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THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN: 50th ANNIVERSARY REMASTERED & EXPANDED LIMITED EDITION (2-CD SET)
LLLCD 1655
Music composed and conducted by John Barry
Title song sung by Lulu
Lyrics by Don Black
Limited edition of 5000 units
Exclusive release: Sold exclusively at www.lalalandrecords.com and 007Store.com for the first 90 days of release
La-La Land Records, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, EON Productions and Universal Music Enterprises mark the 50th Anniversary of the ninth 007 film The Man With The Golden Gun, with a remastered and expanded 2-CD re-issue of composer John Barry's original motion picture score. Produced by Albert R. Broccoli and Harry Saltzman, the 1974 film stars Roger Moore as James Bond with Christopher Lee as Francisco Scaramanga, and is directed by Bond veteran Guy Hamilton.
Hot off a stellar debut in Live And Let Die, Moore returns in The Man With The Golden Gun, a film that would also mark the return of Oscar® winning composer John Barry to the franchise, providing his first score for Moore’s 007. The composer accompanies the globe-trotting adventure with yet another accomplished work – with 007 motifs, familiar and new, blended within an irresistible meld of classic orchestra, rock and jazz. With lyrics by Don Black, the bombastic title song is brought to life by iconic Scottish singer Lulu. Expanded beyond previous soundtrack editions and with highly enhanced audio quality, The Man With The Golden Gun is unleashed like never before within this deluxe presentation.
Produced by Neil S. Bulk, remixed by Chris Malone from high-resolution digital transfers of 2" tapes provided by MGM and mastered by Doug Schwartz, this 2-CD release, limited to only 5,000 units, showcases the music of The Man With The Golden Gun in thrilling and comprehensive fashion. Disc 1 presents the score in chronological order and features music never before available. This is followed by additional music including source music recorded for the film and the demo take of the title song. Disc 2 presents the original 1974 soundtrack album, newly assembled for this release. The new, exclusive liner notes are by journalist and author Jon Burlingame, and the art design is by Dan Goldwasser.
DISC 1
SCORE PRESENTATION 65:49
1. Gun Barrel / The Island 1:36
2. Scaramanga’s Fun House 4:37
3. Main Title: The Man With The Golden Gun (Performed By Lulu) 2:35
4. Getting The Bullet 2:43
5. Macau / Forever Hold Your Piece 2:04
6. Following Andrea 1:43
7. Scaramanga Strikes 2:05
8. Hip’s Trip 3:19
9. Chew Me 2:03
10. Quite Titillating 1:02
11. Grisly Land 2:12
12. Take Mr. Bond To School / Chula / Escape 1:30
13. Kung Fu Fight 1:54
14. 20,000 Baht 1:22
15. J.W. Pepper / Bond Rides Off 0:39
16. The Death Of Hai Fat / New Chairman 1:22
17. Moments 1:01
18. Goodnight Goodnight 5:22
19. You Must Be Good / In The Boot / Car Keys 2:07
20. Let’s Go Get ’Em 3:48
21. Flying Car 0:58
22. In Search Of Scaramanga’s Island (Film Version) 2:33
23. Bond’s Arrival / The Solex Agitator / The Sun / Solar Power 1:32
24. Return To Scaramanga’s Fun House 6:26
25. Absolute Zero 0:59
26. Retrieving The Solex Agitator 2:45
27. Slow Boat From China 1:38
28. End Title: The Man With The Golden Gun–Reprise (Performed By Lulu) 3:06
ADDITIONAL MUSIC 11:04
29. Lost Charm :48
30. Bottoms Up I 2:14
31. Bottoms Up II 2:48
32. In Search Of Scaramanga’s Island (Alternate) 2:31
33. The Man With The Golden Gun (Demo Instrumental) 2:35
TOTAL DISC 1 TIME: 1:17:00
DISC 2
ORIGINAL SOUNDTRACK ALBUM 43:11
1. Main Title: The Man With The Golden Gun (Performed By Lulu) 2:35
2. Scaramanga’s Fun House 4:37
3. Chew Me In Grisly Land 3:59
4. The Man With The Golden Gun (Jazz Instrumental) 2:29
5. Getting The Bullet 2:43
6. Goodnight Goodnight 5:21
7. Let’s Go Get ’Em 3:41
8. Hip’s Trip 3:19
9. Kung Fu Fight 1:54
10. In Search Of Scaramanga’s Island 2:28
11. Return To Scaramanga’s Fun House 6:26
12. End Title: The Man With The Golden Gun–Reprise (Performed By Lulu) 3:06
TOTAL ALBUM TIME: 2:00:11
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Comments
Yes I'm having that too :D
Same!
New Bond music, in any form, brings me so much joy.
We're so fortunate to have so much of it, too. What other franchise can offer 25+ soundtracks to its core audience where (almost) all of them are memorable, instantly identifiable, and (mostly) terrific?
Cinematic Bond's musical run really has been unbelievably stellar. And seeing them still willing to celebrate the history like this is wonderful.
Yeah. It's just electric. Such a seismic franchise!
Thanks for this release, @GoldenGun! ;)
Most anticipated cues:
Gun Barrel
Macau
Following Andrea
Chula
Bond Rides Off
Moments
Bottoms Up I
Bottoms Up II
...and the unused music.
I'll still keep my copy of (and occasionally listen to) gkgyver's score reconstruction, an invaluable effort which kept me happy through the lean years. Bottoms up, gkgyver!
I didn't want to listen to samples of unreleased cues, but I did listen to disc 2's Let's Go Get 'Em, to check out the mix. It sounds a bit drier, and an unpleasant defect that was present in the 2003 album is absent here.
The only cues I can think of that aren't included are the two pieces of dance music from the Beirut nightclub, which were provided by dance coordinator Jean Issakoff (Jon Burlingame's book only mentions Issakoff in regards to Saida's dance music, but it's safe to say the cue that follows inmediately after is also from Issakoff).
They also seem to have definitely done away with the borders for these re-releases. It was a convoluted idea anyway, using a certain color for each anniversary, and the execution wasn't that good.
No, that's likely the source music that plays when Bond takes the cab in Beirut.
They were planning to do LTK a few years back so I guess that'll happen at some point.
If OHMSS doesn't happen this year and LLL sticks to anniversary releases, it means we'll probably have to wait another five(!) years until we get a definitive editon of Barry's greatest score, three years for YOLT and two years for DAF.
If only I had a time machine...
I've been looking through my notes on the film and I think that all of the music is accounted for.
So the only missing music is four source cues - the two Beirut club pieces by Jean Issakoff and the two pieces played with the dancers when Bond and Goodnight are drinking the 'Phuyuck'. The latter were probably recorded on set.
Given that none of these were composed or arranged by John Barry, we can rest easy :)
I'm curious, what is the defect?
Did anyone notice this part of Neil's blog?
@-)