Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

White Lunar

0.0

販売価格

¥
2,190
税込
還元ポイント

在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2013年08月19日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルMute
構成数 2
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 XW9646632
SKU 5099996466322

構成数 : 2枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Given their output, it's certainly tempting to write about the shared aesthetic philosophy of Nick Cave and Warren Ellis as film composers, but that's actually beside the point. In fact, what's most remarkable about White Lunar, the double-disc collaborative retrospective compilation from film scores by the pair, is how utterly "small" and atmospheric the work is, especially considering that three of these films cover very large visual landscapes. Two are Westerns: The Proposition -- which Cave also wrote the screenplay for and set in the Australian Outback -- and The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. The third of these large-landscape movies is The Road, based on the post-apocalyptic novel by Cormac McCarthy. Disc one is comprised of the selections from the scores of these films, while disc two contains music from The Girls of Phnom Penh and The English Surgeon, as well as assorted unissued tracks from the duo's vaults. Each disc is compiled to stand on its own. Disc one does so in a way that is quietly spooky and powerful despite the minimal approach of the few instruments employed: violin, piano, bass, guitars, some atmospheric keyboards, etc. Whether one has seen the films orchestrated here hardly matters. The aural impressions are of loneliness, solitude, vast stretches of emptiness, and physical as well as emotional desolation. There are a couple of vocal tracks on disc one, mainly the traditional "Happy Land," which was totally rearranged -- as all good folks songs should be -- by Cave, and "The Rider 2," which is vastly different from its instrumental counterpart that's here. This disc alone is worth the purchase price; it stands as a testament to a working method that is based on instinct and careful attention paid to interior space as well as microscopic details in composition and mixing. Disc two is bookended with cues from The Girls of Phnom Penh. The approach here is even more minimal and a shade more dissonant. The use of keyboards is a bit more prevalent but not in an intrusive way. It feels both emotionally distraught and physically foreboding despite the quiet nature of the score. Tracks from the vaults and The English Surgeon are alternated in between, a few from each, then repeated before the disc ends. The vault tunes are little more than bits of ideas, articulated enough so that something else might be built upon them. The music from The English Surgeon, if not more lush, is more melodic and emotionally resonant of melancholy, dread, and even tenderness. Ultimately, this is a fascinating, provocative, and thoroughly enjoyable document on its own, though one would be well advised to pick up the individual scores for the films on disc one as well. ~ Thom Jurek

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Song For Jesse
    2. 2.
      Moving On
    3. 3.
      What Must Be Done
    4. 4.
      Song For Bob
    5. 5.
      Happy Land
    6. 6.
      The Proposition #1
    7. 7.
      Road To Banyon
    8. 8.
      The Rider #2
    9. 9.
      Martha's Dream
    10. 10.
      Gun Thing
    11. 11.
      The Rider Song
    12. 12.
      The Road
    13. 13.
      The Mother
    14. 14.
      The Father
    15. 15.
      The Beach
    16. 16.
      The Journey
    17. 17.
      The Boy
  2. 2.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Srey Leak
    2. 2.
      Me Nea
    3. 3.
      Rom
    4. 4.
      Halo
    5. 5.
      Zanstra
    6. 6.
      Black Silk (Suture)
    7. 7.
      Brain Retractor
    8. 8.
      Dandy Brain Cannula
    9. 9.
      Rat s Tooth Forceps
    10. 10.
      Kerrison s Punch
    11. 11.
      Micro Sucker
    12. 12.
      Window
    13. 13.
      Daedalus
    14. 14.
      Magma
    15. 15.
      Cheata
    16. 16.
      Sorya Market

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Nick CaveWarren Ellis

オリジナル発売日:2009年

商品の紹介

The Bad Seeds, Grindermanを通して、15年間ともに制作活動をしてきたニック・ケイヴとウォレン・エリス。2人が手掛けてきた映画音楽+サウンドトラックをフィーチャリングした特別2枚組がリリース!すでにリリースされた書き下ろしのサウンドトラック3作品ほか、近年映画用に提供した楽曲、そして過去作品からレア・トラックが収録!ディスク1には、ニック・ケイブが脚本を手掛けた『THE PROPOSITION(2005)』、ゴールデングローブ含む様々な映画賞受賞/ノミネートを果たしたブラッド・ピット、ケイシー・アフレック主演作『ジェシー・ジェームズの暗殺(2006)』、Cormac McCarthy原作、ヴィゴ・モーテンセン、シャーリーズ・セロンが主演『THE ROAD』のサントラを収録。ディスク2には、過去作品『THE ENGLISH SERGEON』by Geoffery smith、『THE GIRLS OF PHNOM PENH(2009)』by マシュー・ワトソン、さらに過去作品からのレア&未発表トラック4曲"マグマ"、"ザンストラ"、"ハロー"、"ダイダロス"を収録。
タワーレコード

Q - 3 stars out of 5 -- "[With] scores penned for The Proposition and more that work just fine as stand-alone pieces." Uncut - 4 stars out of 5 -- "[Cave has] mastered the subdued, unobtrusive yet sinister piano ripple and the occasional unsettling rumble, gilding them with rare, understated vocals."
Rovi

Given their output, it's certainly tempting to write about the shared aesthetic philosophy of Nick Cave and Warren Ellis as film composers, but that's actually beside the point. In fact, what's most remarkable about White Lunar, the double-disc collaborative retrospective compilation from film scores by the pair, is how utterly "small" and atmospheric the work is, especially considering that three of these films cover very large visual landscapes. Two are Westerns: The Proposition -- which Cave also wrote the screenplay for and set in the Australian Outback -- and The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford. The third of these large-landscape movies is The Road, based on the post-apocalyptic novel by Cormac McCarthy. Disc one is comprised of the selections from the scores of these films, while disc two contains music from The Girls of Phnom Penh and The English Surgeon, as well as assorted unissued tracks from the duo's vaults. Each disc is compiled to stand on its own. Disc one does so in a way that is quietly spooky and powerful despite the minimal approach of the few instruments employed: violin, piano, bass, guitars, some atmospheric keyboards, etc. Whether one has seen the films orchestrated here hardly matters. The aural impressions are of loneliness, solitude, vast stretches of emptiness, and physical as well as emotional desolation. There are a couple of vocal tracks on disc one, mainly the traditional "Happy Land," which was totally rearranged -- as all good folks songs should be -- by Cave, and "The Rider 2," which is vastly different from its instrumental counterpart that's here. This disc alone is worth the purchase price; it stands as a testament to a working method that is based on instinct and careful attention paid to interior space as well as microscopic details in composition and mixing. Disc two is bookended with cues from The Girls of Phnom Penh. The approach here is even more minimal and a shade more dissonant. The use of keyboards is a bit more prevalent but not in an intrusive way. It feels both emotionally distraught and physically foreboding despite the quiet nature of the score. Tracks from the vaults and The English Surgeon are alternated in between, a few from each, then repeated before the disc ends. The vault tunes are little more than bits of ideas, articulated enough so that something else might be built upon them. The music from The English Surgeon, if not more lush, is more melodic and emotionally resonant of melancholy, dread, and even tenderness. Ultimately, this is a fascinating, provocative, and thoroughly enjoyable document on its own, though one would be well advised to pick up the individual scores for the films on disc one as well. ~ Thom Jurek|
Rovi

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