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King Kong Vs. Godzilla<限定盤>

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フォーマット LPレコード
発売日 2024年02月02日
国内/輸入 輸入(ヨーロッパ盤)
レーベルDoxy Cinematic
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 DOC145
SKU 889397381455

構成数 : 1枚

  1. 1.[LPレコード]

    【A面】

    1. 1.
      Main Title

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    2. 2.
      Series Of World Wonders

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    3. 3.
      The Sparkling Iceberg

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    4. 4.
      The Seahawk In Crisis

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    5. 5.
      The Seahawk's S.O.S.

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    6. 6.
      Fallow Island

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    7. 7.
      The Natives

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    8. 8.
      Thunder And The Devil

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    9. 9.
      Fumiko's Misgivings

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    10. 10.
      Godzilla's Resurrection

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    11. 11.
      The Cry Of The Devil

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    12. 12.
      A Prayer To The Rolling Thunder

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    13. 13.
      Drums Of Battle

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    14. 14.
      The Devil In The South Seas

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    15. 15.
      Giant Octopus Vs King Kong

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    16. 16.
      The Sleeping Devil

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    17. 17.
      The Invincible King Kong

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    18. 18.
      Preparations For Operation ‘Burial'

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    19. 19.
      Operation ‘Burial'

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    20. 20.
      Operation ‘Burial' Fails

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

  2. 1.[LPレコード]

    【B面】

    1. 1.
      The Terror Of Godzilla

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    2. 2.
      King Kong Vs Godzilla I

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    3. 3.
      Preparations For Operation ‘One Million Volts'

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    4. 4.
      Operation ‘One Million Volts' I

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    5. 5.
      Operation ‘One Million Volts' II

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    6. 6.
      Kong Shows Up In Tokyo

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    7. 7.
      The Plan To Rescue Fumiko

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    8. 8.
      The Plan To Transport King Kong

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    9. 9.
      King Kong Advances On Fuji

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    10. 10.
      The Confrontation At Fuji

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    11. 11.
      King Kong's Resurrection

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    12. 12.
      King Kong Vs Godzilla Ii

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

    13. 13.
      Ending

      アーティスト: 伊福部昭

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: 伊福部昭

商品の紹介

La-La Land Records is a small label in Burbank, CA, that devotes itself to the re-release, and in some cases first release, of "golden age" and contemporary film soundtrack music. King Kong vs. Godzilla is the label's first joint venture with Toho Studios in Japan, and makes available music from the original Japanese version of this monster movie "clash of the titans" that has mostly gone unheard in the West, as American distributors replaced most of this track with standard library music in the familiar English-language edition. While with first glance, many potential buyers may regard King Kong vs. Godzilla with little more than interest as a campy artifact, the music is in all but two cases composed by Japanese master Akira Ifukube. Ifukube established the Japanese musician as a force in Western concert music well before he broke into writing for movies, ultimately contributing his talents to the service of the great green one, providing her voice as well. Sadly, this disc rather unwittingly serves as a memorial also, as Ifukube died at age 91 just as the La-La Land disc was being released in America. This is powerful and exciting stuff: Ifukube calls into play a combination of traditional Japanese drumming, chanting, and the kind of driving, dissonant music one associates with Russian futurism; indeed, Stravinsky's Le Sacre du printemps was a major formative influence on the composer. The music is most effective when it is at its simplest; with crashing cluster chords on the piano, combined with an orchestra playing mostly in unison or just two parts, pounding drums and eerie period electronic organ one gets a strong sense at how different the Godzilla scores were from anything that went before in terms of film music. Japanese recording technology was state of the art in 1962; no one else in the world could touch it in terms of low-end response at the time, though the introduction of Edward Dolby's system would soon tip the balance elsewhere. King Kong vs. Godzilla was the only project from within the early Godzilla series that had a budget allowing for a stereo soundtrack. Nonetheless, one can hear how difficult it was to mix Ifukube's visionary music even with this advantage, and some tracks essentially duplicate the music of others but demonstrate that the balance of parts have changed back at the mix console. Naturally, as in most film scores, there is considerable recycling of musical themes between tracks, and these are frequent enough that some listeners may find it repetitive. Nevertheless, for the rest of us, what is not to love about the soundtrack disc for King Kong vs. Godzilla? It benefits likewise from an attractive and user-friendly package, good notes, and some charming bonus material, including some a cappella chanting not used in the final film and a Japanese pop song heard over a transistor radio in the original King Kong vs. Godzilla that was left on the cutting room floor in America.
Rovi

La-La Land Records is a small label in Burbank, CA, that devotes itself to the re-release, and in some cases first release, of "golden age" and contemporary film soundtrack music. King Kong vs. Godzilla is their first joint venture with Toho Studios in Japan, and makes available music from the original Japanese version of this monster movie "clash of the titans" that has mostly gone unheard in the West, as American distributors replaced most of this track with standard library music in the familiar English-language edition. While with first glance, many potential buyers may regard King Kong vs. Godzilla with little more than interest as a campy artifact, the music is in all but two cases composed by Japanese master Akira Ifukube. Ifukube established the Japanese musician as a force in Western concert music well before he broke into writing for movies, ultimately contributing his talents to the service of the great green one, providing her voice as well. Sadly, this disc rather unwittingly serves as a memorial also, as Ifukube died at age 91 just as the La-La Land disc was being released in America. This is powerful and exciting stuff: Ifukube calls into play a combination of traditional Japanese drumming, chanting, and the kind of driving, dissonant music one associates with Russian futurism; indeed, Stravinsky's Le Sacre du Printemps was a major formative influence on the composer. The music is most effective when it is at its simplest; with crashing cluster chords on the piano, combined with an orchestra playing mostly in unison or just two parts, pounding drums, and eerie period electronic organ, one gets a strong sense at how different the Godzilla scores were from anything that went before in terms of film music. Japanese recording technology was state of the art in 1962; no one else in the world could touch it in terms of low-end response at the time, though the introduction of Edward Dolby's system would soon tip the balance elsewhere. King Kong vs. Godzilla was the only project from within the early Godzilla series that had a budget allowing for a stereo soundtrack. Nonetheless, one can hear how difficult it was to mix Ifukube's visionary music even with this advantage, and some tracks essentially duplicate the music of others but demonstrate that the balance of parts have changed back at the mix console. Naturally, as in most film scores there is considerable recycling of musical themes between tracks, and these are frequent enough that some listeners may find it repetitive. Nevertheless, for everyone else, what is not to love about the soundtrack disc for King Kong vs. Godzilla? It benefits likewise from an attractive and user-friendly package, good notes, and some charming bonus material, including some a cappella chanting not used in the final film and a Japanese pop song heard over a transistor radio in the original King Kong vs. Godzilla that was left on the cutting room floor in America. ~ Uncle Dave Lewis
Rovi

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