Album US 2009 on Film Score Monthly label
Soundtrack (Soundtrack)
Golden and Silver Age Classics series. 3 CDs. Limited edition of 2000 copies. FSM continues its informal annual tradition of releasing a 3CD set of classic western film scores with a second volume of westerns from the historical M-G-M film library: Northwest Passage (Book I—Rogers’ Rangers) is the 1940 adventure score by Herbert Stothart, M-G-M’s premier composer in the 1930s and ’40s, presented in nearly complete form from the monaural optical film masters, with a few otherwise lost cues added from the film’s music-and-effects track. Many Rivers to Cross (1955) is a comedy western score by Cyril J. Mockridge, conducted by no less than Miklós Rózsa, with a song (“The Berry Tree”) by M-G-M songwriter and executive Saul Chaplin. This score survives in glorious three-track stereo from the original 35mm magnetic film. A Thunder of Drums (1961) is a cavalry adventure score by Harry Sukman, also presented in true stereo. Dominated by grim and martial passages, the music also features romantic strains anticipating Sukman’s scores for TV’s Dr. Kildare. At the end of disc 3 is a television rarity: David Shire’s 1974 TV movie score for The Godchild (a John Badham-directed adaptation of Three Godfathers, a western story filmed several times earlier). It is a brief and spare work demonstrating the composer’s gift for simplicity and melody—presented in excellent stereo sound. The film titles for this album were selected in large part from listener responses to our last westerns collection. So keep listening, and keep suggesting titles! Complete liner notes for this album can be found—for free—online at our website. Finally: our previous two western collections, centered respectively around The Unforgiven and The Naked Spur, promptly sold out. We have increased the manufacturing run on this volume to 2,000 copies—but don’t delay!
Herbert Stothart , 1885-1949 US album by | |
Cyril Mockridge p, 1896-1979 GB album by | |
Harry Sukman p, 1912-1984 US album by | |
David Shire p, syn, *1937 US album by |
No | Title | Artist | Composer | Duration |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Disc 1 - Northwest Passage (Book I—Rogers’ Rangers) (1940) Music Composed and Conducted by Herbert Stothart | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | ||
2 | Northwest Passage (Book I—Rogers’ Rangers) (1940) | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | 50:20 | |
3 | Bonus Tracks | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | 15:44 | |
4 | Disc 2 - Many Rivers to Cross (1955) Music Composed by Cyril Mockridge, Conducted by Miklós Rózsa | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | ||
5 | Song: “The Berry Tree” by Saul Chaplin, Sung by Sheb Wooley | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | ||
6 | Many Rivers to Cross (1955) | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | 52:35 | |
7 | Bonus Tracks | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | 17:59 | |
8 | Escape From Fort Bravo (1953) Music Composed and Conducted by Jeff Alexander | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | ||
9 | Song: “Yellow Stripes” by Stan Jones | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | ||
10 | Main Title/Foreword (corrected mix) | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | 2:59 | |
11 | Disc 3 - A Thunder of Drums (1961) Music Composed and Conducted by Harry Sukman | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | ||
12 | Tracks 23, 24, 25 Composed and Performed by Duane Eddy | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | ||
13 | A Thunder of Drums (1961) | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | 46:00 | |
14 | Source Music | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | 9:11 | |
15 | The Godchild (1974) Music Composed and Conducted by David Shire | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | ||
16 | The Godchild (1974) | Herbert Stothart, Cyril Mockridge, Harry Sukman, David Shire | 21:48 |