Film Score Monthly
FSM HOME MESSAGE BOARD FSM CDs FSM ONLINE RESOURCES FUN STUFF ABOUT US  SEARCH FSM   
Search Terms: 
Search Within:   search tips 
You must log in or register to post.
  Go to page:    
 
 Posted:   Dec 5, 2024 - 10:45 AM   
 By:   Thor   (Member)

Quite a few familiar names on that list! And funny that mastadge insisted they use his screen name instead of his real name.

 
 Posted:   Dec 5, 2024 - 12:43 PM   
 By:   johnbijl   (Member)

As requested here's the image of the backer in the CD:



I’m a little bit delighted that they placed my name as last in the B. The ‘ij’ is basically a variation of ‘y’ (and pronounced that way) but sometimes it’s placed at ‘i j’.

 
 Posted:   Dec 5, 2024 - 1:04 PM   
 By:   JeffM   (Member)


I’m a little bit delighted that they placed my name as last in the B. The ‘ij’ is basically a variation of ‘y’ (and pronounced that way) but sometimes it’s placed at ‘i j’.


Are we looking at the same picture?

 
 
 Posted:   Dec 6, 2024 - 7:06 AM   
 By:   Andy   (Member)



What resulting gap?


the "gap" resulting from switching to the next ripped audio file.
you do not hear this when playing the cd

 
 Posted:   Dec 6, 2024 - 7:54 AM   
 By:   Nicolai P. Zwar   (Member)



What resulting gap?


the "gap" resulting from switching to the next ripped audio file.
you do not hear this when playing the cd


Then something is wrong with the setting, or it is ripped to lossy (like MP3). Or something isn't quite right with your player. Lossless files like ALAC/FLACs are naturally "gapless", they normally play the files as they are and there should be no audible break between tracks when there isn't supposed to be one. I have ripped lots of CDs with tracks segueing into each other, and none of them have audible gaps when it goes from one track into the next.
You could of course also rip a CD and combine several tracks into one, but that is usually not necessary.

 
 
 Posted:   Dec 6, 2024 - 10:09 AM   
 By:   Andy   (Member)

Hi Nic

thanks, sorry, my fault, did not know this, in fact it was a mp3 rip on my phone.
I've ripped all my cds both in PCM and mp3 ( for mobiles to spare some memory)
At home i mostly play from CD.

 
 Posted:   Dec 6, 2024 - 10:09 AM   
 By:   JeffM   (Member)



What resulting gap?


the "gap" resulting from switching to the next ripped audio file.
you do not hear this when playing the cd


Then something is wrong with the setting, or it is ripped to lossy (like MP3). Or something isn't quite right with your player. Lossless files like ALAC/FLACs are naturally "gapless", they normally play the files as they are and there should be no audible break between tracks when there isn't supposed to be one. I have ripped lots of CDs with tracks segueing into each other, and none of them have audible gaps when it goes from one track into the next.
You could of course also rip a CD and combine several tracks into one, but that is usually not necessary.


Some players DO automatically add a gap in between tracks. My car CD players does this and it's annoying as hell when playing live CDs or cues split over several tracks. We also had a CD player at a radio station I volunteered at back in the 90s that also added a gap. We had to be careful when playing multiple tracks by an artist that are usually played back to back (like Queen, Journey, INXS, etc) when choosing which CD player to load the music into.

 
 Posted:   Dec 7, 2024 - 4:20 PM   
 By:   EdG   (Member)

Received my copy today along with many of you and I must admit that in all the amazing historic releases of the past few weeks this one is the one I'm most excited to hear. Bravo, Christopher!

 
 Posted:   Dec 7, 2024 - 4:36 PM   
 By:   DavidCoscina   (Member)

I finally had a chance to hear the work in its entirety. Absolutely stunning. From the melodic gothic sound of the first act to the chromatic harmony of the second, and the aleatoric terror of the third act, this work has a breadth to it that impresses.

 
 Posted:   Dec 7, 2024 - 4:59 PM   
 By:   Nicolai P. Zwar   (Member)


Some players DO automatically add a gap in between tracks. My car CD players does this and it's annoying as hell when playing live CDs or cues split over several tracks. We also had a CD player at a radio station I volunteered at back in the 90s that also added a gap. We had to be careful when playing multiple tracks by an artist that are usually played back to back (like Queen, Journey, INXS, etc) when choosing which CD player to load the music into.


I have LOTS of classical music CDs where long delicate tracks (like 30 minutes or even more) are segmented into many shorter tracks for easier access. No CD player I have ever owned, be it in a home stereo system or in a car or portable player, ever added any gaps between tracks. That would render a lot of CDs near useless, practically ALL opera CDs or live concert CDs would be practically a waste.
Note: I am not saying there are not some such CD players, I am just saying that I have never in all the decades of music listening ever came across such a CD player or even heard it mentioned. Fortunately.

However, that is not what Andy is saying, and it has since been clarified: he ripped to MP3, which indeed adds gaps to cues. Because even if a CD player added gaps during playback, it should never add gaps during ripping, because ripping programs should rip the exact data on the CD (provided you rip to ALAC/FLAC or other lossless formats), and if there are not gaps on a CD, they shouldn't (and technically couldn't) be ripped losslessly with gaps for obvious reasons. (Unless your settings specifically are set to add gaps of silence on purpose, of course.)

But I would be very interested to know what CD player automatically adds a gap between tracks? Can you name a model? Seriously, that would be quite interesting to me. Because I wonder: this should have been a major issue of contention when such a player was made or build. I certainly would have returned any player that adds gaps between tracks during playback, not matter in what decade I bought it. I imagine any serious audio magazine must have blasted such a CD player to pieces.

 
 
 Posted:   Dec 8, 2024 - 3:58 PM   
 By:   mark.bagby.19   (Member)

Did anyone get ship notifications? Or did their CDs just show up?

Mine arrived in the mail yesterday (Dec. 7); I live 100 miles from the Santa Monica mailing address. No advance notice; just showed up.

 
 
 Posted:   Dec 8, 2024 - 8:55 PM   
 By:   MarkS   (Member)


Some players DO automatically add a gap in between tracks. My car CD players does this and it's annoying as hell when playing live CDs or cues split over several tracks. We also had a CD player at a radio station I volunteered at back in the 90s that also added a gap. We had to be careful when playing multiple tracks by an artist that are usually played back to back (like Queen, Journey, INXS, etc) when choosing which CD player to load the music into.


I have LOTS of classical music CDs where long delicate tracks (like 30 minutes or even more) are segmented into many shorter tracks for easier access. No CD player I have ever owned, be it in a home stereo system or in a car or portable player, ever added any gaps between tracks. That would render a lot of CDs near useless, practically ALL opera CDs or live concert CDs would be practically a waste.
Note: I am not saying there are not some such CD players, I am just saying that I have never in all the decades of music listening ever came across such a CD player or even heard it mentioned. Fortunately.

However, that is not what Andy is saying, and it has since been clarified: he ripped to MP3, which indeed adds gaps to cues. Because even if a CD player added gaps during playback, it should never add gaps during ripping, because ripping programs should rip the exact data on the CD (provided you rip to ALAC/FLAC or other lossless formats), and if there are not gaps on a CD, they shouldn't (and technically couldn't) be ripped losslessly with gaps for obvious reasons. (Unless your settings specifically are set to add gaps of silence on purpose, of course.)

But I would be very interested to know what CD player automatically adds a gap between tracks? Can you name a model? Seriously, that would be quite interesting to me. Because I wonder: this should have been a major issue of contention when such a player was made or build. I certainly would have returned any player that adds gaps between tracks during playback, not matter in what decade I bought it. I imagine any serious audio magazine must have blasted such a CD player to pieces.


My 2016 Mazda 3 waits until each track ends before looking for the next track on the memory card. Very annoying, but I've always combined continuous tracks into one track, so it's not a killer.

 
 
 Posted:   Dec 9, 2024 - 12:14 PM   
 By:   MThiermann670   (Member)

The more often I listen to it, the better it gets. All the little details are so fantastic and multifaceted. A delight from the first to the last note. It is everything you could want from Chris Young and much more. Chris' music is made for the concert hall. I can only warmly recommend this treat to every lover of horror film music!

 
 Posted:   Dec 10, 2024 - 12:03 PM   
 By:   nuts_score   (Member)

What a beautiful thing this is. I found a cut of the movie on YouTube which syncs rather perfectly to the Young re-score and introduced my wife to Murnau's silent classic with this new score. As a Horror film score fan, I'm very lucky to have TWO great Nosferatu scores release in one month. I am quite loving the new film's score though I'll have a more concrete idea of it when seeing it to the picture. But this Christopher Young version is just a grand Gothic ballet of sonic brilliance. It plays great alongside the film. My wife was enthralled and mentioned we should try to own this as a release at some point. I missed out on the CD version it will appear, but I'll keep my eyes open for future releases.

 
 Posted:   Dec 10, 2024 - 1:18 PM   
 By:   danbeck   (Member)

I missed out on the CD version it will appear, but I'll keep my eyes open for future releases.

But the CD version is already available to order from most online stores.

 
 Posted:   Dec 10, 2024 - 4:20 PM   
 By:   danbeck   (Member)

Interesting. Checked the LP release at Amazon to be available Dec. 20 and it is a single LP with a single track on each side titled “Nightmares From Nosferatu” (Pt. 1 & 2) totalling 43 min. I’m sure Thor would love that version.

Curious to know how Young organized this massive 94 min work in a shorter suite from.

 
 Posted:   Dec 10, 2024 - 11:16 PM   
 By:   Stephen Woolston   (Member)

Wouldn't it be nice if someone did a Blu-Ray or 4K that had all available versions of the 1922 film with all the scores written for it.

But first—I still look forward to receiving my backer copy of the CD. I'm resisting ordering one off Amazon to get it quicker!

Cheers

 
 Posted:   Dec 10, 2024 - 11:31 PM   
 By:   Nicolai P. Zwar   (Member)

Wouldn't it be nice if someone did a Blu-Ray or 4K that had all available versions of the 1922 film with all the scores written for it.

But first—I still look forward to receiving my backer copy of the CD. I'm resisting ordering one off Amazon to get it quicker!

Cheers



Oh, yes to both. Atilla waiting here, and I'd love to get the such a Bluray release.







Edit:
PS: I meant to write "Also waiting here", but when I came back to this thread now, I see that it says "Atilla waiting here". I have no idea why my Smartphone auto-corrected "Also" to "Atilla", but it's too cool to not leave it there. In fact, "Attilla waiting here!" might be my new line in business mails when I'm waiting for something.

 
 
 Posted:   Dec 11, 2024 - 1:06 AM   
 By:   Thor   (Member)

Interesting. Checked the LP release at Amazon to be available Dec. 20 and it is a single LP with a single track on each side titled “Nightmares From Nosferatu” (Pt. 1 & 2) totalling 43 min. I’m sure Thor would love that version.

Ooooh, nice! Maybe I don't need to whittle after all. I'll keep my eyes out for that; hopefully a digital version will appear at some point.

 
 
 Posted:   Dec 11, 2024 - 4:29 AM   
 By:   Prince Damian   (Member)

My copy has just arrived. I'm about 10 minutes in. So far so good.

 
You must log in or register to post.
  Go to page:    
© 2025 Film Score Monthly. All Rights Reserved.
Website maintained and powered by Veraprise and Matrimont.