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Wow, thank you so much eggerty. Those are terrific!
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Posted: |
Jan 12, 2022 - 8:42 AM
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By: |
Hurdy Gurdy
(Member)
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Don't ask me why, but I never bought this when it was first released OR when LK was offering up those last copies at a discount!! Such can be ones dickness. BUT...thankfully, I managed to get a copy, in the recent past, for a little over the original asking price, and got while the gittin' was good. I've been VERY SLOWLY taking my time in getting to know the various scores on offer these past few months. Some of them, I've already known and loved for years (THE GHOST & MRS MUIR, TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD, VIVA ZAPATA, THIEF OF BAGDAD), while others will be like a brand new film score experience to me. Anyway...why am I here? As I type, I'm listening, for the first time, to Disc 12, which is EB's re-recording of his score to KINGS OF THE SUN. WoW!! It's very good, isn't it. Pure Elmer. I nearly started crying during track 2 (Love That Parade). Remember when film music was always like this!? And what a gorgeous package the whole thing is. The Box! The fantastic mini, hardbound book, with notes and comments and stills and music sheet reproductions!! More WoW!! This will be a long labour of love for me, getting to know unknown (or relatively unknown) scores by Alfred Newman and Bernard Herrmann and Miklos Rozsa and Waxman and Steiner. Oh, The Joys of this wonderful hobby!!
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One of the greatest treasures Lukas (and of course Elmer originally) ever produced for us. I’m so happy you got a copy Kev, and I’m excited to hear how you like the new-to-you scores. I will say that some of them like The Silver Chalice are better in their original form. Yavar
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I wonder if are they any chances that those Bernstein recordings can be re-released on cd's in similiar treatment like Herrmann Decca recordings and Gerhardt series?
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I wonder if are they any chances that those Bernstein recordings can be re-released on cd's in similiar treatment like Herrmann Decca recordings and Gerhardt series? Sure there is, if a label wants to license them from the Bernstein estate. There is a minor complication in that the three titles reissued on LP by Warner Bros. Records in the late 1970s, Torn Curtain, The Thief of Bagdad and To Kill a Mockingbird, are with WBR in perpetuity—with the exception of mail order direct sales. (We took advantage of that "carve-out" to do the box set, and WBR graciously let us use their masters.) Lukas
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