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Soylent Green/Demon Seed (1973/1977) |
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Music by Jerry Fielding, Fred Myrow |
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Click to enlarge images. |
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Line: Silver Age |
CD Release:
May 2003
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Catalog #: Vol. 6, No. 8 |
# of Discs: 1 |
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Released by Special Arrangement with Turner Classic Movies Music
FSM adds to its library of science fiction soundtracks with a doubleheader of provocative music from 1970s M-G-M films: Soylent Green and Demon Seed.
Soylent Green (1973) was the last and arguably the finest of Charlton Heston's trilogy of early-'70s sci-fi films, beginning with 1970's Beneath the Planet of the Apes and continuing with 1971's The Omega Man. (All three soundtracks are now immortalized as FSM CDs.) Heston plays a detective in this dystopian, overcrowded future, where the death of a prominent executive leads to a discovery of the shocking truth behind the society's precious foodstuff.
The music to Soylent Green was composed by Fred Myrow (1939-1999), an eclectic musician who worked in film, theater and the concert hall. Myrow provided an imaginative, pop-based main title (for a montage of still photographs), futuristic-sounding source cues (featuring electric violin and synthesizers), and strange, atmospheric moods for the underscore. The CD includes his original, unused classical-styled music for Edward G. Robinson's death sequence, as well as the actual classical works (by Tchaikovsky, Beethoven and Grieg) conducted by Gerald Fried for the finished film. The Soylent Green portion of the CD is entirely in stereo.
Demon Seed (1977) was directed by Donald Cammell (Performance) and stars Julie Christie as the wife of a scientist (Fritz Weaver) who has invented the Proteus IV supercomputer. However, Proteus soon develops the need to procreate—and uses Christie as the means to that end, trapping her in her house and terrorizing her. Jerry Fielding's avant garde score was a high-water mark in the composer's experimentation, featuring eerie suspense and violence as Proteus and Christie engage in a battle of wills.
Fielding conceived and recorded several pieces electronically, using the musique concrete sound world of Karlheinz Stockhausen; some of this music he later reworked symphonically. FSM's premiere release of the Demon Seed score features the entire orchestral score in stereo, as well as the unused electronic experiments in mono and stereo. |
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Instruments/Musicians |
Click on each musician name for more credits |
For more specific musician lists for the scores on this album, go here: |
Demon Seed |
Soylent Green |
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Leader (Conductor): Jerry Fielding, Gerald Fried, Fred Myrow
Violin: Israel Baker, Robert Barene, Virginia Bartold, Arnold Belnick, Blanche Belnick, George Berres, Harry Bluestone, Henry Arthur Brown, Herman Clebanoff, Manuel Compinsky, Shirley A. Cornell, Glenn Dicterow, Bonnie J. Douglas (Shure), Assa Drori, Elliot Fisher, Ronald P. Folsom, Sam Freed, Jr., David Frisina, Werner L. Gebauer, Debbie Sue Grossman, Thelma Hanau (Beach), Anatol Kaminsky, Nathan Kaproff, George Kast, Louis Kaufman, Richard Kaufman, Ezra Kliger, Jacob Krachmalnick, Bernard Kundell, Robert S. Levine, Marvin Limonick, Alfred Lustgarten, Gordon H. Marron, Alexander Murray, Irma W. Neumann, Stanley Plummer, Jerome Joseph Reisler, Nathan Ross, Ambrose Russo, Sheldon Sanov, Albert Saparoff, Ralph Schaeffer, Haim Shtrum, Paul C. Shure, Ralph Silverman, Marshall Sosson, Joseph Stepansky, Charles Veal, Jr., Gerald Vinci, Kenneth Yerke
Viola: Alfred Barr, Myer Bello, Denyse N. Buffum, Rollice Dale, James F. Dunham, Pamela Goldsmith, Allan Harshman, Myra Kestenbaum, Louis Kievman, Mark Gabor Kovacs, Joel B. Lish, Alex Neiman, Dan Lionel Neufeld, Gareth D. Nuttycombe, Robert Ostrowsky, Sven Reher, Harry Rumpler, David Schwartz, Linn Subotnick, Milton Thomas, Herschel P. Wise
Cello: Ron Cooper, Douglas L. Davis, Selene Depuy-Hurford, Joseph DiTullio, Justin DiTullio, Marie Fera, Igor Horoshevsky, Judith M. Johnson (Perett), Armand Kaproff, Dennis Karmazyn, Raphael "Ray" Kramer, Ronald A. Leonard, Frederick R. Seykora, Eleanor Slatkin, Jeffrey G. Solow, Mary Louise Zeyen
Bass: Milton Kestenbaum, Abraham Luboff, Peter A. Mercurio, Buell Neidlinger, Meyer (Mike) Rubin, Ray Siegel
Flute: Burnett Atkinson, Louise M. DiTullio (Dissman)
Oboe: William Criss, Gordon Pope
Clarinet: Edmund Samuel Chassman, Gary G. Gray
Bassoon: Norman H. Herzberg, Jack Marsh
Woodwinds: Gene Cipriano, Louise M. DiTullio (Dissman), Earle D. Dumler, John F. Ellis, Dominick Fera, Bernard Fleischer, Norman H. Herzberg, Arnold Koblentz, Marty Krystall, Ronald Langinger (aka Ronny Lang), Jack Marsh, John Neufeld, Ethmer Roten, Sheridon W. Stokes, Howard P. Terry
French Horn: James A. Decker, Vincent N. DeRosa, Robert E. Henderson, Arthur Maebe, Jr., Richard E. Perissi, Gale H. Robinson
Trumpet: John Audino, Maurie Harris, Malcolm Boyd McNab, George Werth
Trombone: Glenn Ferris, Francis L. "Joe" Howard, Lewis Melvin McCreary, George M. Roberts, Thomas Shepard, Lloyd E. Ulyate
Tuba: John T. "Tommy" Johnson, Ray Siegel
Keyboards: Douglas Clare Fischer, Caesar Giovannini, Ralph E. Grierson, Richard P. Hazard, Artie Kane, Lincoln Mayorga, William Osborne, Clark Spangler, Ian R. Underwood
Guitar: Michael J. Anthony, Larry E. Carlton, Joseph Robert Gibbons, Alton R. "Al" Hendrickson, Mitchell L. "Mitch" Holder, Lee M. Ritenour, Thomas "Tommy" Tedesco
Fender (electric) Bass: Charles W. Rainey
Harp: Catherine Gotthoffer (Johnk), Denzil (Gail) Laughton, Dorothy S. Remsen
Percussion: Hubert "Hugh" Anderson, Larry Bunker, Victor Feldman, Joe Porcaro, Emil Radocchia (Richards), Mark Z. Stevens, Tommy Vig, Kenneth E. Watson
Orchestrator: Greig McRitchie, Leonard "Lennie" Niehaus
Orchestra Manager: Lloyd Basham, Martin Berman, Harry W. Lojewski
Supervising Copyist: Harry W. Lojewski
Copyist: Willard W. Jones, Ray Mace
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