Barocco / Les soeurs Brontė


Quartet Records 07/08/2021 CD - 500 copies
 

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# Track   Duration
BAROCCO (1976)
1.Générique1:52
2.La valise0:48
3.Romance0:45
4.Les temps modernes1:07
5.Vent sur les affiches1:23
6.S’en sortir1:40
7.La radicale4:07
8.On se voit se voir (Vocal: Marie-France)2:19
9.Portrait Robot2:13
10.La poursuite1:30
11.Nocturne0:48
12.Les mers du sud1:28
13.Romance / Mais vous vivez de quoi?3:11
14.Les mers du sud1:28
 
LES SOEURS BRONTĖ (1979)
15.Les soeurs Brontė–Mouvement 16:03
16.Les soeurs Brontė–Mouvement 23:01
17.Les soeurs Brontė–Mouvement 33:18
18.Les soeurs Brontė–Mouvement 43:51
19.Les soeurs Brontė–Mouvement 52:57
20.Les soeurs Brontė–Mouvement 61:53
 45:42
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Barocco / Les soeurs Brontė

Added on Friday, July 16, 2021  

Barocco / Les soeurs Brontė

Quartet Records, in collaboration with Gruppo Sugar, presents the CD release of a Philippe Sarde and André Téchiné double-header: Barocco and Les Soeurs Brontė.

Quartet Records, in collaboration with Gruppo Sugar, presents the CD release of a Philippe Sarde and André Téchiné double-header: Barocco and Les Soeurs Brontė.

Barocco (1976) stars Isabelle Adjani and Gérard Dépardieu in a Hitchcock-like thriller, strongly inspired by the doppelgänger plot of Vertigo. As a blackmailing plot goes south, a young woman finds a strange fascination with a man who looks just like her boyfriend whom he had just killed. Sarde’s score is Herrmann-inspired with repetitive, fragmented thematic material rounding out the mystery of mistaken identities. The soundtrack also includes the original song “On se volt se voir” performed by Marie-France Garcia. Philippe Sarde won the César Award for this score, which is one of his best and most valued works.

Les Soeurs Brontė (1979) stars Isabelle Adjani, Marie-France Pisier and Isabelle Huppert as the Brontė sisters, whose singular contributions to British literature such as Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre marked a new era for awakening female authors. Sarde’s elegant work for this film was to adapt several classical pieces, especially by Schumann, as an underscore.

This CD release issues complete versions of both scores. Barocco was already quite well-represented on the original LP, but the three bonus tracks fill in the remaining gaps in the score.
For Les Soeurs Brontė, an original music-and-dialogue LP was released in 1979; now Quartet Records present the score in six movements as conceived by Sarde, without dialogue.

This album has been produced by Edouard Dubois and the composer, and mastered by Chris Malone from first-generation master tapes provided by Gruppo Sugar. The richly illustrated package features liner notes by Gergely Hubai discussing the films and scores.


More info at: Official Web Site Quartet Records

More info at: Composer Philippe Sarde Official Site





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