as Elmer Gantry (1960) and Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse (1962). In only a few years he would quit film altogether, but in 1963-1964 he was employed at Warner Bros. on the music direction for My Fair Lady (1964) and—while that film was shooting—the underscore for Dead Ringer.
Dead Ringer was a followup of sorts to Bette Davis's comeback hit What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962), in which Davis had starred opposite Joan Crawford. Based on a project that had originated in the 1940s, Dead Ringer gave Davis dual roles as the "good" and "bad" sister in a pair of identical twins—but in this case, it is the "good" twin who finds herself going down a path of corruption and tragedy.
From this relatively straightforward premise, Andre Previn hit an absolute home run with his score. Two major themes are present: a jagged, modernistic melody spotlighting strings and harpsichord, used for the determination of the "good" twin to take over her sister's life; and a wonderful homage to Erich Wolfgang Korngold (who scored several of Bette Davis's most famous pictures) in a soaring love theme with uniquely Previn touches.
If anything, Dead Ringer features the same sense of gleeful showmanship and symphonic wizardry (and specifically harpsichord) that is found in John Williams's score for Alfred Hitchcock's Family Plot. Both scores seem to live by Hitchcock's reported saying to Williams (and others): murder can be fun.
This CD features the premiere release of the complete Dead Ringer score. Tracks 1-13 feature the Warner Bros. Records LP program in excellent stereo sound (remixed from the original three-track 1/2" album master), while tracks 14-21 feature the balance of the score (and source cues) in monaural sound (the previously unreleased music survives only in mono). Liner notes are by Jeff Eldridge. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Instruments/Musicians |
Click on each musician name for more credits |
|
Leader (Conductor): Andre Previn
Violin: Israel Baker, David Berman, Josef Brooks (Schoenbrun), Bobby Bruce (aka Robt. Berg), Herman Clebanoff, Sam Freed, Jr., Benny Gill, Howard W. Griffin, Mort Herbert, Anatol Kaminsky, Nathan Kaproff, Marvin Limonick, Joseph Livoti, Dan Lube, Hillard Lubie, Emanuel Moss, Erno Neufeld, Jerome Joseph Reisler, Sam Ross, Paul C. Shure, Joseph Stepansky, Harry Zagon
Viola: Alvin Dinkin, Cecil Figelski, Virginia Majewski, George Raymond Menhennick, Robert Ostrowsky, Milton Thomas
Cello: Margaret Aue-Van Wyck, Justin DiTullio, Anne Goodman (Karam), Armand Kaproff, Raphael "Ray" Kramer, Edgar Lustgarten, Harold Schneier, Eleanor Slatkin
Bass: Peter A. Mercurio, Keith "Red" Mitchell, Joseph Mondragon
Flute: Arthur Gleghorn, Sylvia Ruderman
Oboe: Arnold Koblentz
Clarinet: Dominick Fera, Mitchell Lurie, John Neufeld
Bassoon: Norman H. Herzberg
French Horn: John W. "Jack" Cave, Vincent N. DeRosa, William A. Hinshaw
Trumpet: Emanuel "Manny" Klein, Larry Sullivan, Raymond Triscari
Trombone: Hoyt Bohannon, Richard "Dick" Nash, George M. Roberts
Piano: Russell Freeman, Pearl Kaufman (Goldman)
Harp: Catherine Gotthoffer (Johnk)
Accordion: Frank T. Messina
Drums: Frankie Capp, Frank J. Flynn, Louis Singer
Orchestrator: Albert Woodbury
Copyist: Robert C. Clark, Dan Franklin, Arthur W. Grier, Dave Strech
|
|
|
|
|
|
|