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Tex Avery (EU)

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販売価格

¥
2,079
税込
ポイント15%還元

廃盤

在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2008年04月21日
国内/輸入 輸入(ヨーロッパ盤)
レーベルVictor/Milan
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 3991932
SKU 3299039919323

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Carl Stalling is the 500-pound gorilla in the room when music written for classic American theatrical cartoons is considered. However, Stalling was not the only player in the game. There was Winston Sharples at Famous Studios, Philip Scheib at Terrytoons -- who on his own scored nearly 800 cartoons -- and Scott Bradley at MGM. Bradley is a figure of particular significance, as he scored all of the theatrical cartoons of the world's most popular cat and mouse duo -- Tom & Jerry -- through 1958, and was a significant contributor to the work of classic animation's most certifiably insane director, one-eyed tall tale spinner and spot gag specialist Fred "Tex" Avery. However, serious interest in Bradley has been comparatively slow to develop in comparison to Stalling, and although Bradley's name is only acknowledged in the small print, Milan's Music from the Tex Avery Original Soundtracks is a small step in the right direction.
The disc includes a mixture of complete and condensed soundtracks from six cartoons and totals a mere 35 minutes. However, the sound is terrific, especially in material taken from original soundtrack elements without the voice actors, and particularly when compared to anything that might come squawking out of the speaker on one's television, the most common reproduction medium used for experiencing such music. Bradley's score for "TV of Tomorrow" (1953), without its ingratiating narration, comes off well on its own and contains good examples of Bradley's innovative scoring techniques, nurtured in silent films and early talkies, but further informed through his contact with Arnold Schoenberg. On the downside, Deputy Droopy (1955) is a little harder to appreciate without the hilarious screaming of the actors that would have been part of the voice track -- we get the musical passages leading up to the yowling, but then the yowl itself isn't there. By comparison, with "Little Johnny Jet" (1953) we get the whole soundtrack, complete with dialogue and sound effects, and the additional elements are noticeably distracting vis a vis Bradley's music. One might deduce that availability of elements would have played a large part in determining the final content of this short disc, but there is no explanation of this part of the process in the notes, of which eight paragraphs are devoted to lionizing Tex Avery and only three to Bradley's part in their collaboration. These concentrate mainly on Bradley's use of pre-existing material, despite that Bradley's relative departure from stock tunes and interest in music that follows action is what largely sets him apart from his colleagues.
Tex Avery's name, in large letters, is above the title, and indeed, he is the focus of this collection. Avery was a visual artist -- a superb one -- but this disc doesn't give us any insight into Avery's work that can't be gained from a good video collection of it. However, little details do come to the fore that are not readily apparent from watching; when "the fly up on that mesa thar yonder" is shot in "Drag-A-Long Droopy," and falls with a horrible shriek to his long-delayed Averian death, you can tell that the scream does indeed continue until he finally hits the ground. Therefore, Milan's Music from the Tex Avery Original Soundtracks isn't perfect, but despite its flaws is a good start in exploring a region of cartoon scoring that could use a bit more attention. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Cell Bound
    2. 2.
      Little Johnny Jet
    3. 3.
      TV Of Tomorrow
    4. 4.
      Three Little Pups
    5. 5.
      Deputy Droopy
    6. 6.
      Dragalong Droopy

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Scott Bradley

その他
プロデューサー: David Franco

商品の紹介

バッグス・バニー、ダフィー・ダックなど1940年代のアメリカのカートゥーンを多く手がけたアニメ作家、Tex AveryことFrederick Beanの生誕100年を記念したサウンドトラック集が登場!Tex Averyの作品群を多く手がけ、カートゥーンの音楽作家の草分けとして知られるScott Bradley作曲のテーマ曲をコンパイル。
タワーレコード

Carl Stalling is the 500-pound gorilla in the room when music written for classic American theatrical cartoons is considered. However, Stalling was not the only player in the game. There was Winston Sharples at Famous Studios, Philip Scheib at Terrytoons -- who on his own scored nearly 800 cartoons -- and Scott Bradley at MGM. Bradley is a figure of particular significance, as he scored all of the theatrical cartoons of the world's most popular cat and mouse duo -- Tom & Jerry -- through 1958, and was a significant contributor to the work of classic animation's most certifiably insane director, one-eyed tall tale spinner and spot gag specialist Fred "Tex" Avery. However, serious interest in Bradley has been comparatively slow to develop in comparison to Stalling, and although Bradley's name is only acknowledged in the small print, Milan's Music from the Tex Avery Original Soundtracks is a small step in the right direction.
The disc includes a mixture of complete and condensed soundtracks from six cartoons and totals a mere 35 minutes. However, the sound is terrific, especially in material taken from original soundtrack elements without the voice actors, and particularly when compared to anything that might come squawking out of the speaker on one's television, the most common reproduction medium used for experiencing such music. Bradley's score for "TV of Tomorrow" (1953), without its ingratiating narration, comes off well on its own and contains good examples of Bradley's innovative scoring techniques, nurtured in silent films and early talkies, but further informed through his contact with Arnold Schoenberg. On the downside, Deputy Droopy (1955) is a little harder to appreciate without the hilarious screaming of the actors that would have been part of the voice track -- we get the musical passages leading up to the yowling, but then the yowl itself isn't there. By comparison, with "Little Johnny Jet" (1953) we get the whole soundtrack, complete with dialogue and sound effects, and the additional elements are noticeably distracting vis a vis Bradley's music. One might deduce that availability of elements would have played a large part in determining the final content of this short disc, but there is no explanation of this part of the process in the notes, of which eight paragraphs are devoted to lionizing Tex Avery and only three to Bradley's part in their collaboration. These concentrate mainly on Bradley's use of pre-existing material, despite that Bradley's relative departure from stock tunes and interest in music that follows action is what largely sets him apart from his colleagues.
Tex Avery's name, in large letters, is above the title, and indeed, he is the focus of this collection. Avery was a visual artist -- a superb one -- but this disc doesn't give us any insight into Avery's work that can't be gained from a good video collection of it. However, little details do come to the fore that are not readily apparent from watching; when "the fly up on that mesa thar yonder" is shot in "Drag-A-Long Droopy," and falls with a horrible shriek to his long-delayed Averian death, you can tell that the scream does indeed continue until he finally hits the ground. Therefore, Milan's Music from the Tex Avery Original Soundtracks isn't perfect, but despite its flaws is a good start in exploring a region of cartoon scoring that could use a bit more attention. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis|
Rovi

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