2012 May 18 • Friday

Joey Baron is still the greatest. I saw him last week at Birdland with Steve Kuhn and Steve Swallow.

It's inspiring how present he is and how much energy and sensitivity he brings to every moment.


2012 May 16 • Wednesday

That's a picture of a Shanghai restaurant in Flushing. It's called Nan Xiang Xiao Long Bao and Dexter and I have been going there every week or two for over a year.

Xiaolongbao is what we call soup dumplings, though they're identified on the menu here as steamed pork buns. Nanxiang is apparently a suburb of Shanghai where xiaolongbao were invented. So if you've got a restaurant called Nan Xian Xiao Long Bao (Nanxiang xiaolongbao), you can guess what they want to be known for.

The soup dumplings there are among the best food I've ever had in my life. I crave them. I would want them as part of my last meal.

(Dexter and I went to Joe's Shanghai in Manhattan Chinatown to try their soup dumplings and we found Joe's Shanghai to be pathetic in comparison. I never want to go there again.)

Dexter's dish of choice is the Shanghai Stir-Fried Udon, which is also delicious.

It is, as you can see, stir-fried udon, with pork and bok choy. I eat all the bok choy since Dexter won't eat anything green. You can also get a version of this dish with seafood instead of pork.

Sometimes just an order of the steamed pork buns is enough for me, but I often get Crispy Noodles with Shredded Chicken.

This dish tastes best to me with some hot chili paste added. The noodles appear to start raw and get cooked by the chicken, mushrooms and cabbage on top. It's too hot for me to eat when it first arrives and by the time I'm getting into it, the noodles have begun to soften.

This is one of the perfect meals you can have in New York City. The total for these three dishes is about $21.


2012 May 14 • Monday

Concluding this series of Japanese television music, the 217th Soundtrack of the Week is 80's Television's Hits.

The first track is the theme from Wonderful Guys. It starts with engine noises, screeching tires and car crashes. These sounds pop up throughout the instrumental theme, which is classic late '70s/early '80s TV action music with a wailing fusion guitar solo.

Next is the theme song for Signpost of the Wind a relaxed, funk/disco ballad with laid back male vocals and a breezy synth sound that matches the title. After that is the music for Star Parade, song by a woman with a raw, driving blues voice. The music is inbetween "Night Train" and mid-century American rock and roll and pop.

The next song is called something like "A True Sad Story" and is the theme song to a classic Japanese drama show, Sailor Suit and Machine Gun. It's about a teenage girl still in high school who, because of the rules of succession, becomes the boss of a yakuza gang. It's famous for a scene where she first uses the machine gun and then says, in a dreamy voice, "Cool". You can see that scene and hear the song in this trailer for the show.

After that comes "Sunset Serenade", a gentle, almost lullaby-like song that sweels into orchestral pop grandeur for the chorus. It sounds like it might be based on Pachelbel's Canon in D. This is followed by something called "Weekend Love" which reminds me of Luther Vandross's "I'd Rather". The next song is called something "Drifting Love" and is more spoken than sung by the female vocalist until the big chorus which uses castanets.

"Take Care of My Love" has a Steely Dan feel to it. I don't know what show it was used for but singer Yasuhiro Suzuki released it as a single in 1983 and, according to Wikipedia, his blood type is B. Mizue Takada's "Looking for True Love", the next song on the CD, also came out as a single in 1983. She has a pognant, breathy voice. You can hear it here.

The next song, delivered by a raspy-voiced male vocalist, is called "Human Camel" and is apparently the theme to a teen drama called something like Scattered Youth.

Things get upbeat again with this, which Google translates as "Swimming Crazy Ship". The next piece, "Nostradamus Private School Song", begins with church organ and a hymn-like vocal chorus before exploding into a goofy, uptempo piece sung by none other that Beat Takeshi, a.k.a. Takeshi Kitano!

Then there's a cheesy piano ballad which sounds like what you'd expect from a song called "Falling in Love". After this comes a Huey Lewis-like blast of bubbly pop brightness, called something like "Pakkun Egg! Eggs Falling from the Sky!". This is what the single looked like:

The next song, which is called something like "Please Don't Be Shy", is a nice, melodic piece with limpid female vocals. After that comes "Show Me", whose '80s dance fever assault will knock you out of your chair after the delicate mood of "Please Don't Be Shy" (or whatever it's called).

"Hide and Seek with the Wind" is a gentle melody given a childlike, innocent vocal delivery. Then there's a tango-like song called "Windmill of Love" and, finally, "Lullaby of the Virgin", a wistful, romantic song.


2012 May 11 • Friday

This book was great, despite occasional racist language, typical of the period, alas. (This is a 1949 paperback edition of a 1933 novel.) The story wasn't at all what I expected. Here's what the back cover tells you.

That's pretty accurate as far as it goes. But the really interesting part of it is that Dark Hazard is the name of a dog, and most of the gambling that happens in the book takes place at dog racing tracks.

The story begins in Chicago, 1928. where Jim is working as a night clerk in a shabby apartment hotel, a job that W. R. Burnett once had as well. The action then moves to California, 1929, and then finally to Ohio, 1932.

Jim and Marg are barely getting by in Chicago and Marg's family back in Ohio has money problems. Jim loses his job, wins three thousand dollars at roulette and then gets a job at a dog racing track in California.

In California Jim falls under the spell of the dog Dark Hazard, who doesn't look like a champion but streaks by every other dog on the track time and time again. Marg struggles to tolerate the world of gamblers that provides them with their livelihood but Jim's childlike obsession with Dark Hazard derails their marriage after Marg becomes pregnant. Marg returns to her Ohio hometown where, three years later, she's confronted by a bottomed-out Jim who wants to start again.

The theme that runs through each of these three parts (Chicago, California, Ohio) is one of people struggling to suppress their nature, to be not themselves but somebody others want them to be. Jim is trying to live in Marg's world and Marg is trying to live in Jim's world but it's an impossible fit for both of them. Dark Hazard, a creature who gives itself free rein and lets its drive take it as far and as fast as it can go, is something of a symbol of unfettered nature and pure will.

Dark Hazard is surprisingly touching and absorbing, and very well written. One of the impressive qualities of the book is how well drawn the characters are. They are all human, imperfect and sympathetic. There are no villains, no heroes. Even Dark Hazard turns out to be a real creature, not a mere symbol, in the end—and a sweet, friendly, animal as well.

This edition has many typos and perhaps there's one in the first line, which would explain the run-on sentence: "The clock above the switchboard struck midnight slowly, each chime was preceded by a faint, weary, premonitory whir, then the works buzzed for a moment after the final chime and went on ticking".


2012 May 09 • Wednesday

This is a great record! You can buy it here.

It's instrumental guitar/drum duets but it doesn't sound like anything else I've ever heard. Parts of it reminded me of Tom Verlaine's instrumental records (Warm and Cool and Around) but it really has its own thing going on.

There are ten tracks and the music can be intense and rocking, gentle and ethereal. It's all recorded live but sounds too complex to be totally live. This has something to do with the fact that Percy uses three amps with different effects and switches between them and blends them while playing. (Or something like that. I think that's what Chris told me.)

It's really cool. Get it!


2012 May 07 • Monday

Here's 70's Television's Hits Vol. 2, the 216th Soundtrack of the Week.

First up is "Thank You Song", a combination of surf and marching bad with a great electric guitar sound and an energetic female vocalist. Sounds like there's a Farfisa in there too. After this it's the theme from Let's Say Farewell with Tears, a country-style song with smooth horn touches, pedal steel guitar and harmonica. You can hear it here.

The third track is the theme for Two People's World, a drama about a married couple. It's a mid-tempo romantica song with strings and various easy-listening, almost Muzak-like touches. It has a recitation bit at the end. When I Woke Up Everything Was Fine comes next, a heart song performed in an atmosphere of acoustic guitar, electric bass, piano, drums, strings and what sounds like the "whistling" setting on a synthesizer.

Up next is Lovers of the Sun, presumable the theme for a TV show of the same name. It's pretty rocking action music with some good guitar playing and a male vocalist who seems to want to avoid any kind of swing. The sixth track is the theme for Jun Guts, a high-school baseball drama. You can see the opening credits, with the theme, here. I think it looks kind of cool and I have no interest in sports. The song sounds like somebody's national anthem with some 1970s musical ingredients thrown in.

By all means watch the opening credits for the next show on the CD, Are You Okay, Beautiful Women?. It's really great, with beautiful animation and a very chipper song. After that comes the theme for Where Is Youth?, which begins with a wistful trumpet solo and features a sensitive male voice singing over gentle percussion and guitar.

Ken of the Cake Shop has a child-like bouncy theme song, which sounds like it might actually be sung by a child. I'm not sure how to translate the title of the next song. Google has come up with several ideas for the name of this moody piece which I would say is in 6/8 or 12/8 and quite stirring, with lovely, understated, female vocals. All the translations agree that the word "ear" is in the title, but I could have told you that.

That moody number is followed by the ridiculously poppy theme song for Ping Pong Gymnastics, which has apparently found a secure place in Japanese popular culture, as evidenced by Morning Musume's recent cover of this. They can't touch the original, though, which has much better production values.

The next show, Decide! Finish, has a breathy female vocalist singing an engaging melody that reminded me of songs from yakuza movies. Apparently it's a sports drama about women's gymnastics. And so I suspect that the next song, the theme from Red Shoes, is a ballet drama. The lovely, dramatic music quotes "Swan Lake" and features harp and piano.

After that it's the theme for Ra Ra Ra Youth, in which "Yoko & Kumiko" sing about happiness in a minor key before switching to a major-key disco chorus. There's an organ solo that sounds like it's played on the Yankee Stadium organ. This is followed by But Something Is Different, whose theme is kind of a folk-pop song done in the style of The Eagles.

The sixteenth song is the theme for A Beautiful Morning Will Come. That's how I translated the title, anyway. A bright, airy female voice sings cheerful-sounding lyrics over an interesting arrangement of instruments, featuring wooden flutes. Hear it for yourself. Next up is Beautiful Summer, a beautiful, sad song in 3/4 with a wonderful performance from singer Ryoko Moriyama. Here it is.

Surf guitar returns for the Planet of the Apes Japanese TV spin-off, Army of the Apes. There are also some weird keyboard sounds for a stomp sectino that sounds a bit like music from masked rider shows and Gamera movies. You can give it a listen here.

The theme for what Google translates as Bayashi Festival Can Be Heard took me by surprise, sounding like some kind of Barry White or Stevie Wonder song or something like that. It really sounds familiar and I can't remember what it seems to be based on. There are some interesting guitar sounds in there, too. The show appears to be a drama about a professional cyclist who gets injured in a race and ends up working in a retirement home. e , though this sheet music for it puts it in 4/4.

The great Ryoko Moriyama returns to sing the theme for My Song Festival. There's nice use of a harpsichord or something that sounds like one. Finally, there's Our Festival, which is another one that reminds me of some big pop song that I've heard a hundred times but can't place right now. It's the beginning bit with the guitars that makes me think of it. The track on the CD is instrumental and performed by a band called Transam. This link will take you to the exact same recording but with a vocal track on top.


2012 May 04 • Friday

This is a 1966 paperback reprint of a 1954 sci-fi novel. Like many of these books, it's on the short side, only 168 pages. The whole thing could have been printed in a single fiction magazine, as many novels used to be.

It's about a man who discovers that he's telepathic and, being somewhat young and naïve, fails to keep this fact hidden. The government snaps him up and puts him to work as a human receiver for spies. Distance is no problem for his abilities, so an agent on the other side of the world transmits information to the telepath as soon as information becomes known.

A nice wrinkle is that the telepath's boss is basically evil and is exploiting this arrangement to increase and consolidate his own power. Our telepathic hero realizes this and sensibly keeps secret the fact that he has also mastered telekinesis.

It's an engaging book but it doesn't get up to much. It's the story of a person who has incredible, godlike powers but doesn't really use them. He does his spy job and eventually uses his powers to get revenge, but he never expresses any interest or curiosity in what else he could do.

There's some light discussion of whether he represents a new development in the evolution of the species but not much exploration of that or other ideas. It's mostly a book about somebody sitting in a house thinking and listening to other people's thoughts.

Still, it's something of a precursor to movies like ESPY and Scanners. I don't remember A. E. Van Voght's Slan (1940) too well, having read it a long time ago, but I think it did a lot more with the same basic idea.

The first line is "The microphones were dead, had been disconnected for many days".


2012 May 02 • Wednesday

The Dutch/French film of this book is a masterpiece of horror. The book itself, a mere 108 pages, is also excellent. Both book and movie have their unique strengths. The movie is better at involving the viewer in the horror of the story. It seems more real than the book, which has a dreamlike quality that makes it seem less dangerous, more distant.

But the book lets you get inside the characters' head, giving you knowledge not just of what they think but of how they think. This is particularly effective when it comes to the villain of the piece, one of the most convincing and most terrifying psychopaths in all of fiction.

The story is similar. A young couple stop at a gas station and one of them disappears, vanishes without a trace. Years pass and the man can't forget the woman. He would do anything to find out what happened. This leads up to the terrifying lines, "Now he knew. It was too awful to know".

I'd like to read more of Krabbé. The writing is perfect and of a very high quality, even in English translation. The two main characters are reflections of each other in eerie and mysterious ways, as doomed by and drawn to each other as Shade and Kinbote in Pale Fire.

The first line is "Smooth as spaceships, the cars full of tourists moved south down the long, wide turnpike". The reference to spaceships is significant in that it foreshadows a thread running through the narrative, a dream about flying through the universe trapped in a golden egg. (The Golden Egg is the book's original title.)



Rob Price
Gutbrain Records
rob + gutbrain.com = email


APPEARANCES


CDs:


Submarine Pictures
Rob Price
Reuben Radding
Matt Moran



I Really Do Not See The Signal
Rob Price
Ellery Eskelin
Trevor Dunn
Jim Black



Get Lost
Rob Price
David Grollman



At Sunset
Rob Price
Ellery Eskelin
Trevor Dunn
Joey Baron



Providence
Mr. Dorgon
Laura Cromwell



Blue Punctilios
Combination No. 10
Rob Price
Victor Rice
Ara Babajian


http://www.amazon.com/Cawthray-price-zankowski/dp/B0017KQ4LG/ref=sr_f3_1?ie=UTF8&s=dmusic&qid=1208606374&sr=103-1
(download)

CPZ
Chris Cawthray
Rob Price
Ed Zankowski


Alice Bierhorst
Joey Baron
Sandy Bell
Jim Black
J. Brown
Shelley Burgon
Chris Cawthray
Jason Crigler
Jonathan Dixon
Mr. Dorgon
Trevor Dunn
Ellery Eskelin
Lee Feldman
Vivienne Flesher
Scott Friedlander
Pete Galub
Greta Gertler
Jen Gilleran
Curtis Hasselbring

Head vs. Wall
Dan Hewins

Chesley Hicks
Kayt Hoch
Jeff Kaiser
Briggan Krauss
Valerie Kuehne
Woody Mann
Rebecca Martin
Joe McCloskey
Terrence McManus
Lucio Menegon
Chris Moore
Matt Moran
Now's the Time
Andy O'Neill
Ed Price
Reuben Radding
Ted Reichman
Ward Schumaker
Tom Shad
Elliott Sharp
Ches Smith


Ark Square
The Astronomy Picture of the Day
Barnacle Press
Lynda Barry
Bear Family
Gabrielle Bell
Stephen R. Bissette
Black Hole Reviews
Boing Boing
Bully Says: Comics Oughta Be Fun!
CD Japan
Cinebeats
Cinematic Titanic

Classic Comics Press
The Comics Reporter
Daily Howler
Doonesbury
Downtown Music Gallery
Drawn & Quarterly
Dusty Groove America
The Fate of the Artist
Film Music Society
Film Score Monthly
Get Your War On
Godzilla Monster Music
Hark! A Vagrant
Here's Park Slope
Illustration House
Japan Society
jwz
The Library of American Comics
macao (actualités du jazz en Champagne-Ardenne)
Melissa Mendes
The Mercury Theatre on the Air
Midnight Eye
Pathologically Polymathic
Sakaya
Mark Schilling
Bruce Schneier
Screen Archives Entertainment
Slow Wave
Soundtrack Collector
Sunday Press
Jillian Tamaki
There, I Fixed It
The Times Literary Supplement
Toho Kingdom
Tokyo Food Page
Tribute Film Classics
xkcd

April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010

August 2010

July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006

January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005
April 2005

March 2005
February 2005

January 2005

New Tax Bill May Be Needed,
Limited Farm Bill Favored

Soundtracks of the Week
217)
Various:
80's Television's Hits

216)
Various:
70's Television's Hits Vol. 2

215) Various:
70's Television's Hits

214)
Various:
60's Television's Hits Vol. 2

213)
Various:
60's Television's Hits

212)
Kanno Yugo:
SP (Security Police)

211)
Michiru Oshima:
Gokusen

210)
Jerry Fielding:
Straw Dogs

209)
Carlo Savina:
Malenka, la nipote del vampiro
&
I diabolici convegni

208)
Waldo De Los Rios:
A Town Called Hell
&
Savage Pampas

207)
Van Cleave:
Robinson Crusoe on Mars

206)
Percy Faith:
The Oscar

205)
Sally Kubota:
The Toyota 2000GT Documentary 1965–1970

204)
The Back-Wash Rhythm Band:
The Golden Breed

203)
War:
Youngblood

202)
Ennio Morricone:
Matchless

201)
Akihiko Matsumoto:
Bayside Shakedown: The Movie

200)
Bernard Herrmann:
White Witch Doctor

199)
Jerry Goldsmith:
The Swarm

198)
Nico Fidenco:
Agente Logan Missione Ypotron

197)
Henry Mancini:
99 & 44/100% Dead!

196)
Michael J. Lewis:
Theater of Blood

195)
The Reds & Michel Rubini:
Manhunter

194)
Elmer Bernstein:
Rampage

193)
John Williams:
Family Plot

192)
Bernard Purdie:
Lialeh

191)
various:
Faces

190)
Kunio Miyauchi:
Ultra Q

189)
Giuliano Sorgini:
The Living Dead at the Manchester Morgue
&
John Cacavas:
Horror Express

188)
Angelo Francesco Lavagnino:
Il castello dei morti vivi (Castle of the Living Dead)

187)
Goblin:
Zombi

186)
De Wolfe Music Library:
Dawn of the Dead

185)
Capitol Hi-"Q" Production Music Library:
Night of the Living Dead

184)
Nico Fidenco:
2+5 Missione Hydra

183)
Stu Phillips:
A Time to Every Purpose, The Name of the Game Is … Kill and The Meal

182)
Laurence Rosenthal:
Requiem for a Heavyweight & A Raisin in the Sun

181)
Nora Orlandi:
The Strange Vice of Mrs. Wardh

180)
Frank Cordell:
Khartoum & Mosquito Squadron

179)
Popol Vuh:
Heart of Glass

178)
John Cameron:
Psychomania

177)
Don Gere:
Werewolves on Wheels

176)
Les Baxter:
Hell's Belles

175)
Max Steiner:
A Summer Place

174)
Luis Bacalov:
Summertime Killer

173)
Basil Poledouris:
Big Wednesday

172)
Les Baxter:
Beach Blanket Bingo

171)
Bernard Herrmann:
The Day the Earth Stood Still

170)
Bernard Herrmann:
The Alfred Hitchcock Hour: Volume 1

169)
Bernard Herrmann:
Beneath the 12-Mile Reef

168)
Bernard Herrmann:
On Dangerous Ground

167)
Chuji Kinoshita:
Mito Koumon

166)
Fukuda Yasuhiko:
Bakuhatsu! Sukeban Hunters: Sokatsu Nagurikomi Sakusen

165)
Yamamoto Naozumi et al.:
All Star Show: Atsumi Kiyoshi

164)
Isao Tomita and The Helpful Soul:
A Thousand & One Nights

163)
Takeo Yamashita:
Playgirl & Playgirl Q

162)
various:
Hawaiian Eye

161)
Morton Stevens:
Hawaii Five-0

160)
Henry Mancini:
The Hawaiians

159)
Elmer Bernstein:
Hawaii

158)
Shunsuke Kikuchi:
Zero Woman: Red Handcuffs

157)
Jerry Goldsmith and Morton Stevens:
Cain's Hundred

156)
Howard Shore:
Crash

155)
Henry Mancini:
Experiment in Terror

154)
Daniele Amfitheatrof:
Bird of Paradise

&
Hugo Friedhofer:
Lydia Bailey

153)
Francis Lai:
Jeune fille libre le soir (The Babysitter)

152)
Igo Kantor, Bert Shefter and Paul Sawtell: Faster, Pussycat! Kill! Kill!
&
James Griffith and Hal Hopper: Lorna
&
Igo Kantor: Vixen

151) John Barry:
The Quiller Memorandum

150)
John Williams:
Black Sunday

149)
Gianni Ferrio:
Black Box Affair: Il Mondo Trema

148)
James Brown:
Black Caesar

147)
Jerry Fielding:
The Black Bird

146)
Gene Page:
Blacula

145)
Vasco Vassil Kojucharov:
Dio Perdoni La Mia Pistola & Anche per Django Le Carogne Hanno Un Prezzo

144) Joe Harnell:
The Bionic Woman: "Once a Thief", "Deadly Ringer: Part 1" & "Bionic Beauty
"
143) James Horner:
Star Trek III: The Search for Spock

142) Nico Fidenco:
La Via Della Prostituzione (Emanuelle and the White Slave Trade)

141) Nico Fidenco:
Emanuelle e gli ultimi cannibali

140) Nico Fidenco:
Emanuelle Around the World

139)
Nico Fidenco:
Emanuelle in America

138)
Nico Fidenco:
Black Emanuelle Goes East

137)
Nico Fidenco:
Black Emanuelle

136)
Stelvio Cipriani:
Il triangolo delle Bermude, Bermude: La fossa maledetta & Uragano … Bermude l'ultimo S.O.S

135)
Taku Izumi:
Giant Space Monster Girara (a.k.a. The X from Outer Space)

134)
Kikuchi Shunsuke:
Edogawa Rampo Series: Akechi Kogoro

133)
Waldo De Los Rios: ¿Quien puede matar a un niño? (Who Can Kill a Child?) & La Residencia (The House That Screamed)
132) Il Reale Impero Brittanico:
Perché si uccidono

131) Patrick Williams:
Cuba

130) Yuji Koseki:
Mothra

129) Marcello Giombini:
Return of Sabata

128) Jerry Fielding:
The Big Sleep

127) Bronislau Kaper:
Home from the Hill

126) Lalo Schifrin:
The Wrath of God

125) Shelly Manne:
Young Billy Young

124) Bernard Herrmann:
Cape Fear

123)
Akira Ifukube:
The Three Treasures
122) Maurice Jarre:
Ma Période Française

121)
Chappell Recorded Music Library:
The Prisoner: The Complete Chappell Recorded Music Library Cues

120) Les Baxter:
Panic in Year Zero!

119) Charles Bernstein:
White Lightning

118)
Ravi Shankar and Ustad Vilayat Khan:
Film India

117) Toru Takemitsu:
Kawaita hana (Pale Flower)

116) Mario Migliardi:
A Come Andromeda

115) Elmer Bernstein:
Stri
pes
114) Antonio Carlos Jobim & Vinicius de Moraes:
Orfeu da Conceição

113) Sadao Bekku:
Matango

112) Mikis Theodorakis:
Z

111) Shelly Manne:
The Proper Time

110) Ennio Morricone:
Corleone

109) Henry Mancini:
The Pink Panther

108) Nino Rota:
Il gattopardo

107) Piero Piccioni:
Il bell'Antonio

106) Earle Hagen:
I Spy

105) Akira Ifukube, Isao Tomita, Kunihiko Murai, Shigeru Ikeno:
Zato Ichi: The Best Cuts

104) Ennio Morricone:
The Five Man Army

103) Joe Harnell:
The Bionic Woman: "Doomsday Is Tomorrow Part 2"
and "The Martians Are Coming, The Martians Are Coming"

102) Gil Mellé:
The Andromeda Strain

101) Kenyon Hopkins:
The Reporter

100) Quincy Jones:
The Deadly Affair

99) The Sandals:
Endless Summer

98) Shelly Manne:
Jazz Gunn

97) Bruno Nicolai:
La Battaglia del Deserto

96) Seitaro Omori:
Arashi o yobu otoko

95) Max Steiner:
She

94) Maurice Jarre:
Lawrence of Arabia

93) Gian Piero Reverberi and Gian Franco Reverberi:
Le Malizie di Venere

Carlo Savina:
Hypnos: Follia di Massacro

Piero Umiliani:
28 Minuti per 3 Millioni di Dollari

92) Yasushi Akutagawa:
Hakkodasan

91) Barry Gray:
UFO

90) James Horner:
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan

89) Jerry Fielding:
The Mechanic

88) Elmer Bernstein:
Cannon for Cordoba and From Noon Till Three

87) Ennio Morricone:
Città Violenta (Violent City)

86) Charles Bernstein:
Mr. Majestyk

85) John Barry:
The White Buffalo

84) Berto Pisano:
La Morte Ha Sorrsio all'Assassino
&
Stefano Liberati & Elio Maestosi:
La Mano Che Nutre La Morte & Le Amanti del Mostro

83) Eric Demarsan:
L'Armée des Ombres (Army of Shadows)

82) Alex North:
Hard Contract

81) Jerry Fielding:
Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia

80) Ernest Gold:
Exodus

79) Andre Previn:
Two for the Seesaw

78) Masao Yagi and Shunsuke Kikuchi:
Kensyu Takakura Shuen Sakuhin Best Selection

77) Marcello Giombini:
Sabata

76) Masaru Sato:
The Film Music of Masaru Satoh Vol. 11

75) Booker T and the MGs:
Up Tight!

74) Ennio Morricone:
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

73) R. D. Burman:
The Train

72) Bernard Herrmann:
North by Northwest

71) Hajime Kubaragi:
Doberman Cop

70) Nico Fidenco & Gianni Dell'Orso:
Sharaz and Ragan

69) Erich Wolfgang Korngold:
The Prince and the Pauper

68) Roy Budd:
Get Carter

67) Laurence Rosenthal:
Who'll Stop the Rain

66) David Grusin:
The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter

65) Bernard Herrmann:
The 7th Voyage of Sinbad

64) Angela Morley:
Captain Nemo and the Underwater City

63) Yugo Kanno:
Suspect X no Kenshin

62) Chuji Kinoshita, Takeo Watanabe and Taichiro Kosugi:
Junko Fuji Best Collection Volume Two

61) Piero Umiliani:
La Morte Bussa Due Volte

60) Barry Gray:
"Stand By for Action!"

59) Maury Laws & Jules Bass:
Mad Monster Party

58) Angelo Francesco Lavagnino:
L'Impero del Sole

57) Jerry Goldsmith, Harry Sukman et al.:
Dr. Kildare

56) Davie Allan & The Arrows:
Cycle Breed

55) Roberto Pregadio & Romano Mussolini:
Kriminal

54) various:
Ein Wigwam Steht in Babelsberg

53) Piero Umiliani:
Due Mafiosi Contro Goldginger and Due Mafiosi Contro Al Capone

52) Frankie Chan:
Ashes of Time

51) Mario Migliardi:
Matalo!

50) David Shire:
The Conversation

49) various:
Go! Cinemania Reel 4: Screaming A Go Go

48) Georges Delerue:
Day of the Dolphin

47) Goblin:
La Via Della Droga

46) Alfred Newman:
The Best of Everything

45) Akira Ifukube:
The Tale of Osaka Castle

44) Philip Green:
All Night Long

43) John Barry:
Starcrash

42) Bronislau Kaper and Heitor Villa-Lobos:
Green Mansions

41) De Wolfe Music Library:
Kung Fu Super Sounds

40)Bernard Herrmann:
The Thing from Another World
&
Dimitri Tiomkin:
Take the High Ground

39) Nora Orlandi:
Il dolce corpo di Deborah

38) Peter Thomas:
Chariots of the Gods

37) Henry Mancini:
Silver Streak

36) R. D. Burman:
Sholay

35) Jim O'Rourke:
United Red Army

34) Ennio Morricone:
…e per tutto un cielo di stelle

33) Ron Grainer:
The Omega Man

32) Isao Tomita & Kunio Miyauchi:
Mighty Jack

31) Miklós Rózsa:
El Cid

30) Robby Poitevin:
Little Rita nel West

29) Hugo Friedhofer:
Boy on a Dolphin

28) David Shire: Farewell, My Lovely and Monkey Shines
27) Yukihiro Sawada:
Yukihiro Sawada's World

26) Bernard Herrmann:
The Kentuckian and Williamsburg: The Story of a Patriot

25) Gladys Knight & The Pips:
Claudine and Pipe Dreams

24) Franz Waxman:
My Cousin Rachel

23) Edwin Astley:
Department S

22) Mikis Theodorakis:
Five Miles to Midnight

21) Bronislau Kaper, Daniele Amfitheatrof and Jeff Alexander:
The Naked Spur: Classic Western Scores from M-G-M

20) Trevor Dunn:
Four Films

19) Les Baxter:
The Dunwich Horror

18) Masaru Sato & Koji Izumi:
Jikiru to Haido

17) Elmer Bernstein:
Gangs of New York, The Journey of Natty Gann and The Scarlet Letter

16) Dominic Frontiere:
The Outer Limits

15) Bernard Herrmann:
Mysterious Island

14) Lalo Schifrin:
Kelly's Heroes

13) Masao Yagi:
Hiko Shojo Yoko (Delinquent Girl Yoko)

12) Albert Elms & Ron Grainer:
Man in a Suitcase

11) Ennio Morricone:
Giornata Nera per l'Ariete

10) Max Steiner:
Pursued

9) José Sola:
Jazz en el Cien Negro Español

8) Bruno Maderna:
La Morte Ha Fatto l'Uovo

7) Mina Aoe & Masahiko Sato:
Onna no Keisatsu

6) various:
Kosmos: Soundtracks of Eastern Germany's Adventures in Space

5) Jerry Goldsmith:
Alien

4) Jacques Loussier:
Dark of the Sun

3) Keiichiro Akagi:
Nikkatsu Collection

2) Delia Derbyshire, Brian Hodgson, David Vorhaus and Dudley Simpson:
The Tomorrow People

1) Luboš Fišer:
Valerie and Her Week of Wonders



Curtis Hasselbring
Rob Price
Ches Smith
Trevor Dunn
Shelley Burgon

(photo by Alice Bierhorst
)

)
Rob Price
Jim Black
Trevor Dunn
Ellery Eskelin
(photo by Scott Friedlander)


Rob Price
Chris Cawthray
Ed Zankowski
(photo by
by Seven Stock)


Rob Price
David Grollman

(photo by Alice Bierhorst)


Rob Price is on other CDs:


Dexter Price
Alice Bierhorst



The Magic Lantern
Alice Bierhorst



Jubilee
Alice Bierhorst



Sonic Demons
Lucio Menegon



Smell the Glove
Mr. Dorgon



Da Whole Thing
Tooth



Dim Sum Clip Job
Harmolodic Jeopardy



Game of Death
Reprisal