2024 January 29 • Wednesday

Like most people, I knew Matt Berry to be an actor before knowing he was also a musician. I enjoyed the music he contributed to Toast of London but didn't know he made records until I saw something about his Television Themes album in Shindig! magazine.

I liked that record a lot and went ahead and got all of his other records. When Phantom Birds came out it became a favorite of mine and I listened to it dozens of times.

And now here's his newest one, Heard Noises.


And this is also great, as well as more amibitous. Berry has always been developing his skills as not just singer and songwriter but multi-instrumentalist, arranger, engineer and producer.

For Heard Noises he brings in more people than he ever has before, including a couple of guest vocalists (of whom one is his mother!), and the songs themselves dip into the pools of several genres while still maintaining the thread that spools through all of Berry's work.

He has a musical identity and style just as easily recognizable and particular to him as his speaking voice and line delivery.

I've only given it one spin on the turntable so far (I got the psychedelic swirl vinyl and the 8-track!) but it's excellent.

Hey, I've got an idea. You should check it out!


2025 January 27 • Monday

Here's a whole lot of brilliant Jerry Goldsmith music for the 841st Soundtrack of the Week, Goldsmith at 20th Vol. V.

First up is a selection of cues from episodes of the TV series Anna and the King. While Bernard Herrmann dove deep into the traditional music of the region for the movie Anna and the King of Siam, Rodgers and Hammerstein ignored both it and Herrmann's offer to share his work when they made the musical adaptation The King and I.

Goldsmith threads the needle, frequently suggesting melodic lines that you can easily imagine a gamelan orchestra executing while also writing more familiar-sounding pastoral, romantic and suspenseful cues. It's lovely to listen to and has got me curious about the show.

We all love it when Jerry goes groovy swinging '60s secret agent style. The soundtrack for the two Flint movies is probably the peak but his music for the Nick Quarry series is almost at that high level.

You only get four tracks and as I recall, these have been previously released as bonus tracks on some other CD, but it's nice to hear them again and this is where they belong.

Then there are three tracks from Only in America. These are all basically klezmer pieces, and really good ones, too.

Goldsmith wrote a really nice main theme for Room 222 and that's fortunate since that's what you hear in all six tracks from that program, in different arrangements of course.

Prudence and the Chief also has a cool theme and the "Main Title" even features what sounds like one of those electric guitar sitars as well as maybe clavinet.

The other cues provide opportunities for very effective tension and action cues as well as several different other dramatic moods. Jerry really makes use of different percussion instruments in this one.

Then we're back to dreamy, romantic, wistful, lovely listening in A Tree Grows in Brooklyn. Who knew they made a TV show out of this? The cues here showcase some of Goldsmith's best writing for small orchestra, making especially great use of the strings and woodwinds.

The last program represented here is A Girl Named Sooner, whose main title has harmonica playing a very quite and delicate melody with harp accompaniment, soon joinedd by flute and a few other instruments.

The theme gets its fair number of reprises and rearrangements but there are some other more playful and dramatic cues. Once again the music is making me interested in the show. Jerry Goldsmith was just amazing. No wonder he scored a zillion things.


2024 January 24 • Friday

One of 2024's best new releases was Easy As Pie, the new record by The Surfrajettes.


They've been a favorite band for years and they just keep getting better. The new album is great, with a five well chosen covers folded in with seven excellent originals.

The Astronauts is one of my favorite surf bands and The Surfrajettes' cover of "Hot Doggin'" is right on the money, not a copy but a tribute and interpretation.

One of their strengths is the blending and interweaving of the two electric guitars and this is brilliantly demonstrated in their surf/instro version of The Spice Girls' "Spice Up Your Life".

Among the instrumentals, "Double Reverb" stands up for its delicate balance of high energy with a haunting melody, "Chiffon Daydream" for its lush, "Sleepwalk"-like qualities and "Priss and Vinegar" for its nimble and active lines that should help you imagine yourself on a surfboard.

"Lickety Split" also has a sort of epic and triumphant quality to it.

You should really buy this record!


2024 January 22 • Wednesday

Jazz covers of '60s rock/pop are fine but what else is there? Well, lots. But one of the absolute best is this recent album by Japanese surf/instro band The Routes. In The Twang Machine they transmute ten Kraftwerk songs into absolutely impeccable surf rock instrumentals.


This is a great record even if you've never heard of Kraftwerk and don't know any of the songs.

While most of it is pretty driving and high energy there are a couple of more dreamy and floating numbers. My favorite song on the record is one of these, their interpretation of "Tour De France".

But you don't have to take my word for it. Buy it right here!


2025 January 20 • Monday

I remember browsing the laserdisc selection at Tower Records about thirty years ago and getting into a casual conversation with another shopper who insisted that I "had to" see Ninja Scroll. So far I've managed to get away with not seeing it, but its score by Kaoru Wada is the 840th Soundtrack of the Week.

The music is really good, blending the familiar small orchestra with traditional Japanese instruments.

A lightly rhythmic "Prologue" clears the way for a heavier and more aggressive evolution into "Jubei", with some sparse horn figures adding definition.

Creepy long tones from strings introduce "Eight Warriors of the Demon Clown", which also uses koto to great effect. Wind instruments pick up the melody and percussion comes crashing in later for Ifukube-like moment. The next track, "Blood Wind", is a continuation.

"Kagerou" is a long (8:22) piece that's mostly an unhurried combination of melody, mood and texture, with more effective koto playing and some lovely lyrical lines.

A couple of tense action cues, "Visions" and "Devil Shadow", come next, with the latter bursting into a terrific driving groove near the end.

An even cooler groove, North African or Middle Eastern it sounds like, is the foundation for "To Those Who Face the Wind", the first of the movie's two songs. Both were composed and sung by Ryouhei Yamanashi with lyrics by Shou Jitsukawa. This one, with its infectious and energetic feel and some impressive violiln soloing, is really great.

The same koto hit starts off the next two tracks, "Pursuit" and "Devil Swordsman", both short and powerful action/suspense pieces.

"Strategy" starts off as a pensive sort of piece, moves into an Ifukube-like passage and then ends with more hard-driving action pulse music. The beginning feel is then reiterated in "Reincarnation" and developed into a mysterious and lyrical melodic line.

The shakuhachi gets featured in "Struggle to the Death", which also continues the theme from the previous cue, before the "Epilogue", unsurprisingly similar to "Prologue".

The second song, "Somewhere, Faraway, Everyone Is Listening to a Ballad", is a more typical love song but still nice to listen to.


2024 January 17 • Friday

Probably the best album of Beatles covers is McLemore Avenue, a reinterpretation of Abbey Road by Booker T & THE MGs.

But of course there are many. And one of them is The Music Company's Rubber Soul Jazz from 1966.


While this is ostensibly "The Music Company"'s record, the featured instrument on every track is piano courtesy of Don Randi. He's joined by Pat Smith on bass and Tommy Tedesco on guitar. The other musicians include, on some of the tracks, another great guitarist, James Burton, as well as legendary dummer Hal Blaine and Julius Wechtor on vibes and percussion.

Because I don't sit around listening to The Beatles very much, I don't actually know a lot of these songs, which means that many of them aren't the ones that you always hear.

The familiar tracks to me were "Norwegian Wood", "Michelle" and "In My Life". But all the songs are well done here, though I wish Burton had got a chance to do more. Tedesco takes several fine guitar solos, though, on both electric and acoustic guitar.


2024 January 15 • Wednesday

After an album of pop covers with orchestral arrangements by Bob Florence, guitarist Joe Pass teamed up with Florence again for The Stones Jazz, an album of Rolling Stones covers.


I like this record more than, well, everyone, it seems. I have one friend so horrified by its very existence he asks me not even to put it on when he's over at my place.

Maybe this is because I'm more or less indifferent to the Rolling Stones and am more of a fan of jazz guitar and Joe Pass and these kinds of, I'll admit it, sappy '60s pop-jazz-easy-listening collisions.

I don't even know a lot of the songs on this record. So to me they just sound like cool tunes with great guitar solos and, courtesy of Bill Perkins, tenor sax solos.

It helps that Bob Florence left the orchestra at home and opted for a mid-size jazz ensemble. Victor Feldman adds some great vibes playing and Ray Brown is terrific on bass, as usual.

As for the songs I do know, "Mother's Little Helper" has been swing jazzed practically out of existence and sounds like it would be more appropriate for an album of Mary Poppins numbers. But once they get through the melody, Pass takes a fantastic solo and I stopped caring what song it was.

The famous riff for "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" sounds like it could have come from a Quincy Jones bossa nova album with its flutes and backbeat. Again, this is a Joe Pass record, though, and when he steps into the spotlight, the song takes off.

Pass starts "Paint It Black" with some lush and friendly jazz chords backed by easygoing swing from the rhythm section. If this is a moving and powerful song for you when played by the Stones, you might have a panic attack if you hear this. As for me, I might try to transcribe Pass's solo.

It wouldn't be such a stretch for "As Tears Go By" to get this treatment, would it? Certainly not but, unexpectedly, this one comes across as just kind of boring.

The last song on the record is a Joe Pass original called "Stone Jazz". It doesn't seem to have anything to do with the Stones and is just kind of a generic '60s bluesy groover with tasty guitar playing. It's fine.


2025 January 13 • Monday

Egil Monn-Iversen's jazz score for Heaven and Hell is the 839th Soundtrack of the Week.

It start with an English-language vocal main title song, sung by Inger Lise Andersen ("You will get stories to tell / About the heaven and hell"). It's a pretty straight jazz swing number with some cool modulations.

Then we get a moderate up tempo organ combo tune called "Pythagoras". With the organ are electric bass guitar, drums, electric guitar and tenor saxophone and everyone gets a chance to stretch out.

The same combo is back for the next two tracks: "Zatek's Theme" is a more laid back and groovy number that really features the guitar while "Club 13" has a heavier, more backbeaty feel to it.

"The Vigieland Park" is a feature for flutes that create a serene, lovely and romantic mood accompanied by drums and some sensitive guitar playing.

A different organ sound and a woozier and more shadowy mood all around make "Zatek's Theme 2" quite distinct from its first iteration.

A blues/soul/country/rock groove kicks off the still jazzy "Meeting with Hash", which again has some great guitar playing and really swings.

The classic organ combo sound returns for the late-night feel of "Østerdalsgate Blues", very unhurried and relaxed.

Since this is apparently a 1960s Norwegian anti-drug propaganda movie, there had to be a tune called "Freakout", right? Well, here it is. It's mostly an organ freak-out, with lots of long tones and unexpected harmonies, with the other members of the band subtly adding sounds here and there while it gradually builds to a climax. It sounds like it was more or less freely improvised by people who knew what they were doing.

Then there's an instrumental version of the main title song and that's it. A very cool record. You can see the movie on YouTube but the picture quality isn't good and there are no subtitles.


2024 January 10 • Friday

You better watch what you say around Mandrake the Magician.






2024 January 08 • Wednesday

There are tons of movie references and "in" jokes in Joe Dante's Gremlins 2: The New Batch. For instance, here's movie reviewer Leonard Maltin panning Gremlins in Gremlins 2 right before getting attacked by gremlins.



There's also a true Meta Marquee moment, though it's also a joke, as Dante imagines a tenth sequel to his 1981 movie The Howling.



2025 January 06 • Monday

While my first reaction to a 4k restoration of a movie screening at the Film Forum is usually to grumble that the screens there are on the small side and I can watch 4k and make much better popcorn at home, both times I attended such a showing at the Film Forum in 2024 were quite rewarding.

The second of these was The Umbrellas of Cherbourg and it was absolutely worth seeing in the theatre for full immersion. It was also, for me, radicalizing in a very specific way. I walked out grimly determined to tell the world that The Umbrellas of Cherbourg is an opera, not a musical.

In fact, it appears to have been made as a complete reversal of Carmen, the opera that the main characters go to see very early in the film.

The difference between an opera and a musical is one of realities. An opera takes place in a reality where all words are sung and none are spoken. A musical alternates between our reality, where people go around talking and walking and not actually singing and dancing unless the singing and dancing are deliberate acts of singing as singing and dancing as dancing, and a reality where everyone starts singing and dancing as an unremarked substitute for talking and walking.

My knowledge of opera is minimal but it seems like there isn't a lot of dancing going on in it. Essentially the forms break down like this:
Play: talk
Opera: sing
Ballet: dance
Musical: all of the above

And so 2025 begins with Michel Legrand's inexhaustibly delightful and mindblowingly great music for The Umbrellas of Cherbourg as the 838th Soundtrack of the Week.

The music is a tremendous achievement, accompanying every second of the film yet never flagging or trying too hard or becoming dull.

It's a delicious concoction of jazz and pop and orchestral music, effortlessly breezing from Serge Gainsbourg-ish melodies and grooves to intensely stirring passages of operatic intensity. Perhaps the use of jazz and pop language in combination with the movie's 90-minute running time is part of the reason The Umbrellas of Cherbourg is categorized as a musical.

There isn't much I can say about the music other than that for the last few weeks, since leaving the Film Forum, I've been listening to it, singing it, whistling it or just having it in my head.

This two-CD presentation of it is a must-have and also includes some good extras, particularly Legrand himself shredding the main theme as his piano trio romps through it in various genres.

Tony Bennett is also here with the English-language "Watch What Happens", an overblown arrangement that lacks the sprightliness and dazzle of the original.


2024 January 03 • Friday

More Meta Marquee moments!

Here's Diane Keaton in Looking for Mr. Goodbar with a copy of Mario Puzo's The Godfather.



Diane Keaton was famously in the movie adaptation and that would be enough, even though having the book there is only a slight connection.

But no, it gets weirdly meta when Richard Gere approaches her and starts talking about the movie of The Godfather!





Pauline Kael called this out in real time, when she reviewed Looking for Mr. Goodbar:

When Tony first meets Terry, she's sitting at a bar with a hardcover edition of The Godfather in front of her; he comes over and says he has seen the movie. What was the director thinking of? With a star who appeared in that movie, and with the two young actors imitating De Niro and Brando, couldn't the director give her a different book to use as a come-on?


2024 January 01 • Wednesday

Happy New Year!

We ended 2024 with dull observations for our ridiculous Meta Marquee page. And we're starting 2025 exactly the same way!

George P. Cosmatos directed Of Unknown Origin with Peter Weller, as well as Rambo: First Blood Part II with Richard Crenna.

In 1989 he made Leviathan with both Weller and Crenna, and slipped in this allusion to his first North American film, both on screen and spoken:



I'll have to watch Cobra again to see if Cosmatos did anything like that there. And I guess Tombstone, though that doesn't seem too likely.