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Black Sunday (1977) |
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Music by John Williams |
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Click to enlarge images. |
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Line: Silver Age |
CD Release:
January 2010
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Catalog #: Vol. 12, No. 19 |
# of Discs: 1 |
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Pop quiz: What was, until now, the most recent John Williams feature film score completely unreleased? Black Sunday (1977)—new on CD from Film Score Monthly.
Black Sunday was a large-scale thriller about an attempted terrorist attack on the Super Bowl, adapted from a novel by Thomas Harris (The Silence of the Lambs), produced by Robert Evans (Chinatown) and directed by John Frankenheimer (The Manchurian Candidate). Robert Shaw (Jaws) stars as an Israeli Mossad agent teaming with the FBI; Marthe Keller plays a terrorist who is manipulating an ex-POW pilot (Bruce Dern) into flying a blimp over the crowd at the Super Bowl and exploding rifle darts into the 85,000 spectactors.
Black Sunday is a minor masterpiece of grim 1970s international espionage (decades later, Steven Spielberg and John Williams would revisit the genre in Munich). Much of the film’s success is owed to director Frankenheimer, renowned for his handling of large-scale physical action in films such as The Train, Grand Prix and French Connection II. The film’s climax at the Super Bowl—much of it shot at the actual Super Bowl X—features some of the most spectacular footage ever captured for a Hollywood movie.
John Williams was a natural choice to score Black Sunday. Not only was he a veteran of the 1970s disaster cycle (The Poseidon Adventure, The Towering Inferno) but his landmark score to Jaws marked him as Hollywood’s top composer at a time when Paramount Pictures was positioning Black Sunday to be the blockbuster of 1977 (a claim to fame shortly taken by Star Wars).
For the Frankenheimer film, Williams composed a taut, suspenseful score with an obsessive terrorist motive and grim but noble minor-mode theme for Shaw’s character. As the film expands in scope from claustophobic backrooms to the sprawl of the Super Bowl, so does the score grow from quiet tension to large-scale action-adventure, climaxing in furious symphonic writing for a showdown aboard the (would be) killer Goodyear blimp.
This premiere release (in any form) of the Black Sunday soundtrack is in complete chronological order, remixed by Mike Matessino from the original 16-track 2” masters recorded on the Paramount Pictures scoring stage for stunning sound quality. Liner notes are by Scott Bettencourt, Mike Matessino, Jeff Eldridge and Alexander Kaplan.
A final note about this release: In recent years, a limited edition of this sort would sell out quickly. FSM has negotiated with the American Federation of Musicians (whose players performed the music and are due “re-use” fees for the album) to make this CD a limited edition of 10,000 copies (not the customary 3,000)—enough so that everyone can get one. But if your response to this is, “Good, I’ll get it later”—truly no good deed goes unpunished, and we’ll never try this again! Black Sunday is John Williams action scoring circa 1977—what are you waiting for? Buy it now! |
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John Williams Scores on FSM |
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About the Composer |
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John Williams (b. 1932) is not only the composer of most of the biggest blockbusters of all time—including Star Wars, E.T., Jaws, the Indiana Jones films, Harry Potter, Jurassic Park and many more, many of them directed by Steven Spielberg—but he has transcended film music to become the world's most famous living composer, and an American institution. His popular symphonic scores are so iconic that they often overshadow the fact that he has been equally proficient at sophisticated, adult fare (Schindler's List, Images) and had a successful career in composing (for television and often comedy features), arranging and performing well before he even met Steven Spielberg. FSM, like most labels, will release everything it can of Williams's music, and has concentrated (for reasons of availability) on his early years as "Johnny" Williams when he was doing sterling work on relatively little-known television and films—always with an amazing attention to melody and detail. In fact, his early works are fascinating for the ways in which they foreshadow his later, world-renowned efforts. IMDB |
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Track List |
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Click on track TIME for MP3 sound clip. Black Sunday Music Composed and Conducted by John Williams - Beirut 0:37
- Commandos Arrive 1:15
- Commando Raid 5:30
- It Was Good/Dahlia Arrives/The Unloading 3:11
- Speed Boat Chase 1:50
- The Telephone Man/The Captain Returns 2:14
- Nurse Dahlia/Kabakov’s Card/The Hypodermic 3:28
- Moshevsky’s Dead 1:57
- The Test 1:55
- Building the Bomb 1:53
- Miami/Dahlia’s Call 2:26
- The Last Night 1:28
- Preparations 2:42
- Passed 0:31
- The Flight Check 1:49
- Airborne/Bomb Passes Stadium 1:46
- Farley’s Dead 1:33
- The Blimp and the Bomb 3:12
- The Take Off 1:43
- Underway 0:39
- Air Chase (Part 1) 1:12
- Air Chase (Parts 2 and 3)/The Blimp Hits 7:19
- The Explosion 2:36
- End Title 2:15
Total Time: 55:14 Alternates and Source Music - Hotel Lobby (source) 1:49
- Fight Song #1 (source) 0:51
- Fight Song #2 (source) 1:45
- End Title (alternate, without percussion) 2:20
- The Explosion (revised ending)/End Title (film edit) 2:12
Total Time: 8:58 Total Disc Time: 64:12 |
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Instruments/Musicians |
Click on each musician name for more credits |
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Leader (Conductor): John T. Williams
Violin: Israel Baker, Arnold Belnick, Glenn Dicterow, Harold Dicterow, Bonnie J. Douglas (Shure), Irving Geller, James Getzoff, Debbie Sue Grossman, William Hymanson, George Kast, Louis Kaufman, Jacob Krachmalnick, Yukiko Kurakata (Kamei), Marvin Limonick, Alfred Lustgarten, Alexander Murray, Irma W. Neumann, Stanley Plummer, Nathan Ross, Haim Shtrum, Paul C. Shure, Marshall Sosson, Gerald Vinci, Dorothy M. Wade (Sushel)
Viola: Denyse N. Buffum, Allan Harshman, Myra Kestenbaum, Virginia Majewski, Sven Reher, Harry Rumpler, David Schwartz
Cello: Marie Fera, Kathleen Hougesen (Lustgarten), Armand Kaproff, Raphael "Ray" Kramer, Edgar Lustgarten, Nino Rosso, Eleanor Slatkin, Mary Louise Zeyen
Bass: Suzanne Ailman (Stokes), Milton Kestenbaum, Abraham Luboff, Peter A. Mercurio, Meyer (Mike) Rubin
Flute: Louise M. DiTullio (Dissman), Luella Howard, Sheridon W. Stokes
Oboe: William Criss, John F. Ellis
Clarinet: Dominick Fera, John Neufeld
Bassoon: Don Christlieb, Norman H. Herzberg, Jack Marsh
French Horn: James A. Decker, Vincent N. DeRosa, David A. Duke, Arthur Maebe, Jr., Richard E. Perissi, Gale H. Robinson, Harry Schmidt
Trumpet: Malcolm Boyd McNab, Graham Young
Trombone: Francis L. "Joe" Howard, Richard "Dick" Nash, George M. Roberts, Lloyd E. Ulyate
Tuba: John T. "Tommy" Johnson
Keyboards: Ralph E. Grierson, Michael A. Lang
Guitar: Thomas "Tommy" Tedesco
Fender (electric) Bass: Charles L. Domanico
Harp: Catherine Gotthoffer (Johnk)
Percussion: Larry Bunker, Emil Radocchia (Richards), Kenneth E. Watson, Don Williams, Jerry D. Williams
Arranger: Herbert W. Spencer
Contractor: Phillip Kahgan
Copyist: Ralph Fera
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