Rob Price
Gutbrain Records
rob + gutbrain.com = email


2019 December 30 • Monday

2019's last Soundtrack of the Week, #602, is Gerald Fried's bewitching music for The Baby.

The main theme has a Morricone-ish feel to it (and is also somewhat reminscent of Schifrin's "The Cincinnati Kid) and Fried makes use there and throughout of high-pitched chiming percussion instruments that suggest a nursery. Perhaps a glockenspiel?

Cello is another featured voice, in tracks such as "Evil Eye" and "Baby Dressed Older", the latter of which becomes a hauntingly lovely and groovy piece that's almost something from the lounge and exotica world.

Dramatic orchestral music is a big part of it as well, first heard in "Hatchet Wielders".

"Night Approach is a wonderful take on the main theme that incorporates jazz instrumentation and ideas along with the cello voice and some ambient and atomospheric percussion.

If the movie is half as interesting as the score, it must be something!


2019 December 27 • Friday

Here's an interesting record. It appears to be called 2 2 1 3 2 4 3 4 1 4 1 and is all solo drum pieces, each composed by a different person and all performed by Fritz Hauser on his "clearly defined drumset".

There's a map of his drum set under the tray and it's an extension of the basic kit. There's a bass drum, snare, hi hat, and toms plus an assortment of crashes and rides, some woodblocks and a few other things. So you won't be hearing any crazy weird unfamiliar noises for the most part.

The pieces are all quite different and there's a nice flow to the album. Bun-Ching Lam is the only person to offer two pieces, or one piece in two parts, "Klang 1" and "Klang 2".

(Note that if you retrieve the CD information from iTunes you won't get any of the names of the pieces, and the composer information will be wrong and Mani Planzer's name won't even be there.)

There are some big names on here such as Pauline Oliveros and John Cage and each composer gets a page of the liner notes to say something. The offerings range from a Zen saying to straightforward biographical information. John Cage's cheeky contribution, appropriate for right now, is "Happy New Ears!".

Fritz Hauser states on the back cover that this collection is "more than just a new solo program" but "a pespective" and after listening to it, I agree.

There is much to admire in every piece but of course (and unsurprisingly) I will single out Joey Baron's contribution as being a particular favorite.


2019 December 25 • Wednesday

Well here it is December 25th again, the day we all gather with our family and take the day off work so we can celebrate the anniversary of the first regularly scheduled passenger train in the United States, in South Carolina in 1830.

And also the solstice! If you get paid by the hour, cheer up, for the days are getting longer.

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It's also the time of year that, when we were younger, we used to have a Patrick Swayze Christmas. And while that's still fun and all, this year we had a Robert Mitchum Christmas.

That's right, we finally watched Holiday Affair.

Until yesterday this had been one of the few Robert Mitchum movies I hadn't seen. I became aware of it around Christmas time the last few years because it gets shown on Turner Classic Movies. It wasn't especially popular when it came out but has become something of a holiday staple on television recently, or so it seems.

It's a strange movie in many ways, some of them unsurprisingly sexist and paternalistic, though not in any remarkable way for a movie of its era.

What is remarkable, however, is an epic awkward conversation Wendell Corey and Robert Mitchum when their characters first meet. Here is but a sample.

There were several other baffling elements in this movie, such as the comparison shopper job that Janet Leigh's character has. I've made a note to research what exactly this was and why it was even a job in the first place.

A couple of scenes take place at the Central Park Zoo and I was additionally confused by the signage on this hot dog cart.

Hot dogs, surem and it looks like he sells peanuts, too, but what's with the crab and the swan and the camel?

Anyway, happy Celsius anniversary!


2019 December 23 • Monday

For the 601st Soundtrack of the Week we're continuing to enjoy the efforts of Trunk Records. They just released this Roy Budd score for a movie called The Internecine Project.

It's never been released in its entirety before and this LP contains some music that didn't make it into the movie as well qs some cues which were edited for their use. So there's a lot of new stuff here!

The music in general is funky and groovy but also restrained and laidback.

Fans odf Roy Budd will be happy: slinky electric bass and tablas laying down a tasty foundation while spare figures get expressed above.

It's another excellent release from Johnny Trunk!
2019 December 20 • Friday

As interesting as the stories and record covers library music are, equally satisfying is hearing how good some of the actual music is.

The Unusual Sounds book has this accompanying two-record set.

The first track is one of my favorite pieces, which I first heard as a teenager, as the music for a "Coming Attractions" bumper that was from the 1970s, I believe.

The whole collection is a groovy delight and quite impressive!


2019 December 18 • Wednesday

We hadn't even finished admiring Johnny Trunk's book of library music album covers when another library music book, Unusual Sounds, arrived on our doorstep!

While it has its share of gorgeous covers, it also has quite a bit of text about library music and the people who created it.

But the covers are probably what most peopler will remember!

If you can't think of a good cover design, go with a weird title.

We were happy to see Delia Derbyshire in here.


2019 December 16 • Monday

It's the 600th Soundtrack of the Week!

We should do something special. A lot of people have wanted there to be more tennis in our soundtrack selections [citation needed]. We can’t bring ourselves to do anything with Match Point or Borg vs. McEnroe though we might reasonably be expected to listen to the Strangers on a Train score someday or perhaps the music from one of the iterations of Prince of Tennis. (I enjoyed the live-action movie).

Have we already done the music for Ace o nerae!? We have covered music from The Bionic Woman. Jaime Sommers was a former tennis pro and the opening credits showed her on the court as well as crushing a tennis ball with her bionic hand.

And we also did another tennis-pro tv show, I Spy, in which international tennis tournaments were the cover for spy Robert Culp’s espionage activity.

But nevertheless the people have spoken [citation needed], and we will respond with Delitto al Circolo del Tennis, whose music is composed by Phil Chilton & Peter L. Smith and performed by The Rage Within (misspelled as The Rage Whitin on the cover).

Rock bands with electric guitars, electric bass, drums and... harpsichord! are a favorite thing of mine. The Rage Within is such a band. And to make it even better, the guitarist likes to play the guitar in a jangly and arpeggiated fashion a lot of the time and will help you remember that "arpeggio" means "harp-like". The keyboard player gets behind some groovy organs too and the band explores several different grooves and handles instrumental and vocal numbers with equal ease.

The main theme is a vocal number, "She’s a Born Loser", whose lyrics don’t stray too far from the title and features a riff shamelessly stolen from "Strawberry Fields Forever".

After that comes a mysterious and atmospheric instrumental track, "Midnight Ride", which intriguely mixes flower power pop baroque ideas with some vaguely Middle Eastern motifs. There are two takes of this, at different tempos and with a much wetter guitar sound on the slower one.

"When all is said and done / What battle have you won? / Do you think that it was right / To wander in the night / Alone without a guide, without direction?" So begins the mellow pop number "Upon Reflection", which gets a lot of mileage out of the 12-string acoustic guitar.

"Willow Tree" has that baroque pop harpsichord and electric guitar thing going on but the lyrics are a little more startling: "Child is to the man / Like a sword is to the hand / It can kill with a single blow". The band plays nicely and there are some reassuring vocal harmonies. A further source of comfort can possibly be found in deciding that the lyrics don’t make much sense.

Things get into almost a soul groove with the sultry "Benedetta’s Theme", an instrumental that blends electric guitar and harpsichord together really well.

Organ kicks off "Someone Took a Picture", a laidback sort-of soul instrumental and then a different organ takes off snarling for the scrappy tune "Lilla".

A vocal version of "Someone Took a Picture" comes next at a brisker tempo and then things pick up a bit more with the sunshine pop vocal number "Father’s Child": "They sent you to school / And you broke all the rules / You know that you want to be free / Looking around / For a hole in the ground / I wonder how good you could be".

"Musik Theme" is a slow brushes-on-snare number with vibes accompanying the electric guitar and a surprisingly chunk electric bass guitar sound. The melody is a bit reminiscent of "A Taste of Honey".

Another laidback jazzier number comes next with "A Real Taste". This time there’s just regular piano in there.

"Taste of Evil" picks up the pace with a kind of moonshine country rock groove and lyrics about the devil’s gun and working hard for the rich man’s land while children starve etc.

The rest of the record explores these themes and creates variations on them or parallels to them as "Romantic Lounge" or "Country Atmosphere" or "Blood Tinted Green Grass" and so on.

There is also a bongo track called "Bongos Suspense". It’s a great record!
2019 December 13 • Friday

We're still not over Johnny Trunk's book of beautiful wrappers when this other book of album covers of library music records arrives as an early Christmas gift.

This revised second edition of The Music Library makes this a rather lucky Friday the 13th!

I have a handful of library music recordings here. A few on CD and several LPs, most of the latter coming from Pandemonium Books and Discs. They were a little pricier than I would have liked but they were irresistible and the high prices they fetch is noted by Mr. Trunk in his introduction to this new edition.

The music has a huge range and surely part of the appeal is not knowing what you're going to get from any of these records. And while, as I understand it, these records were never commercially available in stores but were distributed only within industries (movies, tv, radio, for soundtrack and various commercial purposes), the covers are way beyond mere eye-catching and quite gorgeous.

If anybody ever applied the lessons to be learned from the Stenberg brothers to album covers, those people must have designed some of the library music records.

Okay, that one is fairly simple but it's devastating. And look at the lettering. Done by hand, I reckon. And also stripes. Perhaps this bounces right off you but it pierces me to the core.

I realize that this one is quite similar—different color stripes, different lettering (though also by hand, I reckon)—but we're including it here because Mr. Trunk notes that "Jimmy Page features". I want to hear it!

"Easy listening, hip psychedelia, dramatics, some fine industrials." What more do you want? Some high speed jazz perhaps?

This one is described as "Deranged, guitar led psychedelia". There's no way you don't wish you were listening to it right now.

We'll just let the covers speak for themselves now.


2019 December 11 • Wednesday

Happy birthday!!!

New on our shelves is a new book from Trunk Records. Actually it's not on our shelves yet because we can't stop looking at it. Jonny Trunk's Wrappers Delight is a gorgeous collection of colorful and striking wrappers, mostly from candies and sodas and such. It is a marvel to behold.

This will be available in stores early next year but you can get it at the Trunk Records website now. I think I joined a Kickstarter for this. My book came with a t-shirt, also available as a separate purchase from Trunk Records.

These photos won't do justice to the book but putting some of them up here was irresistible.

Nice to see The Bionic Woman, Columbo and Kojak!

Some of those candy cigarette wrappers are devastating.

That guitar!


2019 December 09 • Monday

For the 599th Soundtrack of the Week we sat down with Zdeněk Liška's score for Ikarie XB-1, a Czech sci-fi movie apparently based on a Stanislaw Lem story and an influence on Star Trek. I saw it on the big screen maybe about twenty years ago and enjoyed it.

A mixture of strange electronic bleeps and bloops along with some more conventional musical instruments and scoring make up the main title cue.

After that comes a similar electro-acoustic hybrid, "Surveillance on Standby/Alpha Centauri", which veers between some solo clarinet playing and proto-industrial sound manipulation.

A plaintive and mysterious electric guitar with some subtle electronic responses from mysterious sources makes up the fascinating "A Small Stone in Space".

“Sunflower for a New Star” is kind of like avantgarde Hawaiian music, with dreamy and swooping electric guitar lines weaving in and out of electronic noises.

This is followed by a very delicate and spacious piece for vibes and electronics, "The Backwoods of the Universe".

"Silver Ball (Věra in Cameo)" is riveting and atmospheric mostly acoustic piece in 6/4 that features the piano. Something about the groove and the feel of it, as well as the instrumentation, might remind you pleasantly of Sun Ra.

The next cue, "E.V.A. Will Teach You" is also along the lines of Sun Ra, but a mixture of Sun Ra with surf and cartoon music. It's hard to describe: strange but pleasant, pulsating and insistent but not maddeningly so.

That's what you'll hear on Side A. Side B begins with "The Tiger's Breath", a long track of mostly electronic sounds and music, though there is an expansive organ section, eventually joined by some more acoustic instruments for a more traditional sounding approach to scoring. Some of this is similar to some of what you hear in old episodes of Doctor Who.

More weird electronic noises announce that "The Dark Star" is here. I wonder if John Carpenter saw this movie and was influenced by it and its music.

"'Do Not Eat the Fruit'" has an Alphaville-ish computer voice speaking in Czech, over more far out electronic music. Presumably some of this is musique concrète. And perhaps computer voice is saying not to eat the fruit.

After that comes "The Awakening", in which strings are the featured voice, though of course accompanied by some nimble electronics work.

"Voyage to the End (Of the Universe)" is another strange and cool electronics piece, this one with more of a groove to accompany its various blastery and transistory sounds.

Then we come to the end with "The White Planet", a heavy and dramatic orchestral piece (with electronics accompaniment of course) that perhaps is meant to go with a triumphant resolution, though it would probably go with an unhappy ending just as well.


2019 December 06 • Friday

Ken Greenhall's second novel, Hell Hound, is as powerful and unusual as his first, Elizabeth. Just these two books have given me the impression that he was an extraordinary and brilliant writer, under-rated and overlooked, somebody whose work has a lot to teach us about the art and craft of writing.

The book does have one big problem, however: the title. It gives the impression of a demon dog and certainly Baxter, the dog in question, is a terrifying presence in the book.

But Baxter isn't a horror genre monster. A more apt title for this novel would have been Stranger in a Strange Land, though of course that was taken.

What's the story? Baxter is an alien. Okay, he's a dog, but he lives among humans, an alien species that he finds variously contemptible, confusing, pathetic, stupid, attractive or worthy of respect, depending on the person and the situation.

While the story is told from the points of view of at least a dozen different characters, all residing in the same small town, Baxter is the only one whose voice we read in the first person singular—until the last page of the book when a shift from third person to first person concludes the narrative with a silent explosion of devastating dramatic intensity.

While Baxter does some horrible things—murder, infanticide— his alienated and sociopathic reality isn't in and of itself horrible because he's a dog. His lack of interest in the value of human life and human morality can be safely presumed by any reader with only the slightest knowledge of the natural world and the behavior of animals. (Animals even including humans, sadly, the difference being our need to invent contorted rationalizations for our atrocities.)

It's interesting to note how Greenhall steers his characters and the story away from the direction that, say, Stephen King might have taken it.

When Baxter ends up as the companion to a thirteen-year-old psychopathic boy obsessed with Hitler and sexually aroused by violence, who sees in Baxter an instrument and a weapon more than a companion, you might find yourself thinking of Idle Hands and of course Cujo.

The boy builds a pit in which he wants Baxter to fight and kill other dogs. Eventually he puts another boy in there, a younger child, and turns Baxter loose on him as well.

In most writers' hands, that's probably what would happen. It seems like the standard way to escalate everything and move the plot forward. I can imagine a writer being steered in that direction in a creative writing class just as I can imagine any number of professional writers instinctively going that way.

But Ken Greenhall was a true original with a twisted and unique vision. You'll have to read it to find out what happens.


2019 December 04 • Wednesday

The Jimi Hendrix/Billy Cox/Buddy Miles Band of Gypsys Fillmore East concerts have just been released again and if somebody had put out this music in this way decades ago, they would have saved me a lot of money.

Every time I've come across some recording of this band, I've bought it. But finally we have the complete recordings of this two-night run from New Year's Eve 1969 and New Year's Day 1970.

Some of these performances I thought I had listened to so many times that they couldn't possibly reveal anything new to me but here we are, listening to songs I've heard hundreds of times before and they sound new.

Of all the recent Hendrix releases, this is absolutely one of the greatest and most important and it sounds fantastic.

Will I keep all the other versions of this material that I've been buying for the last thirty years or so? Of course. But I don't expect ever to listen to them again.

This is it. A spectacular release of some incredibly powerful music and some of Jimi's greatest guitar playing.


2019 December 02 • Monday

The 598th Soundtrack of the Week is Basil Poledouris's music for On Deadly Ground.

The main title music starts sparsely and quietly with what sounds like a wooden flute. Then strings and percussion come in for a full, rich sound propelled forward by a triplet feel.

A heroic action setting gets introduced in “Aegis Flameout”, which has some of the force and power of John Barry’s Bond music.

Tension and suspense defused by heroism are the key elements of the first half of “Fire Out”, another cue which could almost be right for a Bond movie. The second half is airier and more meditative.

“Forrest Doesn’t Fight” starts out with a lush sweeping passage that suggests an epic storyline, then relaxes into a calm, lovely, peaceful cue.

Suspense and menace return in “Kill Hugh”, with some insistent percussion, dissonant strings and serpentine horn work. There’s also some interesting use of synths throughout and an almost otherworldy feel to the music. I could imagine it being used in a Star Trek<\em> movie.

The dissonance and menace return, along with some serene flute playing, for “Hugh Torture”, which is a surprisingly laidback piece.

That almost bucolic feel is continued, along with urgency created by pulsating synth percussion, in “Forrest Blown Up”.

Some delicately arpeggiated lines, gently lilting strings, solid horn playing and subtle percussion pick up the thread in “Forrest Found”. The main idea of this cue then gets developed further in “Chief Meets Forrest”.

After this comes the eight-minute “The Journey”, a suite of various themes and ideas from the pastoral to the heroic, the rhythmic to the textural.

Violence returns in “The Chief Is Shot”, but it’s another cue that’s surprisingly wistful and uplifting.

“Snowmobile Ride” has a great groove with energetic strings and soaring horns above it.

Then there’s a “Gunfight at Hugh’s”, the first straight-up action cue here, and it’s a blast of energy with great lines for the horns and strings.

Contemplative and suspenseful swirling strings come out of a pensive beginning in “The Mercs/Forrest Decides”. It ends with driving synth percussion and heroic horns that morph into a more organic and thicker sound.

“Safe House/Chopper Explosion” has an almost metronomic percussion part layered with the maniacal synth percussion figure as well as some martial snare drum work. This is contrasted with delicate string work, interrupted by explosive orchestral parts and eventually dominated by a very strong acoustic percussion groove. There’s even some nice guitar playing near the end.

For “Horse Chase”, Poledouris comes up with another driving heroic theme that blends perfectly with everything that came before.

Blaring horns announce that “Forrest Enters Aegis”, which sounds like a place of considerable tension and danger.

“Lights Out” beguns with a John Carpenter-esque keyboard part before returning to the percussive and soaring epic feel that makes up most of this score.

More martial and action music, as well as more sweeping heroics, are the contents of “Mutiny/Setting the Bombs”.

This release has an extended version of the strong and lyrical “Jennings Goes Down”, which swells in intensity and builds to several bursts of excitement over the course of its six minutes.

“The Warning” is gentle and thoughtful piece with plaintive strings and winds above softly bubbling electronic percussion, a chance to catch your breath after the heaviness of the previous track.

Moods of danger and heroism return for the end credits, with another strong rhythmic foundation for stirring orchestral figures.

As a couple of bonus tracks there are also an alternate version of “The Journey” and the music for the Seagal/Nasso production company logo.