See No Evil


Film | Date de sortie: 15/09/2014 | Sortie du film: 1971 | Type: CD
 

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# Track   Duration
1.Main Title2:00
2.The Car1:01
3.Memories Of Steve0:28
4.First Night, First Prize0:29
5.The Stable0:58
6.The Dance Club1:25
7.The Upper Field0:45
8.Phonograph Record No. 10:46
9.Phonograph Record No. 21:08
10.The Silver Bracelet0:40
11.Sarah’s Theme2:09
12.Jacko To Stable0:31
13.Sandy Is Dead2:24
14.Dandy Star3:31
15.Blind Terror1:28
16.Broken Glass1:20
17.Jacko Pursues Sarah1:12
18.Escape!1:00
19.Field And Clay Pit3:55
20.End Credits1:01
 28:10
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The 1971 Columbia thriller See No Evil pits a blind woman against a savage killer. The film is spotted very sparingly, allowing many tense scenes to play out unscored. Even within composer Elmer Bernstein’s cues the music is often made more powerful by being silent. Chamber music textures abound throughout the orchestration. Bernstein’s use of strings, alto flute, piano, electric guitar, forceful trombone octaves, bass clarinet, glittering glockenspiel, brittle xylophone, clarinet doubled two octaves higher by piccolo are colors carefully calculated to make the most impact but often with the least “noise.” Everything in this
concise-but-superb score has its point.

For this premiere release of Elmer Bernstein’s complete soundtrack (the third and final score commissioned for the film), Intrada fortunately was able to locate the two-track stereo session masters, recorded and mixed by Richard Lewzey at Cine-Tele Sound Studios (CTS) in London in July 1971. For decades these tapes appeared to have been lost but, in fact, they survived in full stereo and in beautiful condition, with every cue present—including Bernstein’s three brief original source music cues.

In the film, Sarah (Mia Farrow), a young woman recently blinded in a horse-riding accident, is adjusting to her new circumstances under the loving care of her aunt, uncle and cousin. One morning she wakes and, thinking everyone else is still asleep, goes to the kitchen to make coffee. She has no idea that her cousin lies dead in the next bed, that her uncle’s bloody corpse lies in the bathtub and that her aunt’s dead eyes are staring at her from the living room. Nor does she realize that the murderer’s safety will soon hinge on one more death: hers.


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