The Verdict / The Seven-Ups / M.A.S.H.
Kritzerland Records - KR 20033-7


Kritzerland 05/25/2018 CD - 1000 copies (857252003378)
 

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# Track   Duration
THE VERDICT
1.The Bottom 
2.No Deal 
3.Trouble 
4.Betrayal 
5.End Title 
 
THE SEVEN-UPS (unused score)
6.Main Title 
7.Antique Store 
8.Car Wash/Rip-Off 
9.A Close Shave 
10.Festa 
11.Cops and Robbers 
12.Car Wash II/False Alarm 
13.The Garage 
14.Vito Warns Moon 
15.To Max’s House 
16.Toro Gets Out 
17.The Boys Show 
18.Goodbye Moon 
19.End Title 
 
BONUS TRACKS
20.The Kidnapping (deleted scene) 
21.A Close Shave (alternate) 
22.Toro Gets Out (alternate) 
23.The Boys Show (alternate) 
24.End Title (alternate) 
 
MASH – THE TELEVISION SERIES
25.Main Title 
26.Germ Warfare 
27.I Hate a Mystery 
28.Chief Surgeon Who 
29.Requiem for a Heavyweight 
30.Edwina 
31.Showtime 
32.End Title 
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The Verdict / The Seven-Ups / M.A.S.H.

Added on Friday, April 20, 2018  

The Verdict / The Seven-Ups / M.A.S.H.

Johnny Mandel has written many classic scores over the years, including The Americanization of Emily, The Sandpiper (which yielded the hit song, “The Shadow of Your Smile” for which he won an Academy Award), Harper, The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming, Point Blank, Pretty Poison, MASH, The Last Detail, Freaky Friday.Agatha, Caddyshack, and Deathtrap, to name a few. Here we present three great examples of Mandel magic.
The Verdict, with a screenplay by David Mamet, based on a novel by Barry Reed, tells the story of a once-promising attorney who was framed for jury tampering and who is now an alcoholic reduced to ambulance chasing. He takes on a case, and that case becomes a life-changer for him and a chance for redemption. Brilliantly directed by Sidney Lumet, with Paul Newman turning in one of his all-time best performances, The Verdict was a box-office and critical hit, garnering raves for Newman and the exemplary supporting cast, which included Charlotte Rampling, Jack Warden, James Mason, Milo O’Shea, Lindsay Crouse, and Wesley Addy.
For The Verdict, Mandel wrote a very short, very sparse, but hugely effective score. Running under fourteen minutes, but placed perfectly in the film, it’s amazing how such a little amount of music can still work so powerfully and make such an impact. Sometimes less is more and Mandel’s score for The Verdict is a perfect example of it.
Rare is the film composer who hasn’t had a score replaced at one time or another, especially from the 1970s on. And with The Seven-Ups it happened to Mandel. Producer Philip D’Antoni had already had a huge success with the film Bullitt, starring Steve McQueen, and The French Connection, starring Gene Hackman, Roy Scheider, and Tony Lo Bianco. For The Seven-Ups, D’Antoni brought back Roy Scheider and Tony Lo Bianco to star, and populated the film with excellent New York character actors.
Mandel turned in a terrific score, but it was very different in style to the score Don Ellis had done for D’Antoni’s The French Connection. In the end, D’Antoni went back to Ellis, who provided an excellent score that was much more in keeping with the feel of The French Connection. But thanks to the new Twilight Time Blu-ray, one can see exactly how the film would have played with Mandel’s score and, as always, that’s fascinating to watch. Much of it works really well and at times it seems to give the film an emotional underpinning that the Ellis score never does. As a listening experience, the Mandel score is tops.
The previous CD release only had about nineteen minutes of the Mandel score – here, for the first time, you get the complete score, close to forty minutes. It’s a major score from a great composer.
Two years after the release of the 1970 smash hit film, MASH, writer/producer Larry Gelbart developed M*A*S*H for television. Starring Alan Alda, Wayne Rogers, MacLean Stevenson, Gary Burghoff, Loretta Swit, Larry Linville, and others, M*A*S*H hit the airwaves on September 17, 1972. While it would undergo several major cast changes over its eleven seasons, the show was must-see TV right through to its final episode, “Goodbye, Farewell, and Amen,” which aired on February 28, 1983. That extended finale was, at the time, the most-watched and highest-rated single television episode in U.S. television history, with a record-breaking 125-million viewers.
As with the film, Johnny Mandel provided some of the scores for the TV show, along with his iconic title theme. For this world-premiere release, we feature his main and end title from the show, plus suites from six season one episodes.

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