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If I understand Golden and Silver Age, this one must be Silver Age but not by a lot.
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I'm told Bruce is still doing business with UA - so how about some Vespa-Nascimbene with a French accent. Please
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So early sixties...or very late fifties, I suppose it depends on the composer.
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Bigger than a breadstick?
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First time on CD? First time in any format.
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Is it mostly loud music or not-very-loud music? Or something like a 50-50 split of the two? I'm torn between guessing if it's going to be a loud or quiet score. It has lovely quiet moments and some louder moments but nothing really bombastic. I'm listening to it now - stunning. And a very long CD at over seventy-six minutes.
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Is it from a comedy? I would say it's perhaps one of the few films with almost no laughs
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Sounds like Bernstein. How about Duning's SALOME? That has almost no laughs.... (Well, intentional laughs...)
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So early sixties...or very late fifties, I suppose it depends on the composer. Dates sound about right
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EDIT: I've just seen the clew about it being a premiere release, so I retract most of my (really stupid, if I'd just reread the thread) guesses. However, I don't believe "Too Late Blues" has had any release, and I know it's coming at some point in the near future - maybe it's ready sooner than expected? The film is a rather gritty affair, though with some fine moments of acerbic wit. Regardless, there's much to be excited & delighted about in the Land of Kritzer. Very much looking forward to receiving my copy of "Suzie Wong." Duning was a marvelous melodist (and an adept adapter of other people's music, too).
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EDIT: I've just seen the clew about it being a premiere release, so I retract most of my (really stupid, if I'd just reread the thread) guesses. However, I don't believe "Too Late Blues" has had any release, and I know it's coming at some point in the near future - maybe it's ready sooner than expected? The film is a rather gritty affair, though with some fine moments of acerbic wit. Regardless, there's much to be excited & delighted about in the Land of Kritzer. Very much looking forward to receiving my copy of "Suzie Wong." Duning was a marvelous melodist (and an adept adapter of other people's music, too). The Near Future Is Now. I've been blissed out listening to the master all day.
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