Zum Inhalt springen
Soundtrack Board

Beaverhausen

Mitglied
  • Gesamte Inhalte

    738
  • Benutzer seit

  • Letzter Besuch

Beiträge von Beaverhausen

  1. MV sollte vielleicht mal zu der praxis übergehen, sich einen master komplett anzuhören bevor dieser ins presswerk geht anstatt blind darauf zu vertrauen, dass der sound mixer alles richtig macht. Bruce Botnick hat im FSM forum zwar die hauptkritik geerntet, aber der sollte ja eigentlich nicht für die qualitätskontrolle da sein. Mag ja sein, dass es so im master gewesen ist aber deswegen ist das noch lange nicht unentfernbar.

    Aber mal schaun, ob die störung überhaupt so groß ist, wie einige behaupten. In sachen clicks wird ja gerne mal ein elephant aus einer mücke gemacht. Reden wir hier von einem kurzen leichten clicken (wie bei einer schlechten mp3 z.b.) oder einem ordentlichen knackser, der meine lautsprecher zerstören kann, wenn ich nicht aufpasse?

    eher das zweite.

    ich hörte es laut und habs sogar in der küche gehört.

    über kopfhörer tun dir die ohren echt weh.

    nicht schön!

  2. habe gerade eine email verfasst. sehr höflich. Nach dem Motto: War erschrocken das zu hören, und bin wohl leider nicht der einzige, bin etwas enttäuscht, was gedenkt ihr zu tun, bla bla.

    5Min später eine Antwort:

    There is a very slight digital noise on Disc One, Track 11 of our release of FIRST KNIGHT. This minor anomaly was inherent in our master source and we hope it does not detract from your enjoyment of this exciting release.

  3. Howard hat eigentlich noch nie komplett enttäuscht. war immer was hörenswertes dabei. insofern mach ich mir nicht son kopf. :-)

    Ich finde, das eher eher seit The Village nix wirklich hinbekommen hat, trotz großem Aufgefahre. Großes Orchester heißt ja nix uns spricht nicht für Qualität. Solide sind seine Sachen allemal, aber für den Hörer (mich) eher belanglos,... Also abwarten!

  4. Also Lukas statement ist eindeutig das nachvollziehbarere. Wieso lukas jetzt der böse ist, weil er einen unumstößlichen fakt aufgedeckt hat verstehe ich nicht. Sein ton ist in anbetracht der tatsache, dass er esterhammer schon mehrfach darauf aufmerksam gemacht hat und dieser einfach nicht lernfähig ist, völlig angebracht. Ich wäre an seiner stelle auch genervt, wenn mich eben dieser unprofessionell arbeitende jemand dann auch noch fragt, für ihn connections zu meinen eigenen vertragspartnern herzustellen. Das würde bei denen ja letztendlich ein schlechtes licht auf lukas werfen.

    Bei Lukas lief zwar auch ein aspekt der produktion nicht ganz koscher, aber das licensing war immer in ordnung. Und er hat seine probleme offen gelegt und mit den studios gelöst. Esterhammer muss nun das gleiche tun.

    Lukas kann sich ja dennoch etwas gewählter ausdrücken. Klingt alles sehr emotional von seiner Seite. Er ist halt stinkig. Ich persönlich find es eine Spur zu unprofessionell von Lukas. Der Ton macht die Musik. Und so einen "öffentlichen Brief" in dem Ton, ist fast ein Eigentor.

    Aber wie schon einige angemerkt haben: Ich Lukas Wäsche alles andere als "rein".

    Wer im Glashaus sitzt,.... :lol2:

    Aber unterm Strich: Dumm gelaufen. Schwamm drüber!

  5. neues von intrada:

    One release is limited to 1000 copies. The other is 1500 copies and is a grail to a few folks around here from a catalog we just started releasing stuff from.

    I thought I'd throw you an early bone:

    http://www.intrada.net/namethattune/02_GUESS.m3u

    Here's another clip to the former. http://www.intrada.net/namethattune/guess03.m3u which is by a composer new to Intrada.

    Here's another clip. All these clips are from the 1000 release.

    http://www.intrada.net/namethattune/4Guess_04.m3u

  6. Nachschub von Kritzerland:

    Kritzerland is proud to present a new limited edition soundtrack:

    WE FEEL A MORAL OBLIGATION TO WARN YOU THAT THE PICTURE YOU ARE ABOUT TO SEE WILL SHOCK YOU AS NO OTHER FILM EVER HAS

    BLACK SUNDAY

    Music Composed and Conducted by Les Baxter

    The moral obligation warning came at the head of the American International Pictures US version of 1960s Black Sunday, which was actually released in the US in 1961. And for once that kind of hyperbolic hype was true and you knew it right from the get go first, with a woman being branded with an S (for Satan) in extreme close-up, with the sound of the brand searing her flesh, and second, having a mask of spikes hammered into her face by a huge masked man with a huge mallet. That alone was enough to send impressionable young people running up the aisle, and there was more to come, a lot more a whole plethora of nightmare-inducing images. American International actually trimmed the most violent moments (a spike through someones eye, melting flesh, spurting blood), but what was left was still pretty potent for its time. Add to that, Bavas mist-shrouded exteriors and beautifully shot interiors, and you had atmosphere to spare. But the most brilliant bit of atmosphere a filmmaker could ever have was the ethereal presence of the absolutely stunning Barbara Steele in her dual role of Princess Asa and Katia. Steele would go on to become one of the most iconic faces in 60s horror cinema. And also aiding the atmosphere incredibly well was the wonderful musical score by Les Baxter.

    One of the first decisions American International made for the US version of the film, was to replace the original moody score of Roberto Nicolosi with a more conventional horror score, which they assigned to composer Les Baxter. Baxter had just finished scoring Roger Cormans House of Usher, and he was a perfect choice. He delivered a classic score, which was occasionally moody like the original Nicolosi score, but also delivered the kinds of musical horror moments to which American audiences were accustomed. Right from the start, with the warning logo, you get that wonderful Baxter sound shrieking brass that was literally warning you to watch out. Theres a beautiful love theme for Katia, theres ominous, brooding music, theres music for beer drinkers, theres music that brilliantly punctuates a couple of the films scariest sequences, and the score just does what a score for a horror film should underline the horror in the best and most visceral way it can .

    Black Sunday was hugely influential on an entire generation of filmmakers, and continues to be to this day. Its combination of brilliant and moody photography, horror, and poetry, has been paid homage by many directors, including Francis Ford Coppola and Tim Burton the latter noted that One of the films that remain with me probably stronger than anything is Black Sunday. You can see that influence throughout most of Burtons film, Sleepy Hollow.

    A thirty-four minute suite from Black Sunday was originally released on LP, where it was rather ludicrously mislabeled as Black Sabbath (another great Bava film whose US release also carried a score by Les Baxter). That suite was assembled from a 7½ ips tape of not great quality. The suite received its first CD appearance on Bay Cities and then subsequently on Citadel, both releases from that same tape. Missing from the suite was not only good audio quality but also an awful lot of the films best music. The suite also was assembled in no particular order and didnt really reflect the way the music was used in the film at all, not to mention that it was one long track.

    For this release, we found the original mixed two-track session masters in the MGM vaults, which were in excellent condition. The best news was that those tapes contained every note of music Baxter wrote for the film. The only piece that was missing was the little thirty-second solo piano piece played by the character of Katia in the film. The sound on those original tapes is, of course, miles ahead of the previous version it is pristine mono sound and finally allows the score to be heard in the way that it should be. Weve assembled the score in precise film order, which is how it plays best.

    So here, at long last, is Les Baxters great score to one of the all-time classic horror films, Mario Bavas Black Sunday. Be afraid, be very afraid.

    This release is limited to 1000 copies only. The price of the CD is $19.98, plus shipping. Additionally, we are offering a special deal with the purchase of this release.

    CD will ship the third week of May however, preorders placed directly through Kritzerland usually ship one to five weeks earlier (weve been averaging four weeks early).

    Warning / Prologue / The Mask

    Main Titles

    Carriage Ride / Strange Noises

    The Chapel and The Legend /

    The Bat / Lifting The Mask /

    A Drop of Blood

    Meeting Katia / Revivifying Blood

    The Painting / Vision of the Mask /

    Asas Eyes

    Drinking at the Inn / Scary Woods

    Kruvajan Outside The Inn / Rise Yavuto

    Prince Vajda Sees Yavuto / Mysterious Carriage & Ride Through The Woods

    Kruvajan / Asa Alive

    Kruvajan and Vajda, Kruvajan and Katia / Daybreak

    Andre to the Castle / Dead Boris /

    Andre and Katia

    Thats The Man / Find Her

    Bleeding Dogs / Fiery Drapes / In the Garden / Strangled and Secret Passage

    The Grave / Stake Through The Eye

    Katia Alone and Afraid / Katia Meets Asa Andre and Yavuto / Katia and Asa /

    Save Katia

    Villagers To The Castle / The Cross /

    The Burning / Katia Alive

    End Titles

    Rare CD release of soundtrack by Les Baxter "Black Sunday"

×
×
  • Neu erstellen...

Wichtige Information

Wir nutzen auf unserer Webseite Cookies, um Ihnen einen optimalen Service zu bieten. Wenn Sie weiter auf unserer Seite surfen, stimmen Sie der Cookie-Verwendung und der Verarbeitung von personenbezogenen Daten über Formulare zu. Zu unserer Datenschutzerklärung: Datenschutzerklärung