A genuine oddity from the 1960s, the music from softcore
hippie exploitation flick Psychedelic Sex Kicks is the 887th
Soundtrack of the Week.
Who made this music? It's not so clear. There are credits for Mark Ewdy on sitar ("zitar"),
Jim Mullins on tabla and Oboe Reed on electronic effects and maybe that's the whole
story. All the music itself sounds improvised and mostly features the sounds
of Indian classical music if not its forms. Someone is playing tamboura
in here as well, of course, and maybe even a drum kit sometimes in addition to tabla. Every track is this mixture of faux-Indian noodling with occasional
electronic fooling around. It isn't bad but it isn't compelling, either. The tellingly initialed Lysergic Sitar Delusions is one of the few truly instrumental
pieces, while most others feature some kind of voice-over narration, whether
it's in the form of a square male voice talking about what a drag it is when "the only
grass around is what you walk on and the only acid in town is boric" or breathy female
voice intoning "Teach me love, enlightenment, pleasure". This is an archival relic most noteworthy for its obscurity but hey it's
not terrible.
2025 December 12 • Friday
Steven C. Smith, author of an excellent biography of Bernard Herrmann,
recently released this book specifically about Herrmann's association
with Alfred Hitchcock. It's called
Hitchcock and Herrmann: The Friendship and
Film Scores that Changed Cinema.
Certainly some of this material is already covered in Smith's Herrmann
biography, and some of the Hitchcock stuff will likely be familiar also. But it's good to have all of this in one place and coherently organized. And
the various analyses of how Herrmann's music works and how certain tendencies
were essential to his style are quite good and made accessible to the general reader. The tracking of Herrmann's influence beyond the films that he scored
can be hit or miss. The success of a Quentin Tarantino film or Lady Gaga
music video probably isn't especially dependent on the use of Herrmann cues.
(And did Smith neglect to tag the whistling of the Twisted Nerve
theme in Kill Bill?) One really neat Easter egg that Smith includes is John Williams's
dropping Herrmann's "The Madhouse" cue into his score for Star Wars. The source material available is what it is and Smith leans on a BBC
radio play that dramatized Hitchcock and Herrmann's time together. I haven't
heard this but I wasn't impressed by the selections quoted herein. Herrmann admirers will have to read this book and it's well worth their
time. Hitchcock fans, too, will enjoy approaching the director from this
angle. The first line is "The screen stretched across the studio wall
more than twenty feet wide and eight feet tall".
2025 December 10 • Wednesday
Steve Cropper left us a week ago. What an extraordinary guitarist he was.
And composer, too. All those guitar parts from those Stax recordings,
I guess that technically they're simple but they sure seem pretty
hard to me. And imagine being the person who just came up with them? Check out the guitar solo on the Booker T. & The MGs recording of
"Working in the Coal Mine" for one example… And speaking of Booker T. Jones, his autobiography, Time Is Tight: My Life,
Note by Note is amazing.
The Memphis of his youth was so fertile when it came to music. Jones grew up
with Phineas Newborn on his paper route, hearing the Staple Singers
at his local church and playing with Mahalia Jackson
while only about twelve years old. And he played several instruments, not just keyboards. He studied music at Indiana
University, driving back to Memphis on the weekends to record with the MGs and other
Stax artists. Like so many musicians, Jones gets screwed out of money. And then, after Martin Luther King, Jr.,
is shot, Memphis is just over for him. He moves to Malibu and buys a ranch—even though it's
against the law for an African American to buy property there!—smokes a lot of pot, listens to
The Eagles and hangs out with his neighbor Willie Nelson, which leads to the recording
of the famous Stardust album. One feature of this book, which might be unique, is that Jones composed several
musical accompaniments for the books itself. The music is printed at the back
and footnotes alert the reader to play whatever piece is meant to go with
particular passages. This was a great read. The first line is "Acapulco Gold—like dinner at a fine
restaurant some have described it".
2025 December 08 • Monday
Godzilla will always be the favorite around here but of course we
have time for Gamera, too. Tadashi Yamanouchi's score for Giant Monster Gamera,
the turtle's first outing, is the 886th
Soundtrack of the Week.
The original Gamera movie was in black and white and presented its title monster
as a serious threat, although this would almost immediately change. The Gamera
movies became much more geared towards children with the creature as a clear
defender of human beings and the planet Earth. But this first movie is moody and doomy and clearly a rival film studio's
attempt to cash in on the Godzilla phenomenon. This goes for Yamanouchi's music as well, which deploys strings, percussion,
organ and the occasional odd instrument (musical saw perhaps?) for
eerie effect. He comes up with cues that rival Ifukube's for beauty, strangeness
and fascination and of course there's a march. Gamera's roar is also similar to Godzilla's roar and why not? This is another superb Cinema-kan release and includes a horribly
cheery vocal single.
2025 December 05 • Friday
Mary Orr wrote a short story called "The Wisdom of Eve" that eventually became
the movie All About Eve. Years later she wrote a novel with Broadway
and the theatre milieu as
its setting, Diamond in the Sky.
Brenda Hale is a star who's getting a bit worryingly old (sound familiar?).
When a successful young television writer shows her a historical play he's written,
she recognizes a truly great work that could also be a tremendous vehicle for her. The book's main focus is the crossing of sexual and professional relationships,
as Brenda seduces the young man in order to manipulate him into
expanding her character's part at the expense of the other characters
andthe play itself, while also blackmailing her rich ex-husband into
financing the venture. The writer is also seeing a young woman that he cares for but lacks
the strength to be honest about what he's up to with Brenda Hale.
There's also the director, happily married, who was an ex-lover
of Brenda's as well as two gay men who start sleeping together
so that one of them can get a plum job in the production. The financial risks as well as the emotional ones are always present,
and Orr isn't afraid to let things play out the way they very well might
in real life. Just as All About Eve ended on something of
a grim note, the resolution of Diamond in the Sky
isn't sugar-coated. It was a fun read and I'm going to look for "The Wisdom of Eve". The first line is "Christ!".
2025 December 03 • Wednesday
It's Gold Medal paperback time again! Here's Suddenly by Shotgun
by Norman Daniels!
This was a really good private eye novel that doesn't have a private eye in it.
The hero is Jordan Mace, a lawyer who works for a lawyer named Desmond Cabot. Their relationship is kind of like Archie Goodwin and Nero Wolfe's, but not
nice. Cabot is brilliant but manipulative and greedy and lacking in empathy. Mace has been twice married and twice divorced, both times to brilliant women
whom he loved and who loved him back. But they had rival careers and
Cabot's demand that Mace be on call at all hours, every day, didn't
leave much room for marriage. The set-up for this one is that a ravishing movie star, Roxanne Royal,
basically Marilyn Monroe, has just escaped a murder attempt. A woman
who looks like her, employed as her stand-in and driving her car,
has just been killed by a shotgun blast that took off her entire head. Cabot and Mace let everyone think that Royal is dead while they try to
figure out what's going on and protect her from whoever is trying to
kill her. This involves a descent into a totally corrupt California coastal gambling
town called Panamo, kind of a discount Personville. Daniels appears to have been making up the story and the plot as he
went along, as each turn in the road just sort of appears as
necessary. The only consistent thread is Mace's first-person narration
and he's an amusing character, given to witty remarks without overdoing it. It was fun to read with some deft writing, vivid characters and some moments
of sex and violence that were more explicit than usual. If you've read
any Mickey Spillane you'll probably guess where it's going to end up. The first line is "It was a Hollywood super-colossal, technicolor, wide
screen, panoramic special of a funeral—for a girl without a head!".
2025 December 01 • Monday
For the 885th Soundtrack of the Week, here's another great jazz interpretation of a well known score: Eddie Harris's Jazz from "Breakfast at Tiffany's".

Of course it starts with "Moon River" but the combo of tenor sax, electric guitar, piano, bass and drums does a little something unusual. In the beginning the guitar plays occasional staccato, reverby, percussive notes, sounding more like something from the surf rock world than the jazz world. Eventually the guitarist—I think it's Joe Diorio—gets to cut loose for a solo and it's a great one.
The grooviest tune on the original soundtrack is "Something for Cat", which has always been irresistible for me. On the Harris album it gets a reimagining with a very different feel, extremely syncopated and with a riot of rhythmic attack. It's genius.
Then the short "Sally's Tomato" is a solid piece of West Coast swing/bop that could have been dropped into any episode of Peter Gunn.
The "Mr. Yunioshi" track starts with a stereotypically "Japanese" musical intro that, thankfully, is nowhere near as offensive as the portrayal of the character in the movie but is nonetheless disappointing. With this out of the way, though, the band takes off with a very fast jazz approach and an incredible solo from Harris.
Bluesy and brisk jazz follows for "Big Blow Out", which also features trombone and vibes, and then there's an offkilter rhythmic feel for "Hub Caps and Tail Lights", with the pianist perhaps gesturing toward Monk at times.
The title track, is a bright and cheerful jazz number that swings easily and pleasantly while "Latin Golightly" is just way too short. You want that infectious groove to keep going and going.
Inevitably things will slow down and it happens here with "Holly", a beautiful midtempo piece with brushes on snare and exquisite playing from Harris. Did Paul Desmond ever play this piece? It would be great to hear and of course he adored Audrey Hepburn.
Finally there's the laidback and Latin influenced "Loose Caboose", in which you can hear the Mancini touch quite clearly, even transplanted to this territoru, followed by "The Big Heist", another straight jazz number that reminded me a lot of Mancini's Peter Gunn music.
There are many jazz records based on movie soundtracks, and quite a few specific to Henry Mancini. This is one of the best.

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