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 Posted:   May 16, 2016 - 9:16 PM   
 By:   Amer Zahid   (Member)

INTRADA Announces:

CHINATOWN
Composed and Conducted by JERRY GOLDSMITH
INTRADA Special Collection Vol. 350

Label: Intrada Special Collection Volume ISC 350
Date: 1974
Time: 72:18
Tracks: 32






One of Jerry Goldsmith's all-time most important soundtracks is expanded at last! Roman Polanski's landmark, Academy Award-winning Chinatown left 1974 audiences (and other film makers) with an impact that still reverberates to this day. Stars Jack Nicholson, Faye Dunaway, John Huston, writer Robert Towne, producer Robert Evans… all found themselves together, making the film of a lifetime! Sharing in that spotlight of success was composer Jerry Goldsmith, fashioning one of the most successful - and innovative - scores of a prolific and remarkably brilliant career. Private detective J.J. Gittes sets out on a routine investigation and winds up mired in an increasingly involved and complex web of deceit, deception, corporate crime, greed… and murder. He also finds himself drawn into a love affair that finds him inexorably doomed to repeat tragic mistakes from his past. To provide a musical score that could meld the 1930's Los Angeles milieu with issues relevant in modern times, Goldsmith made the now-legendary decision to anchor the music with a lonely, winding minor-key theme for solo trumpet in 30's period garb, then surround it with material in his trademark contemporary vernacular. The results were perfection: masculine-but-melancholy period trumpet amidst modernistic glissando strings, ringing chimes, scratching percussion effects, multiple harp arpeggios, dissonant harmonies, striking pizzicatos, everything combining together with brooding intensity until it all comes full circle, just like the story. Especially noteworthy are numerous devices from four pianos, tinkling in the right hand, jabbing in the left, hitting in collective cluster. Intrada now presents, courtesy Paramount Pictures and universal Music Group, two programs of this "perfect" score: first a remastered stereo reissue of the famous original ABC label 1974 album, second the complete score as it appears in the film, including music previously unreleased! Previous CD reissues of the 1974 album have been mastered it extremely "hot" levels, compressing the dynamic range and losing much of the level nuance between the various orchestral colors. For this Intrada presentation, an all-new mastering affords more appropriate levels, improved dynamics, better orchestral nuance… and less distortion at last! For the complete score presentation, Intrada was given access to what appears to be the sole remaining "master tape-quality" source material of the complete scoring sessions: a 1/4" full-track (mono) copy of the tape preserved by the composer himself, containing every cue he recorded. A number of important distinctions between the score as recorded for the film and the album are evident: different codas to the closing trumpet line and piano codas in the titles, judicial edits in the album takes, etc. Of special reward are the previously unreleased cues, including the lean, austere trumpet solo of "No Trespassing" when Jake enters the orange groves. Of particular interest is the haunting trumpet variant of the main theme ("Second Thoughts") ending on a rare and otherwise unrelated (for this score) major key as Jake showers, reflecting on events leading up to this unsatisfying juncture in his life. While in mono, the complete score offers clean, warm overall sound with crisp detail. A "flipper-style" booklet cover from Joe Sikoryak plus detailed notes by Jeff Bond is still another asset to this important release. Jerry Goldsmith conducts. Intrada Special Collection CD available while quantities and interest remain!


01. Love Theme From Chinatown (Main Title) (1:59)
02. Noah Cross (2:27)
03. Easy Living (Ralph Rainger & Leo Robin) (1:49)
04. Jake And Evelyn (2:41)
05. I Can't Get Started (Ira Gershwin & Vernon Duke) (3:35)
06. The Last Of Ida (2:59)
07. The Captive (3:05)
08. The Boy On A Horse (2:05)
09. The Way You Look Tonight (Jerome Kern & Dorothy Fields) (2:16)
10. The Wrong Clue (2:32)
11. J.J. Gittis (3:05)
12. Love Theme From Chinatown (End Title) (2:03)

Total Album Time: 31:23

Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
13. Love Theme From Chinatown (Main Title) (1:56)
14. J.J. Gittis (3:10)
15. Noah Cross I (1:32)
16. Mulwray's Office (1:29)
17. A Late Swim (0:25)
18. The Boy On A Horse (2:06)
19. Easy Living (Ralph Rainger & Leo Robin) (1:48)
20. The Way You Look Tonight (Jerome Kern & Dorothy Fields) (4:35)
21. Noah Cross II (1:11)
22. No Trespassing (0:55)
23. Some Day/The Vagabond King Waltz (Rudolf Friml & Brian Hooker) (3:18)
24. The Last Of Ida II (0:54)
25. Jake And Evelyn (2:46)
26. The Captive (3:15)
27. Second Thoughts (1:03)
28. The Last Of Ida I (2:50)
29. The Wrong Clue II (2:15)
30. The Wrong Clue I (1:19)
31. It's Not Worth It (1:11)
32. Love Theme From Chinatown (End Title) (2:01)

Total Soundtrack Time: 40:46

http://store.intrada.com/s.nl/it.A/id.10122/.f?sc=13&category=22848

 
 Posted:   May 16, 2016 - 9:20 PM   
 By:   bdm   (Member)

This was sooooo ordered!

 
 Posted:   May 16, 2016 - 9:26 PM   
 By:   Amer Zahid   (Member)

Both the Stereo album and the new mono complete score sound really good and improved.

 
 Posted:   May 16, 2016 - 9:28 PM   
 By:   Commodore   (Member)

Interesting! No, correction...very interesting!

 
 Posted:   May 16, 2016 - 10:38 PM   
 By:   Replicant006   (Member)

Believe it or not, as much as I love Goldsmith, I've yet to hear a single note from this score, outside of watching the movie. Is it as good as people say? Am I in for a rare treat? Is anyone jealous that I'll be experiencing this score for the first time?

 
 Posted:   May 16, 2016 - 10:44 PM   
 By:   Josh   (Member)

Believe it or not, as much as I love Goldsmith, I've yet to hear a single note from this score, outside of watching the movie. Is it as good as people say? Am I in for a rare treat? Is anyone jealous that I'll be experiencing this score for the first time?

Yes, yes and not me (only 'cause you've been missing out all these years wink).

 
 Posted:   May 16, 2016 - 10:51 PM   
 By:   Josh "Swashbuckler" Gizelt   (Member)

I'm trying to spend as little as money as possible right now, but this was an instant order.

Jerry Goldsmith defined the sound of noir for the 70s with this score, a sound which would persist for the genre until John Barry's score for Body Heat. Goldsmith would then change the sound of that genre again with Basic Instinct.

 
 
 Posted:   May 16, 2016 - 10:58 PM   
 By:   Jim Cleveland   (Member)

Years ago at Peaches Records in a nearby city, I bought SEVEN sealed(and either notched or corner-cut) copies of Chinatown.... still have those sealed copies. Now with vinyl making a comeback, I can make a KILLING! big grinbig grinbig grin

 
 
 Posted:   May 16, 2016 - 10:58 PM   
 By:   haineshisway   (Member)

So, about seven minutes of actual new music. I'm there.

 
 
 Posted:   May 16, 2016 - 11:31 PM   
 By:   Rollin Hand   (Member)

What a masterpiece! At last, they did it!
I listened to the actual original recording sound samples: dense and fabulous.
Ordered at Intrada without delay!

 
 
 Posted:   May 16, 2016 - 11:58 PM   
 By:   Richard-W   (Member)

Bought and paid for.

Now I will have all three.

Is this a pre-order?
Intrada's website doesn't state a release date.

 
 Posted:   May 17, 2016 - 3:42 AM   
 By:   Heath   (Member)

Fantastic release.

I didn't even notice the mono tracks were mono!

 
 Posted:   May 17, 2016 - 5:02 AM   
 By:   RoryR   (Member)


Ordered at Intrada without delay!


Yes! I ordered it immediately after opening the thread last night. A must-have. I watch the movie nearly every summer. Now I'm really looking forward to it.

Intrada is the best.

 
 Posted:   May 17, 2016 - 5:32 AM   
 By:   Amer Zahid   (Member)

Just curious....I wonder if the producers opted to use the rejected score by Philip Lambro on this set, of-course that would have made this to be a 2CD set then?

 
 Posted:   May 17, 2016 - 6:00 AM   
 By:   Josh "Swashbuckler" Gizelt   (Member)

Just curious....I wonder if the producers opted to use the rejected score by Philip Lambro on this set, of-course that would have made this to be a 2CD set then?

Well, the CD program runs over 71 minutes, so yes, it would bump up the number of CDs if anything more substantial than seven minutes was included. However, it probably wasn't an option given that Lambro's score had been already released by another label.

Lambro's score was released by Perseverance: http://www.fortytwotradingco.com/los-angeles-1937-chinatown-rejected-score/

Screen Archives has copies: http://www.screenarchives.com/title_detail.cfm/ID/22935/LOS-ANGELES-1937-REJECTED-CHINATOWN-SCORE-1000-EDITION/

 
 Posted:   May 17, 2016 - 6:39 AM   
 By:   Shaun Rutherford   (Member)

Source cues mixed in with the score would bug me more if it were on vinyl (ahem, Back To The Future), but thanks to today's technology, I'm in charge of the sequence!

 
 Posted:   May 17, 2016 - 7:25 AM   
 By:   FredGarvin   (Member)

Finally, yay! Lost my old one somehow.

 
 Posted:   May 17, 2016 - 7:39 AM   
 By:   Jim Phelps   (Member)

Years ago at Peaches Records in a nearby city, I bought SEVEN sealed(and either notched or corner-cut) copies of Chinatown.... still have those sealed copies. Now with vinyl making a comeback, I can make a KILLING! big grinbig grinbig grin

Goodbye hotplate, hello Aga oven! big grinbig grinbig grin

Thrilled about this release! The old Varese one sounded like one of the musicians was playing a hiss box or something. Strange that Varese isn't doing this one, but Intrada never does me wrong....

 
 Posted:   May 17, 2016 - 7:55 AM   
 By:   The Mutant   (Member)

From Goldsmith's own archives. Cool. Doesn't get much better than Chinatown. Of course I'm thrilled to have the unreleased music, but I'm most excited for the new mix. The old one was way too shrill and loud which made including it in mix playlists impossible.

If only he kept Damnation Alley too...

 
 Posted:   May 17, 2016 - 8:17 AM   
 By:   Grecchus   (Member)

Very generous of Carol Goldsmith and thanks to Intrada for their limitless dedication.

 
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