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Whose Life Is It Anyway? (1981) |
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Music by Arthur B. Rubinstein |
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Click to enlarge images. |
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Line: Silver Age |
CD Release:
May 2009
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Catalog #: Vol. 12, No. 11 |
# of Discs: 1 |
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The collaboration between director John Badham and composer Arthur B. Rubinstein has yielded such excellent scores as Blue Thunder (1983), WarGames (1983), Stakeout (1987) and The Hard Way (1991). FSM proudly presents their first feature collaboration, Whose Life Is It Anyway? (1981), in which Rubinstein makes expert—and affecting—use of Baroque styles to elevate Badham's superior adaptation of the stage play by Brian Clark.
Whose Life Is It Anyway? stars Richard Dreyfuss as a dynamic artist, Ken Harrison, who is paralyzed in an auto accident. Feeling his life is over without the ability to pursue his art, he goes to court for the right to die. John Cassavetes, Christine Lahti and Janet Eilber costar in this acclaimed film adaptation.
Despite the stagebound origins—and potentially downbeat subject matter—Rubinstein wrote a lively symphonic score bristling with energy. “Because the film is about life, I knew the score must reflect that,” Rubinstein says in the CD liner notes. “The music starts upbeat and it ends upbeat. In my own sort of strange dissecting of what the film was about, it was clear to me that it was about the life force, and Ken’s life force was sculpting. The intellectual side of my pea brain led me to Baroque music—Bach. Bach is, for me, the essence of structure, architecture, sculpture. His music is the embodiment of the life force.”
The concept decided upon, Rubinstein crafted a unique sound palette (eliminating flutes, clarinets and violins) and wrote in a variety of classical forms—passacaglia, gavotte, bourée and many others. But his adherence to these styles never gets in way of the music’s essential feeling or its sensitive support of the movie’s expertly crafted drama. The film was Rubinstein’s first major feature (he had scored television and smaller films beforehand) and it is easy to see how he would become so successful in the field—the score is not only terrific in and of itself as music, but is carefully designed (theatrically, emotionally, intellectually) to support a thoughtfully intimate story.
This premiere release of the complete score to Whose Life Is It Anyway? is presented in excellent stereo sound, with liner notes by Jeff Bond and Alexander Kaplan incorporating new comments by Rubinstein, who has graciously assisted with the production. |
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Track List |
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Click on track TIME for MP3 sound clip. Whose Life Is It Anyway? Music Composed and Conducted by Arthur B. Rubinstein - Main Titles 3:08
- Intensive Care 1:37
- Trumpet Voluntary (source) 1:20
- Baroque Sweet 1:36
- Hand Job/Spills 2:38
- The Diagnosis 1:06
- You Eat the Pill/I Want You to Sleep 2:03
- Montage (Sculpting Pat) 3:39
- The Parting 2:14
- Purple Pimpernel (source) 1:49
- I Can’t Breathe 1:43
- Nice Breasts 4:10
- Dialysis 2:14
- Candid Camera 1:28
- Ken’s Studio 1:24
- Art Thief 2:21
- Find a Judge 2:52
- Bad News in the Snow 2:53
- Brave and Thoughtful Man 2:37
- Don’t/Finale and End Credits 3:38
Total Time: 47:17 Bonus Tracks - Jump in the Line (source) 1:02
- Hospital Lady (source) 2:46
- Intensive Care (film version) 1:37
- Main Titles (piano) 1:58
- Montage (Sculpting Pat) (pre-recording) 2:40
Total Time: 10:13 Total Disc Time: 57:37 |
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Instruments/Musicians |
Click on each musician name for more credits |
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Leader (Conductor): Arthur B. Rubinstein
Viola: Denyse N. Buffum, Alan B. DeVeritch, Pamela Goldsmith, Gail Guarneri (Earn), Myra Kestenbaum, Seymour Rubinstein, Joel Soultanian, Linn Subotnick, Herschel P. Wise
Cello: Selene Depuy-Hurford, Christine Ermacoff, Judith M. Johnson (Perett), Jerome Kessler, Jacqueline Lustgarten, Nils Oliver, Daniel Rothmuller, Linda Mehrabian Sanfilippo, Frederick R. Seykora, Christina T. Soule
Bass: Jim Hackman, Milton E. "Mickey" Nadel, Meyer (Mike) Rubin, Robert King Stone, David Henry Young
Oboe: Don Ashworth, Phil Ayling, William Criss, Earle D. Dumler
Bassoon: Ronald A. Jannelli, Jack Marsh, John J. Mitchell, David Riddles, Bob Tricarico
French Horn: James A. Decker, Arthur Maebe, Jr., Richard E. Perissi, Calvin L. Smith
Trumpet: Rick Baptist, Warren H. Luening, Jr., Malcolm Boyd McNab, Graham Young
Trombone: Richard "Dick" Nash, Thomas Shepard
Tuba: Donald G. Waldrop
Keyboards: John D. Berkman, Zita Carno
Harp: Gayle Levant, Lou Ann Neill
Percussion: Thomas D. Raney, Mark Z. Stevens, Kenneth E. Watson
Orchestrator: Bill Brown, Arthur B. Rubinstein
Orchestra Manager: Harry W. Lojewski
Copyist: Dominic John Fidelibus, Robert G. Hartley, Harry W. Lojewski, Ray Mace, Donald J. Midgley
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