ペドロ・アルモドバル監督初期作品のサウンドトラック集。『神経衰弱ぎりぎりの女たち』(1987年 スペイン作品 / 音楽 ベルナルド・ボネッツィ / 出演 カルメン・マウラ、フェルナンド・ギーエン、アントニオ・バンデラス)を1曲目から7曲目までに、『マタドール<闘牛士>・炎のレクイエム』(1986年 スペイン作品 / 音楽 ティノ・アソレ / 出演 ナーチョ・マルティネス、アサンプタ・セルナ、アントニオ・バンデラス)を8曲目から12曲目までに、『グロリアの憂鬱』(1984年 スペイン作品 / 音楽 ベルナルド・ボネッツィ / 出演 カルメン・マウラ、ゴンザロ・スアレス、ルイス・オスタロット)を13曲目から17曲目までに、『セクシリア』(1982年 スペイン作品 / 音楽 ベルナルド・ボネッツィ / 出演 セシリア・ロス、イマノル・アリアス、ヘルガ・リーネ)を18曲目19曲目に収録。
タワーレコード(2014/03/18)
Like former Oingo Boingo leader Danny Elfman, Spanish screen composer Bernardo Bonezzi got his start in a rock group, in his case los Zombies, who scored a Spanish hit with the song "Groenlandia," and like Elfman he made his transition into film scoring through his association with a single director. For Elfman, that director was Tim Burton; for Bonezzi, it was Pedro Almodovar. In both cases, the composer brought a pop sensibility to his movie work, coming up with cues that showed both an immediately ear-catching melodic appeal and a strong sense of rhythm. But there the similarities end, at least as demonstrated on this album of excerpts from five of Almodovar and Bonezzi's early films (two cues from 1982's Labyrinth of Passions; five from 1984's What Have I Done to Deserve This?, one of which was also used in 1987's Law of Desire; five from 1986's Matador; and seven from 1988's Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown). The tracks, presented in reverse chronological order, demonstrate Bonezzi's versatility at the same time that they show a fidelity to Spanish pop and classical styles. The composer had to be versatile to respond to the varying emotional and dramatic tones of Almodovar's wildly imaginative yet character-driven comedy/dramas, and he also seems to have had to work with limited budgets, since his arrangements generally include only a handful of instruments. But he gets a lot out of those charts, whether he is required to come up with haunting, atmospheric underscoring (e.g., "Composicion en Rojo," from Matador) or livelier fare ("Taxi Mambo," from Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown). And he had to accommodate a director who wanted to get his fingers into every aspect of his productions, as Almodovar does in the final two tracks, the disco-styled pop songs "Gran Ganga" and "Suck It to Me" from Labyrinth of Passions, to which Almodovar contributes not only lyrics, but his own vocals. ~ William Ruhlmann|
Rovi