Home-->m-comment-000-eng-->mhan-comm-1-40-eng
PC

Expanding Music Knowledge - Understanding Morricone's Music Language (1)

Inspired by Brockston's comments on Morricone 1-40

Editorial

Just like foreign languages, music is also a language. To understand, comprehend, and appreciate it, one also needs to study diligently. Meanwhile, it is also a special artistic language, Although its letters There are only 7 notes, C, D, E, F, G, A, B, but with the changes in pitch, value, intensity, timbre, and sound speed, as well as the combination of different means of expression such as melody, rhythm, mode, and harmony, it can create a long-lasting and endless variety of music. Moreover, unlike the limitations of a country or ethnic language, it is a high-level language that transcends borders, ethnicities, and religions, and even explanations are no needed to resonate with human emotions, which can be widely spread worldwide and loved by the general public

Unfortunately for fans of Morricone's music, most are not yet professionals in the art. Therefore, it is very important to read carefully the articles of many excellent critics and learn more. British critic Jonathan Broxton has written a large number of excellent critical articles on 123 film scores scored by Morricone from 1997 to 2022. As the president of the International Film Music Critics Association (IFMCA) and the film music consultant of the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in London, Broxton has rich knowledge and profound insights into the theory and practice of film music in many countries. His own famous website contains thousands of reviews of various types of music. His articles are broad in content but understandable in simple terms, rich in knowledge but with the finishing touch. Rarely involves esoteric music theory,It focuses on analyzing and introducing the connotation of music, the relevant historical background, the use of various musical instruments, the relationship between various genres, the characteristics of Morricone's works, etc., with special emphasis on the analysis of music and orchestration. While commenting on Morricone's works, he introduced a lot of musical knowledge related to Morricone's works, orchestration breakdown, musical figures, music history... For example, a large number of musicians: Domenico ModugnoHerb AlpertNino RotaBurt BacharachEdda dell'Orso, Alessandro AlessandroniBasil PoledourisMax SteinerAlfred NewmanBasil PoledourisBernard Herrmann, Wojciech Kilar, Chiara Ferraù, Henry ManciniJohn BarryHerbie HancockHoward ShoreHans ZimmerJohn WilliamsGeorges DelerueLisa Gerrard,(the western scores of Moross and Bernstein…..;Many specialty instruments other than those commonly used in symphony orchestras, e.g.:jaw harpvibraphoneHammond organarimbassitar, cimbalomtabla drums, tambura, bansuri flute….;Various musical genres and performance techniques, e.g.:Bach styleBaroque flavored musicimpressionistic orchestralDixieland jazzIndian ragaDies IraeScottish reels with marchinghighland jig,bossa novaRagtimejazz, Samba dance, Tijuana jazzcountry-bluegrass fiddle, hoe-downssampled--whale songsweeping stringssampledplucked bassrock percussionhorse-gallop percussion,water percussion.....If you read his comments carefully, you can not only gain a deeper understanding of Morricone's works vertically, but also see a broader and more closely related musical world horizontally. After completing the translation, reading and editing of these articles, I can say that most of Morricone's film music works are either pearls or wonders, and each of them is worthy of careful listening and in-depth understanding. Many people will also have a feeling of blooming vision and looking far into the distance: "Ah, Morricone still has so many good works (including some strange and weird works) that need to be listened to and understood!" This leads to a more comprehensive understanding of Morricone's works, as well as his life and events , and a stage of deeper understanding. I hope to share these gains with more fans. There seems to be a lot to say, but it may not suit the needs of every enthusiast. The best way is to ask everyone to read carefully, listen, compare and draw their own conclusions. In order to save everyone's time and facilitate everyone's reading. I tried to put together a summary of the comments in an outline style to facilitate everyone's overall reading. If you have any feelings after reading that you would like to share with everyone, you are also welcome to contribute to this site (qilingren@hotmail.com) and publish them in your personal column. Thanks

Summary of Broxton's review 01-40

01-6101 Il Federale

Il Federale was the first film for which Ennio Morricone, then aged 32, received a screen credit as a composer. It’s an Italian comedy, directed by Luciano Salce, set during World War II about a Mussolini-worshipping but somewhat impressionable and naïve fascist played by Udo Tognazzi, who is sent on an assignment to the Italian countryside, where he has to arrest a prominent liberal professor (played by Georges Wilson) and bring him back to Rome for interrogation. Of course, hi-jinks ensure on the road back to Il Duce’s capital, as the older teacher slowly educates the young soldier about life, politics, and the way of the world. It’s also interesting to note that Morricone would work frequently with Udo’s son Ricky Tognazzi, who is a director – Morricone scored the films La Scorta (1993), Vite Strozzati (1996) and Canone Inverso (2000) for him.

Truthfully, the film would likely be forgotten today were it not for the fact that Morricone scored it; as far as the music is concerned, it’s a competent blend of militaristic riffs for woodwinds and snare drums, offset by a more pompous-sounding march for tubas and weighty horns, and a lively string-based scherzo. It’s perfectly acceptable for a somewhat lightweight 1960s Italian comedy, but it certainly gives no indication as to the astonishing career that lie ahead of the young and relatively inexperienced composer that wrote it.

The soundtrack album is available on the Italian Digitmovies label, having been released for the first time on CD. A single cue, “Titoli,” can be found on the comprehensive 15-CD compilation Ennio Morricone: The Complete Edition, released by GDM Music in 2008.

Words to watch: Woodwinds, militaristic riffs on snare drums, tubas and heavy horns, lively string scherzo
Titole
002-6204 La voglia matta / Crazy Desire

La Vogilia Matta, also known as Crazy Desire, is another Italian comedy, also directed by Lucio Salce and again starring Udo Tognazzi. In this film Tognazzi plays Antonio Berlinghieri, a middle-aged and rather stuffy businessmen, who is newly divorced, and on a road trip to ‘clear his head’ and ‘put his life back together’. During the journey he encounters a gang of cool teenagers on their summer vacation, and unexpectedly finds himself falling for Francesca (played by director Salce’s regular muse Catherine Spaak), a flirtatious girl who would appear to be his exact opposite.

The main theme, “Sole e Sogni,” is a warm, inviting, summery jazz piece for solo harp, stand-up bass, and brushed cymbals. There’s a gently beguiling and lyrical flute solo that speaks of innocent love, and a dreamy wordless vocal that hints at something slightly more erotic.

Unfortunately only ten minutes of score music from this soundtrack have ever been released, on a vinyl EP back in 1964, making it one of the most little-known works of Morricone’s early career, although the film did feature two pop singles which Morricone co-wrote: “La Tua Stagione” by Tony del Monaco, and “Viva Il Jump Up” by I Flippers. Morricone’s main theme spawned at least four popular instrumental hits in Italy – “Sassi,” “Maschere,” “un Filo,” and “Polvere di Niente,” which were re-recorded by popular bandleaders Giampiero Riverberi and Piero Gosio. “Sole e Sogni” can be found on the comprehensive 15-CD compilation Ennio Morricone: The Complete Edition, released by GDM Music in 2008.

Words to watch: An alluring summer jazz tune , solo harp, upright bass and brushed cymbals
Sole e Sogni (02:26)
003-6302 I basilischi / The Basilisks

An Italian neo-realist drama written and directed by Lina Wertmüller, I Basilischi is a story about disaffected youths in post-WWII Italy, trying to come to terms with life, love, death, sex, boredom and the realities of becoming an adult. The film, which has been described as an Italian version of American Graffiti, stars Antonio Petruzzi, Stefano Satta Flores, and Sergio Ferranino; the title refers to the habit the main characters have of simply lounging around in the sun all day – like basilisks – with literally nothing else do to: no jobs, no money, no future. It’s one of the first ‘serious’ films Morricone scored, and can almost be seen as a companion piece to the music composers like Georges Delerue were writing for similarly-themed New Wave films in France around the same time.

Morricone frames the dead-end lives of these young men and women with an almost satirical edge, writing music which is beautiful and haunting, juxtaposing against the hopelessness of their realities. The main theme, “Canzone,” is an elegant, slightly introverted sounding piece for solo guitar, framed by swooning strings, and a repetitive light chime effect.

The best release of the soundtrack is the version which came out in 2014 on the GDM Music label, which pairs around 22 minutes of score from I Basilischi with selections of music from the score for the 1964 film Prima Della Revoluzione. Again, “Canzone” can be found on the comprehensive 15-CD compilation Ennio Morricone: The Complete Edition, released by GDM Music in 2008.

Words to watch: Georges Delerue, serious films, new wave films, guitar solos
Canzone (Song) 02:46
004-6303 Il successo / The Success

Il Successo is an Italian comedy-drama starring Vittorio Gassman, Anouk Aimée, and Jean-Louis Trintignant, directed by Mauro Morassi, and produced by legendary Italian filmmaker Mario Cecchi Gori. Gassman plays Giulio, a middle-aged man dissatisfied with his life, who hatches a plan to find away out of his dull white-collar job – a property scam involving some land in rural Sardinia. However, as Giorgio desperately tries to come up with the 10 million liras he needs to start his investment to buy that land, his increasingly hare-brained schemes begin to make him more and more estranged from his wife and his best friend.

Morricone’s score for Il Successo is fun and lively, with a strong emphasis on jazz, big band, and swing music typical of the era. The main theme, “Il Successo,” is a virtuoso piece for finger-snapping brasses and hip, toe-tapping percussion, highlighted by a vivid and impressionistic trumpet solo half way through the piece. The soundtrack also spawned a handful of Italian pop songs performed by canto artists Rita Pavona, Enrico Polito, Gino Paoli, and Rosy.

The best release of the soundtrack is the version which came out in 2007 on the GDM Music label, which pairs around 23 minutes of score from Il Successo with selections of music from the score for the 1966 film Agent 505 – Todesfalle Beirut. Again, “Il Successo” can be found on the comprehensive 15-CD compilation Ennio Morricone: The Complete Edition, released by GDM Music in 2008.

Words to watch: Typical jazz and swing music of that era. Finger snapping brass, toe tapping percussion, impressionistic trumpet solo
Il Successo (02:02)
005-6401 E la donna creò l'uomo / Full Hearts and Empty Pockets

E la Donna Creò l’Uomo, known in English as Full Hearts and Empty Pockets, is an Italian comedy-drama directed by Camillo Mastrocinque, starring Thomas Fritsch and Alexandra Stewart. The film is incredibly obscure these days; the limited information available online appears to indicate that it’s a film about a man who is blackmailed into taking a promotion at work, and who then becomes corrupted by his own success prior to his eventual downfall. The film’s poster, on the other hand, appears to indicate that it’s about a 6-inch tall man who terrorizes women biting their noses, so what do I know?

Morricone’s score is playful and tune-filled, with a solo violin melody underpinned by lively plucked strings and a whimsical-sounding harpsichord; it eventually gives way to something a little more wistful and introspective, playing the same melody on an electric guitar, but at a slower tempo and with a moody string wash. The soundrack feautres several variations on this main theme done in multiple styles ranging from bossa nova to modern jazz, and one especially interesting one with the intriguing title “Exoticoerotico”!

The best release of the soundtrack is the version which came out in 2005 on the GDM Music label, which pairs around 30 minutes of score from E la Donna Creò l’Uomo with selections of music from the score for the 1965 film Idole Controluce. As you might expect, the main theme from “E la Donna Creò l’Uomo” can also be found on the comprehensive 15-CD compilation Ennio Morricone: The Complete Edition, released by GDM Music in 2008.

Words to watch: Violin solo, lively pizzicato, whimsical harpsichord, electric guitar, bossa nova, modern jazz
E La Donna Creo' L'Uomo (Titoli)(03:02)
Exoticoerotiko (02:14)
006-6404 I malamondo / Malamondo

I Malamondo is a sensationalist Italian documentary directed by Paolo Cavara with the outlandish tagline “bizarre activities of European youth,” which probably tells you all you need to know. It takes a scandalous and sordid look at young people doing all sorts of unusual things, ranging from nude skiing in Switzerland, to hog-butchering in Italy, and even taking part in an orgy in a graveyard. The film was quite notorious when it was first released in 1964, as it brought the recklessness and sexual liberation of kids across Europe firmly into the public eye

The film’s main theme, “Penso a Te,” actually starts out sounding much more like John Barry than Morricone, with a lazy, languid main theme performed on an electric guitar and accompanied by light strings and tapped snare drums . However, once the melody switches to a solo trumpet, and once the softly cooing choir comes in to back it, this becomes a prototypical Morricone piece, and in many ways can be seen as the origin of the style that graced so many spaghetti westerns over the years. Much of the rest of the score is similarly jazz-inflected, with numerous bossa nova and pop twist dance instrumentals.

The best release of the soundtrack is the version which came out in 1992 on CAM Records, which pairs around 45 minutes of score from I Malamondo with selections of music from the score for the 1971 film La Tarantola dal Ventre Nero. Once again, the main theme from “Penso a Te” can also be found on the comprehensive 15-CD compilation Ennio Morricone: The Complete Edition, released by GDM Music in 2008.

Words to watch: John Barry, Electric guitar, snare drum, solo trumpet, choir. Jazz, bossa nova, wiggle.
Penso a Te (02:11)
007-6409 Per un pugno di dollari / A fistful of dollars

A Fistful of Dollars – Per Un Pugno di Dollari – is arguably one of the most influential films ever made. Although ‘spaghetti westerns’ – gritty action films set in the American west but largely filmed in places like Italy and Spain by European filmmakers – had been made before, it wasn’t until 1964 that they really became recognized as a major entertainment medium. Written and directed by the great Sergio Leone, the film is basically an unofficial remake of Akira Kurosawa’s Yojimbo; it starred a little known American actor named Clint Eastwood as a tough-talking amoral drifter who arrives in a small town on the Mexican border and, through a combination of manipulation and his skill as a gunfighter, successfully pits two rival families against for his own benefit.

The legacy of the film is almost incalculable; so many contemporary clichés of the Western genre were invented by Leone for this film, while the visual style and camera work Leone employed would influence filmmakers for decades. So too Ennio Morricone’s score for A Fistful of Dollars reinvented the sound of the Western genre, moving away it from the Americana sound of people like Aaron Copland and Jerome Moross towards something much more gritty and idiosyncratic. The two most famous pieces of the score are the main title, “Titoli,” and the eponymous theme, “Per Un Pugno di Dollari”

“Titoli” is an aggressive, punchy march initially anchored by a florid acoustic guitar, but eventually transitions to feature an iconic whistled melody, performed by the great Alessandro Alessandroni. As the pieces progresses it gradually picks a trilling flute, the sampled sounds of cracking whips and tolling bells, and a gruff male voice choir chanting the words ‘we can fight’. On paper, it sounds like a mess, but the execution is sensational, a truly original sound that had never been heard in cinema before, and which quickly came to define an entire genre.

The second theme, “Per Un Pugno di Dollari,” is more subdued, but no less iconic, with a strident virtuoso solo trumpet offset by a strumming acoustic guitar and choir. It pays homage to the musical heritage of Mexico, and perfectly encapsulates Eastwood’s character. It’s impossible to listen to this music without thinking of him, riding on horseback, chewing on a cigarillo, squinting in the sun. This is, truly, music which changed cinema forever.

This would be enough for most composers, but not Ennio Morricone, who fleshes out the rest of the score with several more iconic moments. “Quasi Morto” is a beautiful piece of folk-like music that further expands on the mythic status of Eastwood’s character with low-end pianos and harmonica. The action music is frenzied and chaotic, with especially notable trumpet performances which have to be heard to be believed. It’s all quite magnificent.

Words to watch: Alessandro Alessandroni, Gorgeous acoustic guitar, whistles, vibrato flutes, crackle of whips, sampled sounds of bells, male choir, low end piano, harmonica
Titoli (02:58)
Per Un Pugno Di Dollari (01:51)
008-6304 Le monachine / The Little Nuns

Le Monachine is an Italian comedy, directed by Luciano Salce, and once again starring Catherine Spaak. She plays Sister Celeste, the leader of a group of three young and innocent nuns who come to Rome to mount a protest against an airline which has been flying jet planes over their convent school. Once in Rome the naïve and innocent sisters find themselves somewhat overawed by the world, and they are chaperoned around the city by the airline’s CEO Livio Bertana (Amedeo Nazzari). Of course, as is the way of things in movies like this, the sophisticated Bertana and the virginal Sister Celeste begin to have decidedly sacrilegious feelings for each other.

Morricone’s score – the third one he wrote for director Salce in four years – is lively and whimsical Bach-inspired piece which is used to accompany the gently comic misadventures of the nuns, let loose in the big city for the first time. The main theme, “Fughetta nell’Orto,” is a playful tune for harpsichord accompanied by rapped snare drums and flighty flutes, where the melody is often doubled by xylophone. It has a cheeky, cheerful feeling, with pseudo-religious overtones undermined by a more carefree joie de vivre.

Words to watch: Bach style, Harpsichord. Rap snare drum. Flute, xylophone. Pseudo-religious color
Fughetta nell'orto (00:45)
009-6509 Menage all'italiana

Menage all’Italiana is a 1960s Italian sex and relationship comedy, directed by Franco Indovina and produced by the great Dino De Laurentiis, one of the first films he made in his long career. It stars Udo Tognazzi and, really, could only have been made in Europe in that era – Tognazzi plays lothario and man-about-town Carlo Valdesi, and all the comedy derives from the fact that he is a cheerful bigamist, struggling to keep his numerous wives and girlfriends happy and unaware of each other’s existence. The women, by the way, range from a famous opera singer (Anna Moffo) to an under-age girl (Romina Power), who is so young that Carlo must lie to her parents and pretend to be her doctor so he doesn’t get arrested!

Morricone’s score for the film is typical of Euro-comedies of the period, and anchored by a series of light pop and jazz instrumentals that get the toes tapping and fingers snapping. “La Moglie Assassina” is a groovy piece for especially rambunctious pianos, “Fermateli!” is a groovy Beach Boys-esque rock instrumental for electric guitars, and so on. The main title track “Menage all’Italiana” uses swirling, twisty cello chords and plucked pizzicato violins in what sounds like a dry run for the theme he would write for Investigation of a Citizen Under Suspicion in 1970.

There’s also a really quite beautiful song, “In Fondo Ai Miei Occhi,” written by Morricone and lyricist Sergio Bardotti and performed by the aforementioned Italian chanteuse Anna Moffo, which receives several gorgeous instrumental renditions later in score, including one for solo violin, piano, guitar, and swooning romantic strings that it simply stunning. Another swingin’ song, “Ho Messo Gli Occhi Su Di Te,” is performed by the gravel-throated one-named Dino, and also gets an instrumental statement featuring a sultry bass flute melody accompanied Hammond organ.

Other cues of note include “1+1+1=4” which arranges Mendelssohn’s famous Wedding March for a pipe organ; “Funerale Stronato,” which arranges Chopin’s famous Funeral March for off-kilter brass, snares, and the same swirling, twisty cello chords from the main title; “La Moglie Calabrese” and “La Bionda Svedese,” both of which engage in some pseudo-Godfather tones for mandolin; and the surprisingly modernistic jazzy suspense music for bass flute, organ, and shimmering chimes in “Giallo è Arrancione”.

Words to watch:Mendelssohn's "Wedding March"Chopin's Funeral March,Light pop, jazz instrumentals, Beach Boys-esque electric guitar rock instrumentals, swirling, distorted cello chords, pizzicato violins, violins, pianos, guitars, husky singers, Hammond organ, sexy bass flute. Organ, snare drum, mandolin, pseudo-godfather sounds, modernist jazz suspense music

La Moglie Assassina(03:22)
Fermateli (02:47)
Menage all'Italiana (01:42)
In Fondo Ai Miei Occhi (03:27)
Ho Messo Gli Occhi Su Di Te (02:09)
010-Una pistola per Ringo / A Pistol for Ringo

Una Pistola per Ringo was the second significant spaghetti western scored by Ennio Morricone, and was intended to capitalize on the success of A Fistful of Dollars the previous year. Directed by Duccio Tessari, it stars Giuliano Gemma (using the Anglicized name Montgomery Wood) as Angel Face Ringo, an ex-convict gunfighter who is hired to infiltrate a ranch overrun by Mexican bandits led by the ruthless Sancho (Fernando Sancho), who have holed up there after a bank robbery gone wrong. Not only that, Sancho has hostages, one of whom is the fiancée of the local sheriff, and Ringo’s mission is to save their lives while dealing with the banditos. Although not as iconic and pioneering as Leone’s original masterpiece, A Pistol for Ringo nevertheless was a successful film in its own right, inspiring several sequels.

Morricone’s score is very much rooted in his iconic ‘spaghetti western’ style, deviating from it only slightly in terms of melody and arrangement. The main title theme, “A Pistol for Ringo,” is a quite dreamy-sounding piece for acoustic guitar, lilting strings, percussion, and a vocal performance by Maurizio Graf and angelic choir singing the name ‘angel face’. Another significant piece is “The Slaughter,” wherein Morricone breaks out his solo trumpet once more, performing a darkly melancholic, subversively heroic theme underpinned by strings, guitar, and an increasingly prominent choir.

Words to watch: Acoustic guitar, lilting strings, percussion, solo trumpet
Angel face (Main titles) (02:18)
The slaughter/(La Strage) (01:58)
011-6504 Gli amanti d'oltre tomba / Lovers from Beyond the Tomb

Amanti d’Oltretomba, also known as Nightmare Castle, is one of the first of the many Italian giallo horror movies Morricone scored during his long and distinguished career. Directed by Mario Caiano using the pseudonym Allen Grünewald, it’s a sort of ‘serious’ version of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, in which a pair of young lovers (Barbara Steele and Giuseppe Addobbati) are tortured murdered by the woman’s vengeful mad scientist ex-husband (Paul Muller). The twist comes when the scientist, in order to secure the inheritance from his wife’s family, has to marry her lunatic sister (also plated by Barbara Steele), and who is now cursed with the spirit of his dead wife!

Morricone’s main theme for the film comes across as something of a twisted lullaby, a superficially beautiful piece for solo piano and lush, gently lilting strings, which masks a grotesque core of pain, blood, and death. In fact, many of the films more horrific scenes are scored with organ music, placing a pseudo-religious slant to the proceedings, and a level of creepy, moody uneasiness. There are also several sequences of quite challenging orchestral dissonance, with long period of brooding, unnerving string writing.

Words to watch: Distorted lullaby, piano solo, lush, ethereal strings, pseudo-religious, orchestral dissonance sequences. Unsettling strings
Amanti Doltretomba (01:27)
012-6514 Slalom / Snow Job

Slalom is a adventure-comedy directed by regular Morricone collaborator Luciano Salce, starring Vittorio Gassman and Adolfo Celi. They play Lucio and Riccardo, two friends who, take a skiing holiday in the Italian Alps with their wives. After some comedy hi-jinks where Lucio falls down in the snow a lot, and then ditches his wife to try to seduce a beautiful woman he spies off-piste, he unwittingly becomes involved in an unexpectedly serious international espionage plot involving counterfeit American dollars and sexy female assassins. The film will be of interest to fans of Bond franchise as it features the aforementioned Celi (the lead villain from Thunderball), as well as Daniela Bianchi (the Bond girl from From Russia With Love) as Nadia, a mysterious and sultry secret agent with a hidden talent for firing machine guns!

Morricone’s score is one of those unusual Euro-thriller scores which features an array of jazz and pop-inflected orchestral action music sequences, has a lush and sexy romance piece, and is anchored by a wholly bizarre main theme. That main theme, “Slalom,” is a wildly upbeat and infectious melody kept in time with a battery of snare drums. The main melody is carried mainly by an electric guitar accompanied by tubular bells and brass, but is frequently enlivened by the sound of a man whistling, as well as a small choir making ‘doo doo’ and ‘la la’ noises or chanting the name of the film!

Words to watch: Jazz, snare drum, electric guitar, tubular bells, brass instruments, whistles, small choir
Slalom (titoli) (01:55))
013-6505 I pugni in tasca / Fist in His Pocket

I Pugni in Tasca, known in English as Fists in the Pocket, is an intense family psycho-drama that marks the debut of influential filmmaker Marco Bellocchio. Lou Castel, Mariano Mase, and Paola Pitagora star as siblings, all but one of whom are epileptics, who look after the elderly blind mother, and who are supported financially by the only non-epileptic brother, Augusto. Tension and drama boils to the surface when one of the other brothers, Alessandro, decides that Augusto would be better off is he did not have to look after them all, and decides to murder his mother, his sister, and then kill himself, so that Augusto can be free.

Morricone’s score for the film speaks to the broken psyches of these disturbed family members, and underscores the drama with music based around a chillingly beautiful central theme for a solo boy soprano vocal, accompanied byimpressionistic accents for piano, chimes and harp which become fractured and dissonant as the piece progresses. To accompany this central idea, Morricone also composed several pieces of lounge jazz source music, which offer a slightly surreal edge to the film, juxtaposing 1960s instrumental pop against the increasingly desperate acts.

Words to watch: Piano, chimes, harp, casual jazz
I pugni in tasca (03:30)
014-6506 Idoli controluce

Idole Controluce is an unusual fictional film about Ugo Sanfelice, a journalist who is assigned to write a biography of the real-life Argentine soccer star Omar Sivori, who played for Italian team Juventus from 1957 onwards, and won the coveted European Footballer of the Year award in 1961. Being unable to secure an interview with the reclusive star, the journalist instead meets a different player, Nanni Moretti, who slowly reveals the details of his own life – his early career in a small provincial team, his debut alongside Sivori, and how the excesses fame eventually cost him his fiancée and his once-promising career. The film stars Massimo Girotti as Sanfelice, Gaspare Zola as Moretti, and Sivori as himself, and was directed by Enzo Battaglia.

Morricone’s score for Idole Controluce is quite lovely; it’s anchored by main theme, “Le Meno Importante,” for lilting strings, softly cooing voices, trilling pianos and a prominent plucked bass, which is somehow nostalgic and optimistic, but has a bittersweet quality of regret and missed opportunities. The score also produced at least three popular hit songs, “Il Simitero è Meravigliosa” and “Si Può Morire” performed by I Gufi, and “Le Cose Piú Importanti,” which Morricone co-wrote and which was performed by Pierfilippi.

Words to watch: Light strings, vibrato piano, prominent plucked bass
Le Meno Importanti (04:10)
Le Cose Piu' Importanti (02:09) Bardotti-Moricone; sung by Pierfilippi
015-6507 Il ritorno di Ringo / The Return of Ringo

Il Ritorno di Ringo – The Return of Ringo – was an insta-sequel to the successful original Una Pistola per Ringo, which had released to general acclaim several months previously. Again directed by Duccio Tessari, it sees the travelling gunslinger Angel Face Ringo (Giuliano Gemma aka Montgomery Wood) involved in another adventure. After fighting for the Union Army in the American Civil War, Ringo returns home to find that his property has been taken over by a family of Mexican bandits, and his fiancée is being forced to marry Fuentes (Fernando Sancho, playing a different role) the leader of the bandit gang. Vowing revenge, Ringo goes undercover disguised as a Mexican to infiltrate the gang, bring it down from within, and reclaim his woman.

Morricone’s score for Il Ritorno di Ringo is very similar to the score for the original Ringo film, making use of the familiar strumming guitars, trumpet refrains, and suspenseful strings in the action sequences; there’s even a new original main title song performed once more by Maurizio Graf. The most interesting new idea is the conclusive piece, “La Pace Torna a Mimbres” or “Peace Comes Back to Mimbres,” in which Morricone offers a contemplative coda to the violence and revenge with a lovely, soothing piece for beautifully bittersweet strings, lilting woodwinds, warm horns, and an intimate solo guitar.

Words to watch: Strings, woodwinds, warm horns, intimate solo guitar, suspenseful strings.
The Return Of Ringo (Il Ritorno Di Ringo) (02:15)
Peace Comes Back In Mimbres (La Pace Torna A Mimbres) (02:21)
016-6511 Per qualche dollaro in più / For a few dollars more

Per Qualche Dollaro in Piú – For a Few Dollars More – is the second instaliment of director Sergio Leone’s Dollars Trilogy, released in November 1965, a year after the original A Fistful of Dollars. Clint Eastwood returns to play the iconic Man With No Name, this time teaming up with fellow bounty hunter, Colonel Douglas Mortimer (Lee Van Cleef), to stop the reign of terror of a deranged bandito named El Indio (Gianmaria Volonte). It’s desperately violent film about greed and revenge, but was an enormously popular success, and again proved influential in terms of the progression of Leone, Eastwood, and composer Ennio Morricone.

Truthfully, Morricone’s music is a direct continuation of the spaghetti western sound established A Fistful of Dollars, with similar orchestrations and similar thematic application; nevertheless, several individual pieces stand out as being worthy of special note. The main title theme, “Per Qualche Dollaro in Più,” is one those pieces Morricone wrote which sounds awful on paper, yet somehow works perfectly in context – a raw, aggressive, rhythmic piece for strings and percussion featuring several spaghetti western staples: the twangy sound of a Jew’s harp, Alessandro Alessandroni’s whistling, gruff male voice chanting, solo recorder, electric and acoustic guitars. It’s still astonishing to me how Morricone came up with these disparate sounds and made them define an entire genre.

Elsewhere, the “La Resa dei Conti” theme has some unexpected conflicting tonal qualities that come to light through the use of different instruments under a variation on the main theme from the first film, including a church organ which gives it a definite ecclesiastical overtone. “Il Vizio d’Uccidere” is a pretty romantic theme for solo electric guitar, solo oboe, strings, and choir, which has a soothing, almost tragic quality, before becoming more lively in its second half. “Addio Colonnello” overflows with emotion, a gorgeous combination of reflective woodwinds, sighing strings, noble brass, and an increasingly prominent choir. “Poker d’Assi” is a piece of raucous honky tonk saloon piano music. “Carillon,” which reprises and expands upon the lullabyish glockenspiel motif also heard in “La Resa dei Conti,” speaks directly to the plot point in the film regarding Indio’s musical pocket watch, which he plays before engaging in gun duels, only firing when the chimes have ended.

Words to watch: Jew's harp, whistles, electric guitar, acoustic guitar, church organ, oboe, woodwinds, sighing strings, noble brass, salon piano music, carillon

Per Qualche Dollaro in Piu (03:50)
La Resa Dei Conti (with music clock) (03:08)
Il Vizio De Ucccideri (02:28)
Addio Colonnello (01:45)
Poker D'Assi (01:22)
Carillon (with music clock) (01:10)
017-6608 Mi vedrai tornare

Mi Vedrai Tornare is an Italian romantic drama directed by Ettore Maria Fizzarotti, which marked the acting debut of the enormously popular pop singer Gianni Morandi, who had a chart hit in Italy with a song of the same name. The film sees Morandi playing Gianni Aleardi, a young sailor enrolled in the Italian Navy, who meets and falls in love with Princess Liu (Elisabetta Wu), a beautiful Japanese girl who returns his affections despite being involved in arranged betrothed to an oriental nobleman living in Rome.

The score’s main theme, “You’ll See Me Return,” is a lightly romantic rock/pop piece led by marimbas and xylophones, underpinned by lush strings, a cooing vocalist, and a contemporary drum kit rhythm section. There is also a lovely (if somewhat stereotypical) Japanese inflection to the theme’s chord progressions, clearly alluding to the national origin of the lovely leading lady. It’s a lightweight theme, really little more than extended instrumental, but it certainly proves that Morricone is adept as writing and arranging music successfully in literally dozens of different styles.

Words to watch: marimbas, Rock/pop, xylophone, modern drum set, Japanese
You'll see me return
Mi Vedrai Tornare (Gianni Morandi)
018-6611 Svegliati e uccidi / Too Soon to Die

Svegliati e Uccide, known as Wake Up and Die in English-speaking territories, is an Italian crime drama directed by Carlo Lizzano, starring Robert Hoffmann and Gian Maria Volontè. The story is based on the life of the real-life Italian criminal Luciano Lutring, who was known as “the machine-gun soloist” (“il solista del mitra”) because he kept his weapon of choice hidden in a violin case. Lutring carried out hundreds of robberies in France and Italy during the sixties before being captured during a robbery in Paris in 1966 and subsequently being sentenced to 22 years in prison.

Morricone’s score is notable for its use of an unusual sampled machine gun sound effect under the music, clearly alluding to Lizzano and his famous nickname. The rest of the music offers the genesis of the familiar contemporary crime-thriller sound he would employ frequently throughout his career; the main theme features low, jazzy pianos offset against funky bass flutes, electric guitars, growling brass, and a rock drum kit percussion section, before becoming more elegiac and elegant in its second half through the inclusion of an operatic female soprano vocal.

Several other cues also leave greatly positive impressions, including “Un Uomo Solo,” the lonely secondary theme for Lutring; and the action sequence “Una Troma a Dallas,” which explodes into a chaotic frenzy of throbbing trumpets, Hammond organ, piano, and vocals. The score also spawned a hit song, “Una Stanza Vuota,” performed by Lisa Gastoni.

Words to watch: Hammond organ、Low jazz piano, funky bass flute, electric guitar, roaring brass, rock drums, trumpet, piano, vocals

Svegliati E Uccidi (02:31)
Una Tromba A Dallas (02:51)
019-6501 Agent 505: Todesfalle Beirut

Agent 505: Todesfalle Beirut is a pan-European German-language spy thriller written and directed by Manfred Köhler. It stars Czech actor Frederick Stafford as Richard Blake, an Interpol agent using the code name Agent 505, who is sent by his bosses to Beirut, Lebanon, to battle a mysterious criminal known as the Sheik, who plans to destroy the city by dropping radioactive mercury on it. The film, which also stars Geneviève Cluny, Chris Howland, and Willy Birgel, is clearly influenced by the James Bond franchise, with From Russia With Love and Goldfinger having been in cinemas during the previous two years.

The finale cue, “Agente 505 Missione Compiuta,” contains the best performance of the score’s recurring main theme, a sexy and stylish trumpet refrain with a 1960s jazz vibe, underpinned by a bombastic percussive kick. The score also contains a fair amount of more progressive free-jazz, often including throbbing electric and acoustic guitars, as well as some quite exciting action music (“Agente 505 in Azione”) and a more sultry variation on the main theme that features whistling, muted trumpets, and brushed snares.

Words to watch: Sexy and stylish trumpet, 1960s jazz, bombastic percussion, free jazz, throbbing electric guitar, acoustic guitar. Whistles, trumpets, brushed snare drums
Agente 505: Missione Compiuta (4:52)
Agente 505 In Azione (2:22)
020-6516 Uccellacci e uccellini / The Hawks and the Sparrows

Uccellacci e Uccellini, known in English as The Hawks and the Sparrows, was a critically acclaimed Italian drama, the fourth film directed by the great Pierpaolo Pasolini. The film is a ‘neo-realist’ drama starring the popular Italian comic-actor Totò as a man who, while roaming the neighborhoods within and the countryside around Rome with his son, encounter various people, each of whom represent a political aspect of Italian society. The film is a harsh and biting criticism of post-WWII capitalism that looks at themes of religion, poverty, social inequality and injustice, and the disenfranchisement of minorities; and which draws inspiration for the fable about two Franciscan friars, who are bid by St. Francis to preach the Gospel to hawks and sparrows in a futile attempt to get them to live side by side in harmony.

Morricone’s music is beautiful and tragic, overflowing with haunting string melodies and stirring thematic ideas that appear to have their roots in sacred church music, but is brief, with just 16 minutes of original score in the final cut of the movie. One theme in particular, “S. Francesco Parla Agli Uccelli,” Father Francesco Speaks to the Sparrows, is a stunningly realized string lament which cleverly juxtaposes the scenes of hardship and societal deprivation against beautiful, uplifting orchestral passages. In addition, the film’s opening titles feature a vocal performance by the popular Italian cantuatore singer Domenico Modugno.

Words to watch: Domenico Modugno, Unforgettable string melody,
S.Francesco Parla Agli Uccelli (01:24)

El Greco is an Italian drama biopic directed by Luciano Salce which tells the life story of master painter Doménikos Theotokópoulos, better known as El Greco, who created multiple masterpieces of renaissance art during the late 16th century. The film stars Mel Ferrer in the title role, with supporting performances by Rosanna Schiaffino and Adolfo Celi, and specifically concentrates on the period of El Greco’s life when he was based in Toledo, Spain, receiving commissions from King Philip II.

The score’s spectacular opening sequence is “Exultate Deo,” a celebratory, resounding fanfare for voices, trumpets, and piano chords, which bookends a stirring, elegantly romantic theme for strings and soft chorus worthy of a sweeping historical drama like this. Morricone’s allows his main to develop throughout the score, offering several beautiful variations, including the tender “Invocazione,” the restrained “Angoscia a Ricerca,” and the stunningly beautiful “Follia e Amore,” the latter of which represents the romantic relationship between El Greco and his beloved Jeronima de las Cuevas.

There’s also a great real of quite flamboyant renaissance-inspired festival music that captures the pageantry and artistic progressiveness of Europe during the period, some liturgical church music for pipe organ (“Rituale”), and even something approaching an action cue in “Per Archi,” which features some furious string writing.

Words to watch: Trumpet, Piano, Renaissance-style holiday music, Organ music

Exultate Deo (02:20)
Invocazione (03:12)
Angoscia e ricerca (02:40)
Follia e amore (02:38)

A very important and critically acclaimed Italian neo-realist war film, The Battle of Algiers was documentary specialist Gillo Pontecorvo’s first success at making narrative films; it told the story of the war between France and Algeria in the late 1950s and early 60s, when Algerian separatists were fighting for independence, and waged a guerrilla war against the French government in the streets of that country’s cities. The film starred Jean Martin as Coloniel Mathieu, the head of the French battalion in Algiers, and Saadi Yacef as Djafar, the leader of the group of insurgents. The film was enormously successful, receiving Academy Award nominations for Best Screenplay, Best Director, and Best Foreign Language Film.

Much of the film is scored naturalistically with traditional North African drumming and manipulated sound effects designed by director Pontecorvo himself, but Morricone did write around 40 minutes of traditional score, His most notable contribution is the stark, militaristic main title theme, “Algeri 1 Novembre 1954,” an aggressive and slightly chaotic piece that pits a relentless snare drum tattoo against rolling pianos, martial trumpets, and intensely rendered woodwinds, capturing the danger and hostility that spilled over from the souks and casbahs and into the forefront of Algerian society at that time.

Words to watch: Pontecorvo, Main theme of militarism, martial arts trumpet, fiercely rendered woodwind instruments
Algeri: 1 novembre 1954 (02:26)

Un Uomo a Metà is an Italian drama film directed by Vittorio de Seta, which stars Jacques Perrin as Michele, a failed writer who, while incarcerated in a mental health clinic, looks back on his life to try to find the origin of his mental problems, including his controlling mother (Lea Padovani), his selfish brother (Gianni Garko), and his numerous failed relationships with women. The film was a critical success, with Perrin winning the Best Actor award for his performance during the 1966 Venice Film Festival.

Morricone’s score for Un Uomo a Metà comprises just one single piece, a 23-minute composition entitled Requiem Per Un Destino, which explores Michele’s damaged psyche and troubled past through a series of expressive, impressionistic orchestral and choral passages, usually written for overlapping layers of strings. One sequence – “Accettare, Comprende, Quest il Senso, il Segreto” – is especially noteworthy for the way the different parts of the string section shift against each other, sometimes tonally beautiful, sometimes uncomfortably dissonant.

Words to watch: expressive impressionistic orchestral. Chorus, the way the different parts of the string section move around each other
Requiem per un destino (23"05")
Accettare, comprendere, questo il senso, il segreto (03:41)

One of the most popular spaghetti westerns of the 1960s, Navajo Joe was directed by Sergio Corbucci and stars a young Burt Reynolds as the titular character, a Native American warrior on a quest or vengeance after his tribe is massacred by a gang of white outlaws led by the ruthless Duncan. Having tracked the gang to a town, Esperanza, Joe finds out about Duncan’s plan to hijack a train full of money, and offers to protect the townspeople by killing Duncan and his men; however, Joe faces a great deal opposition from the residents, especially the town doctor Lynne, who convinces everyone not to trust a ‘redskin,’ and who is secretly in league with Duncan for a share of the money.

Ennio Morricone’s main thematic idea is one of his most famous –  a wild, insanely creative march for strings, electric guitar, and tribal percussion, enlivened by some utterly bonkers vocal effects including shouting, pseudo-Gospel wailing, literal screaming, and a choir chanting both Navajo Joe’s name, and many of his positive characteristics (ever so bold, and so on). The second most important piece is the stark, imposing “A Silhouette of Doom,” which acts as a recurring motif for Duncan and his men, and  layers low-end piano clusters against bold timpani strikes, severe trumpet whole notes, searching strings, screeching woodwinds, and more of those iconic vocals.

These two themes dominate the score, with multiple variations of both ideas throughout (the dreamily slow version in “Joe’s Departure” is interesting), but other pieces stop the score from becoming monotonous: on the one hand, there are a few cues of rambunctious saloon music featuring honky-tonk pianos and banjos, while on the other hand you get a track like the beautifully introspective and calming “The Demise of Father Rattinan” with it’s sensitive acoustic guitars, lyrical oboe, and cooing vocals.

After many years of incomplete and inconsistent releases, the complete score for Navajo Joe was released in 2007 by producer Lukas Kendall on his Film Score Monthly label, featuring cleaned-up sound, a more sensible running order, and handsome production values including liner notes from Italian film music expert John Bender and film director Jim Wynorski.

Words to watch: Salon music, Strings, electric guitar, tribal percussion, vocals, pseudo-gospel wail, timpani, trumpet, woodwinds, bar piano, banjo, oboe

TITOLI DI TESTA-NAVAJO JOE
A_Silhouette_of_Doom

Another acclaimed spaghetti western, La Resa dei Conti was directed by Sergio Sollima and starred Lee Van Cleef as ageing bounty hunter Jonathan Corbett, who is tasked by a railroad tycoon named Brokston to capture and/or kill Mexican bandito Cuchillo, who has been accused of raping and murdering a 12-year-old girl. However, Corbett is not as reliable as he used to be, and Cuchillo evades him, forcing Brokston – who has stakes his future political career on Cuchillo capture – to send a second bounty hunter to take out Cuchillo and, if necessary, Corbett as well. The film co-starred Walter Barnes, Tomas Milian, and Gérard Herter, and was acclaimed by film critics such as Leonard Maltin as one of the finest spaghetti westerns, second only to Sergio Leone’s Dollars Trilogy.

Morricone’s score is another one of his experimental, unusual compositions for the genre, which combined traditional action scoring with a number of unique and often quite bizarre sounds and arrangements. The main title cue “La Caccia,” for example. begins with what I can only describe as ‘the sounds of someone making squawking bird noises, and someone rubbing wet fingers across a window,’ but it slowly develops into a superbly adventurous main theme with a resounding trumpet chorus , relentless horse-gallop percussion, and an angelic female soprano vocal.

As one of the most popular western scores, the score for The Big Gundown has been released multiple times. The best presentation of the complete score is probably the one released by GDM Music in 2012, which features more than 50 minutes of music, including the two performances of the original song “Run Man Run” performed by vocalist Christy with Alessandro Alessandroni’s choir I Cantori Moderni, and conducted by Bruno Nicolai.

Words to watch: Trumpet,horse-gallop percussion, soprano
Run Man Run (Titoli di Testa)
La Resa dei Conti (La Caccia)

Dalle Ardenne all’Inferno, known in English as Dirty Heroes, is an Italian war film directed by Alberto de Martino, starring Frederick Stafford as the leader of a gang of Allied soldiers plotting to steal some diamonds from a fortified Nazi German bunker during the Battle of the Ardennes at the end of World War II. The film – which also starred John Ireland and several James Bond alumni (Daniela Bianchi from From Russia With Love, Adolfo Celi from Thunderball, Anthony Dawson from Dr. No, Curt Jürgens who would later star in The Spy Who Loved Me) – was one of the first of the so-called “macaroni combat” war films inspired by the American film The Dirty Dozen The Dirty Dozen, but it was not well reviewed, and received a great deal of criticism for its poor acting and screenplay, slow pacing, and numerous logical errors.

The score is built mostly around two recurring main themes. The “Ardennes Theme March” is a wonderfully dark, imposing piece for staccato percussion, tolling bells, punchy brass, and a masculine choral element which eventually gives way to a rousing refrain for an impressive bank of trumpets. “Christine’s Theme” is the theme for Daniela Bianchi’s character, the unhappy wife of the German commander who helps the Allies with their mission; her theme is a pretty, but slightly bittersweet melody for longing woodwinds, harp glissandi, a tinkling mandolin, swooning strings, and a soothing choir.

The complete soundtrack was released for the first (and, to date, only) time in 2009 by Beat Records, although as is usually the way of things it includes five versions of the main Ardennes Theme march, six versions of Christine’s Theme, to pad out the running time to over an hour. Both themes can also be found on the comprehensive 15-CD compilation Ennio Morricone: The Complete Edition, released by GDM Music in 2008.

Words to watch: American movie "The Dirty Dozen", Percussion, bells, brass, trumpets, wistful woodwinds, harp slide, tinkling mandolin, strings, choir
Ardenne's Theme Marcia
Tema di Cristine

Da Uomo a Uomo, known in English as Death Rides a Horse, is a brutal spaghetti western directed by Giulio Petroni about, as they often are, revenge and murder. The film stars Lee Van Cleef as Ryan, a gunfighter who is released from a prison after 15 years, having been framed for an armed robbery. As he sets out to track down the members of the gang who framed him he repeatedly crosses paths with Bill (John Philip Law), a young man whose entire family was murdered 15 years previously by members of the same gang that framed Ryan, and who is looking for vengeance of his own.

Morricone’s score for the film is based mostly around two recurring main themes: “Death Rides a Horse” and “Monody for Guitar.” The main “Death Rides a Horse” theme is a nerve-jangling piece for a bank of acoustic guitars, overlaid with an array of the unusual sound effects that Morricone often used for scores like this, notably a wildly impressionistic pan flute, rattling tambourines and driven timpani, and a chanted choral song espousing lyrics of impending doom (“he’ll be comin’ down the mountains, he’ll be drivin’ all his hatred”).

“Monody for Guitar,” meanwhile, is a more sorrowful sounding piece for guitars and hummed vocals that speaks to the lonely quest for vengeance undertaken by both men. There is also a slower piece, “Mystic and Severe,” which becomes quite hypnotic, and some more brooding tension music in “Anger and Sorrow” and “Alone in the Dark”.

The score for Death Rides a Horse was been released several times over the years. The best is the one released by GDM Music in 2004, which presents a more concise version of the music in a tight 45-minute package, although again there are five variations on the main theme, and three versions of the Monody for Guitar; it was re-released in 2010, again by GDM, with the addition of some stereo bonus cues.

Words to watch: wild impressionistic, Pan flutes, bongos and timpani, guitar

DEATH RIDES A HORSE (sung By Raoul)
MONODY FOR GUITAR
MYSTIC AND A WHISTLE (Mystic and Severe)
ANGER AND SORROW
ALONE IN THE NIGHT

L’Avventuriero is an Italian historical adventure drama film directed by Terence Young, based on the novel The Rover by Joseph Conrad. It is set against the backdrop of the French Revolution in the late 1700s and Anthony Quinn as Peyrol, an ageing former gunner with the French republican navy who went rogue and became a notorious pirate, but who seeks to leave his life of bloodshed behind him after 50 years adventuring on the high seas. The film co-stars Rosanna Schiaffino, Richard Johnson, and Rita Hayworth in one of her final screen roles.

The main theme, “L’Avventuriero,” is an unexpectedly thoughtful and introspective piece for strings, harpsichord, and solo violin, which is period-appropriate and casts a somber and possibly regretful look back at Peyrol’s life, the sins he has committed, and his longing for more peaceful conclusion to his life. A secondary melody half way through the cue has an almost lullaby-ish quality. This is counterbalanced by several versions of a darker and more insistent piece, “Il Rogo Della Strega,” which features a wonderfully vivid and flamboyant classical violin against urgent low percussion, tempestuous piano rolls, and massed voices shouting in fear, capturing Peyrol’s terrible reputation as the a rogue upon the high seas. Meanwhile, “Peirol’s Theme” has a more dream-like solo violin and soft, enticing voices cooing his name.

The most comprehensive release of the score is the 2010 version released by GDM Records, which features more than an hour of Morricone’s music (although there are seven different variations on the main theme). The main theme from L’Avventuriero can also be found on the comprehensive 15-CD compilation Ennio Morricone: The Complete Edition, released by GDM Music in 2008.

Words to watch: French Revolution, harpsichord, violin, lullaby, classical violin, low percussion, piano roll
L'AVVENTURIERO 1 1
IL ROGO DELLA STREDA
TEMA DI PEIROL

Ad Ogni Costo, released as Grand Slam in the United States, is a crime caper directed by Giuliano Montaldo, starring Edward G. Robinson as an American professor living in Brazil who, having grown bored with his life in academia, decides to try to pull off a diamond heist during the Rio Carnival. To this end he gathers together a team of skilled crime specialists, including an electronics engineer and a safecracking expert, to help him complete the job, while elsewhere a French playboy is hired to romance the only key to the building from its beautiful female owner, played by Janet Leigh.

The score is based around three main recurring themes. The main title, “Punto e Basta,” is an irrepressibly sunny piece of Herb Alpert -style Tijuana jazz, with a jaunty trumpet refrain, a light pop percussion section, and a choir ‘la la la’-ing and ‘ba-da-ba-ing over the melody. “Vai Via Malinconia” is a more lounge-based jazz piece with its roots in Brazilian bossa nova, with a moody trumpet melody and glittering rhythmic guitars. The eponymous “Ad Ogni Costo” is a little darker and more intense, but still based around jazz music principles, with an unusually metered rhythmic centerpiece for harpsichord and guitars, surrounded by all manner of ethnic shakers and percussion items.

Elsewhere, “Ai, Moreno” is a clattering, flamboyant carnival piece for trumpets and voices that make you want to done a fruit-encrusted headdress and shake your hips. “In Chiesa” is a gorgeous piece of liturgical church music for strings and pipe organ. Finally, “Dirgli Solo No” has a soft rumba beat and, oddly, a set of vaguely Chinese-sounding chord progressions, oddly juxtaposed against wistful vocals. None of this is really going to appeal to anyone who doesn’t care for Morricone’s Latin-flavored pop scores, but I like it a great deal.

I personally own the 1999 RCA Records release which combines 24 minutes of music from Ad Ogni Costo with score from the 1965 movie Menage all’Italiana. However, the most complete release of the music appears to be 2010 edition from GDM Music, which expands the score to 54 minutes with eleven variations on several of the core themes, and presents it with enhanced digital sound.

Words to watch: Herb Alpert stylee Tijuana jazz,Trumpet, percussion, Chinese chords, Latin flavor

Punto e Basta (Titoli de Testa)
Vai Vai Malinconia
In Chiesa
Dirgli Solo No

L’Harem was a European comedy-drama with sexual undertones, directed by Marco Ferreri and starring Carroll Baker. Baker plays Margherita, a sexually liberated young woman with several male lovers, who plays emotional games of pride and desire with three of them, pitting them against each other to win her affections during a summer trip to Croatia. The film was intended to be something of a commentary on gender stereotypes, and had the potential to be scandalous by having the lead character be female – a role reversal from the usual 1960s tropes of men having affairs with numerous beautiful women – but the film was a flop.

Morricone’s score, unexpectedly, undercuts the drama by containing a lot of music that is quite jazzy and upbeat. The main recurring theme, “L’Harem,” is sultry piece based on a languid solo saxophone melody accompanied by moody strings and some vaguely Middle Eastern percussion ideas involving light chimes, castanets, and watery-sounding percussion.

The score is quite short, and so the soundtrack album is based around multiple extended variations on these two main themes, some of which are close to 10 minutes long. Beat Records released an excellent album in 2017, with five pieces, plus some bonus tracks from the 1965 film Menage all’Italia.

Words to watch: Jazz, saxophone, strings, bells, castanets, water percussion
l'harem primo (una per tre) (07:05)

One of the best reviewed spaghetti western films of the genre’s golden era, Faccia a Faccia was the second western directed by Sergio Sollima after La Resa dei Conti in 1966. It stars Gian Maria Volontè as Professor Brad Fletcher, a liberal East Coast professor, who travels to the west during the American civil war and strikes up an unlikely relationship with Beauregard Bennet (Tomas Milian), a career criminal. Over the course of many years Fletcher and Bennet encounter each other several times, often saving each other’s lives, with each occurrence affecting the other man deeply – Fletcher teaches Bennet to be more humane, while Bennet gives Fletcher several hard doses of reality about life in the American west, and the circumstances which drove him to the outlaw life.

While not as memorable or outlandish as many of his other spaghetti westerns, Morricone’s score for Faccia a Faccia is excellent. The main theme, repeated numerous times in different variations throughout the score, is a rambunctious and dramatic piece which builds out of an impressionistic sequence for drums and organ, slowly turning  into a superb combination of nerve-jangling guitars, riotous clashing brass clusters, and a soaring countermelody for strings and chorus. One particular variation on this theme, “Intermezzo,” features the sublimely operatic vocals of Morricone’s regular collaborator Edda dell'Orso.

A recurring secondary theme, “Involuzione,” speaks to the life of Tomas Milian’s character with softer tones, clearly lamenting the fact that truly desperate circumstances, as opposed to personal choice, forced Bennet into his life as a gunslinger. A third theme, “Disperata Nostalgia” is a lovely piece for quasi-romantic acoustic guitars, and there are the usual old-timey saloon music source cues for banjo and harmonica (“Falso Preannuncio,” “Ballando sull’Aia,” “Square Dance”), plus sparsely-scored moments of suspense and danger (“Clandestinamente,” “Scatto Conclusivo,” “Tensione Sottintesa”).

Words to watch: Edda dell'Orso),old style Salon music, Drums, Organ, Guitar, Brass Cluster, Intermezzo, Acoustic Guitar, Banjo, Harmonica,

Faccia A Faccia (Titoli)(03:09)
Involuzione (Arriverderci Professor Fletcher) (01:23)
Disperata Nostalgia (Maria)(00:43)

Duello Nel Texas, sometimes known as Gunfight at Red Sands, was one of the first ever spaghetti western films, and the first western movie scored by Morricone, a year before A Fistful of Dollars. It was directed by Ricardo Blasco and Mario Caiano and stars Richard Harrison as Ricardo ‘Gringo’ Martinez, the adopted son of a family of Mexican sheep farmers, who witnesses the murder of his entire family by bandits. Bent on revenge, Gringo teams up with a local lawman, Corbett (G. R. Stuart) to track down the killers – but soon discovers that not everyone in his hometown wants the killers found.

The score is anchored by an absolutely fabulous song, “A Gringo Like Me,” which has music by Morricone, lyrics by Anne Carol Danell and Tino Fornai, and is performed with golden-voiced authority by folk singer Peter Tevis under a galloping, lyrical orchestral undercurrent. It’s the first song that Morricone wrote for a western film, and set the standard for all those that followed it. The score proper is actually surprisingly conventional, much closer in tone to the western scores of Moross and Bernstein than anything Morricone would himself write. Nevertheless, conventional Morricone is still good Morricone, and there is a lot to recommend. There are numerous cues full of intense and percussion-heavy rattling action music, moments of trumpet-led introspection and beauty, some soothing and folksy guitar solos, and some pseudo-comedic honkytonk saloon music that breaks the flow but probably works in context.

“Part 7,” “Part 14,” and “Part 18” reprise the melody from the ‘Gringo Like Me’ song with good-natured rambunctiousness. “Part 4,” “Part 11,” and “Part 12” are probably the pick of the action cues, and feature some stark, insistent piano chords underneath a shrill orchestra and rapped snare percussion. The lilting guitar melody that floats through several tracks, notably “Part 2,” is sometimes transposed to a lonely harmonica, as in “Part 8,” or a bank of emotional strings, as in “Part 10”. The more reflective side of the score is also illustrated by a soulful trumpet solo that can be heard in “Part 5” and especially the superb “Part 13”. The whole thing climaxes with overt emotion in the beautiful “Part 17,” a bank of lush strings. While not as creative as any of his later iconic spaghetti western scores, Duello Nel Texas is a fascinating look at the genesis of the entire genre, and is well worth exploring for devotees interested in film music history.

Words to watch: (the western scores of Moross and Bernstein, Percussion, trumpet, guitar, piano chords, guitar, harmonica

Track 1 (A gringo like me) (02:29)
Track 17 (02:06)

The inimitable Peter Tevis returns to perform the title song “Lonesome Billy,” a downbeat lament for the life of a gunfighter, made all the more poignant by the silky bass in the singer’s voice. The rest of the score is built around variations on the main theme, “Le Pistole Non Discutono,” a determined melody for trumpets underpinned by acoustic guitars and hoofbeat percussion, which often swells with dark brass nobility and string-led fortitude. There are numerous variations throughout the score, including a couple of lovely versions for solo guitar, a somewhat dissonant variation including chaotically stark combination of pianos and harmonica and thrumming bass guitars (“#2”), and a fun arrangement for regional folk instruments and a Spanish soprano vocalist in the “Version Cantina Messicana”.

The two other main recurring ideas are “Gli Indiani,” recurring insistent explosions of percussion, stabbing pianos, and low horn clusters which give the score a sense of danger and underscore most of the film’s action sequences, and “La Ragazza e Lo Scheriffo,” a more bouncy and playful melody for assorted woodwinds that stands at odds with the rest of the score, but is a ton of fun.

There’s a lot of ‘what if’ about Le Pistole Non Discutono – what if this film had been more successful than A Fistful of Dollars, as was expected? Would this score have been more famous today? Film and music history are filled with stories like this, of chance and missed opportunity. Whatever the case may be, and despite its obscurity these days, Le Pistole Non Discutono is a great early entry into the spaghetti western genre, with a lovely lilting main theme and some bold, energetic, enjoyable action music.

Words to watch: Trumpet, acoustic guitar, hoofbeat percussion, dark brass, strings, guitar, piano, harmonica, regional folk instrument, horn group, woodwinds

Lonesome Billy (01:50)
Gli indiani (02:13)
La ragazza e lo scheriffo (01:08)

Prima Della Rivoluzione – Before the Revolution – is an Italian neo-realist romantic drama film, directed by the great Bernardo Bertolucci in what was one of his first theatrical films. It stars Adriana Asti and Francesco Barilli as two young lovers, Gina and Fabrizio, and charts the course of their relationship against the political and social upheaval that gripped much of Europe at the time. It explores themes of civil rights, socialist political ideologies, and religion, and is strongly inspired by the French New Wave cinema of directors like Jean-Luc Godard)and François Truffaut.

The score for Prima Della Rivoluzione is subdued and introspective and quite serious, and is built around layered banks of strings which often play against each other in unusual ways. The title track, “Prima Della Rivoluzione,” is highly classical in nature, and just gorgeous. Meanwhile, the romance between Gina and Fabrizio is captured by some lovely, elegant writing for strings and woodwinds in “E Dopo,” and this style of writing continues on into later cues such as “Sognare O Non Sognare,” where the woodwinds are paired with florid acoustic guitars.

“Vivere O Non Vivere” gives the woodwinds a renaissance lilt via the inclusion of a harpsichord, and this continues in into the elaborate and gilded “Tu Vedrai,” which juxtaposes the lyrical strings of the main theme against Bach-like keyboards, and becomes quite breathlessly beautiful as it develops over almost eight minutes.

Words to watch: Jean-Luc Godard and François Truffaut, string section, woodwinds, acoustic guitar, harpsichord, renaissance, strings, Bach keyboard

Prima della rivoluzione (01:42)

The main title theme, “The Hills Run Red,” is a stridently heroic march for brass and strings augmented by the dulcet tones of soprano Edda dell’Orso and a male voice choir, and its recapitulations and variations in “The Fury of Fire,” “The River of Dollars,” “Vindication,” and the conclusive “Un Fiume di Dollari” are score highlights. There is suspense music a-plenty too, with the familiar nervous agitato strings, muted horns, and impatient snare drum licks anchoring cues like “Fifteen Miles to Prison” and the sometimes quite dissonant “Blind Obsession”. Elsewhere there is some wistful music for glockenspiel, harp and strings in “Dreams Into Dust,” which gives Brewster’s longing for home a poignant twist; the soft focus pop arrangements of the same ideas in “Memories of Rebecca” and “The Girl With the Golden Hair” are of their time.

The soundtrack also includes two original songs, “Home to My Love” and “Quel Giorno Verrà,” both of which are performed by Gino, and neither of which I care for; there is also some lively Mexican source music in cues such as “Fiesta del Sol,” which is authentic and features some ripe trumpet solos, some down-home Americana in “Ecstasy of Strings,” and ragtimee/honkytonk saloon pianos in “Five Card Draw,” the latter of which unfortunately verge on the annoying.

Words to watch: Ragtime)/ honkytonk saloon pianos, Brass, strings, snare drum, glockenspiel, harp, Mexican source music, American music, trumpet

The Hills Run Red (01:34)
Five Card Draw (02:35)

Morricone’s scores for sex comedies are so different from anything else he wrote; they were rooted into that 1960s Euro-pop sound, which blended sultry vibrato-heavy strings with languid electric guitar licks, brushed jazzy percussion ideas, moody woodwinds, Hammond organs, and faraway vocals, some of which mimic breathy orgasm noises. Much of the score’s melodic content is based on variations around the melody of the opening song, “Pioggia Sul Tuo Viso,” which is dream-like and ethereal and blends electric guitars and what sounds like sampled--whale song. Several subsequent cues – notably “La Diva” and “La Donna Gattina,” plus the various alternate versions of the main theme – follow this same trend, encompassing a series of lounge pop and jazz instrumentals.

One or two cues does stand out for their originality and uniqueness. “La Donna Romantica,” as the name suggests, is much more straightforwardly romantic, and is a lovely, slow duet for piano and strings that can stand with some of his best love themes from the period. “Pizzicato” is, as the name suggests, a somewhat abstract piece for pizzicato strings accompanied by harpsichords and fluttering woodwinds. Meanwhile, several mid-album cues – “Alta Moda,” “Alla Corte di Luigi XVI,” and “La Duchessa” –embrace a highly classical 17th century sound, offering Bach-like arrangements of strings, woodwinds, and brass.

Words to watch: sampled--whale song, Bach-like arrangements of strings, 1960s Europop, vibrato strings, electric guitar licks, brushed jazz percussion, woodwinds, Hammond organ, vocals, lounge pop, jazz instrumentals, pizzicato strings, harpsichord, high classical 17th century sounds, woodwinds, brass instruments

Pioggia sul tuo viso (02:26)
La donna romantica (06:08)
La duchessa (01:36)

The first score cue on the album is vastly different from what follows it: the opening “Adonai” is a driving piece of orchestral rock music led by a heavy electric guitar riff, modern percussion, a screaming trumpet, and an incongruous but brilliantly-incorporated harpsichord. The whole thing is topped off by yelping vocals performed by I Cantori Moderni di Alessandroni. It’s quite brilliant. “Nel Profondo dell’Eros,” on the other hand, is an eerie exploration of shimmering tones for strings and light electronics, which often descend in to abstract and chaos that is quite difficult to describe, other than is feels like the sound of an orchestra tuning up, but more organized.

The title track “Il Giardino Delle Delizie (Primo)” features the ghostly tones of soprano Edda dell’Orso against a bank of eerie strings, while the subsequent “Il Giardino Delle Delizie (Secondo)” contines down the same path, sans vocals. The conclusive “Peccato Originale” is perhaps the most abstract piece of all: faraway vocals, string figures, and unusual processed sound effects fade in and out of the cue over the course of more than several minutes, testing the patience of the listener.

Il Giardino Delle Delizie is an odd duck of a score, which starts out with a maniacally upbeat rock track, but then settles down into a series of unusual tonal explorations which, unfortunately, only dedicated devotees of Morricone’s work will feel the need to check out. The soundtrack for Il Giardino Delle Delizie is an elusive one; although the main title theme does crop up on one or two of the more comprehensive Morricone collections, the complete work has never been released. The best bet for collectors appears to be this 2004 release from GDM Records, which pairs just over 15 minutes of score from this film with selections from the 1987 film Quartiere and the 1995 film L’Uomo Proiettile.

Words to watch: Electric guitar, modern percussion, trumpet, harpsichord, rock music, ghost tones, rock tracks

Adonai (03:04)
Nel profondo dell'Eros (01:02)
Il giardino delle delizie (primo) (05:34)
Peccato originale (04:19)

I Crudeli, released in English as The Hellbenders, is an influential spaghetti western directed by Sergio Corbucci, with whom Morricone collaborated on Navajo Joe, Il Mercenario, Il Grande Silenzio, and Vamos a Matar Compañeros, among others. The film stars Joseph Cotten as Colonel Jonas, the former leader of a notoriously vicious platoon in the recently-defeated Confederate Army, who finds a hoard of Union gold and – with the help of his greedy and villainous sons – plans to use it to revive the Confederacy.

The main title theme, “I Crudeli,” is an effortlessly cool theme for a lazy, jazzy trumpet over rattling metallic percussion, which gradually picks up an undercurrent of soothing voices and, eventually, an urgent piano rhythm. It sounds more like something Lalo Schifrin might have written for an urban crime thriller than a civil war-era revenge movie, but Morricone was never one to make the obvious choice. The theme anchors several additional cues, with variations that range from a downbeat acoustic guitar version in “The Widow” to the more impressive statements in the score’s finale.

The action and suspense music, in cues like “Prima dell’Assalto,” “La Conguira,” “Dopo la Congiura,” “Attesa del Nulla,” and others, tends to be tight and sparse and edgy, making use of rattling tick-tock percussion, staccato guitar licks, and jittery piano chords that emerge from the low end of the keyboard. Elsewhere, the various versions of the solemn “Un Monumento” all feature a typically iconic trumpet solo and, often, a soaring soprano solo vocal, but these are among the few melodic high points of a score which mostly seems to favor the creation of a relentlessly uneasy mood than impressing the listener with recurring bold themes or moments of notable beauty.

The somewhat restrained, sparse, and nervous sound that permeates the score for I Crudeli does make it difficult to appreciate, but Morricone certainly captures the tone of darkness and immortality that permeates the film with his music, and that’s certainly worth something. The score for I Crudeli has been released several times over the years, both as a standalone album, and as part double-feature released combined with the score for Revolver, among others. My personal recommendation – and the score being reviewed here – is the 2017 release from Dagored Records, which includes the score as a standalone album, and includes additional music and outtakes not featured on other releases.

Words to watch: Lalo Schifrin,Metal percussion, jazz trumpet, piano, acoustic guitar, guitar lick sound, trumpet, soprano solo

I Crudeli
Prima Dell'Assalto

As a parody of two of the most iconic genres of the decade, the score is clearly rooted in the musical stylistics of the movies it is parodying, but the dials are all turned up to 11, resulting in a score which drowns in overkill, but is still superbly entertaining if you can get in the right headspace. Morricone’s contribution to the score begins with the “Titoli,” which is an unusual piece of spacey orchestral electronic dissonance underpinned by sultry jazz grooves and vocals, which open the album on an unusual note. The subsequent “Una Dolce Corsa” is a swooning, pseudo-romantic piece for sweeping strings, rock percussion, and Edda dell’Orso’s elevated vocals, intermittently interrupted by a jazzy John Barry-style roaring trumpet that is clearly intended to evoke the espionage cool of James Bond.

“Suspense” is a thunderous explosion of rampaging percussion, throbbing brass, and clamoring vocals, and is intensely energetic, like a chaotic dance piece on psychedelic drugs. This stylistic continues on into “La Danza Delle Trombe,” which adds a Hammond organ and an electric guitar into the same frenzied mix. Later, “Un Pensiero Incantevole” is a sultry, dreamy romance piece for lilting strings, come-hither vocals, and jazzy brushed snares that is typical of the era; the subsequent cue is an arrangement of the same melody for guitar. Finally, “Una Vita Felice” is a sunny, optimistic rock instrumental, which seemingly re-purposes the ‘wa-wa-wa’ vocals from The Good the Bad and the Ugly in a very different setting.

Marinuzzi’s tracks are less impressive that Morricone’s (natch), but still contain some moments worth highlighting. “Un Sogno Ricorrente” is a festival of chipper pizzicato and swooning strings. “Notturno” is a more languid arrangement of the same string theme. “Marcetta Divertente” and “Una Filastrocca Di Note” are pieces of comedy fluff, “Brivido Gelido” is brass-led suspense music, and “Tema Scartato” is a groovy finger-snapping dance band piece. This is the first music I have heard from Marinuzzi, and on this evidence it’s worth seeking out other things he has written.

Words to watch: Gino Marinuzzi Jr. , Empty orchestral electronic dissonance, jazz, vocals, pseudo-romantic works

donne e amori (02:57)

The only two pieces of music ever released from La Cuccagna are “Il Cortile” and “Il Ritorno a Casa,” both of which could be found on a now long-out-of-print 45RPM vinyl EP released by RCA Records Europe. The first, “Il Cortile,” is a sprightly, childish little piece for stand-up piano, shrill woodwinds, and lithe strings, that captures a sense of innocent urban idyll. The second, “Il Ritorno a Casa,” is initially a little more introspective, with darkly-hued strings and an occasional harmonica creating a sense of tension. Eventually an acoustic guitar joins the mix, and it slowly becomes a more traditionally orchestral, a warm but bittersweet melody that has an underlying sense of tragedy. Some of the orchestral phrasings remind me of Nino Rota’s writing for traditional writing for Fellini, and by the end it is quite lovely.

In the absence of any sort of fuller score release, the only place these cues are available to listen to is on YouTube, but unfortunately the first piece is disrupted by dialogue tracks and sound effects from the film, including women singing, assorted kitchen noises, children laughing, and an amateur vocal choir. However the second piece is well worth listening to; it’s a trivial, unimportant work by Morricone standards, but it’s still fascinating from a historical perspective to see where it all began.

Words to watch: Nino Rota, standing piano, woodwinds, harmonica, acoustic guitar,
Il Cortile Ennio Morricone (03:32)
Il Ritorno A Casa Luigi Tenco & Ennio Morricone (02:35)
2023.12.28
2023 Mobile version

VIP

Philately The site standby Collection transfer
Started running in 2003. The site http://morricone.cn standby http://em.hty66.com 信息产业部备案序号(2014): 苏ICP备11039856号 © 2015 hwg 版权所有