Disc One
- 01. The Hallelujah Trail - Overture - Elmer Bernstein
- 02. The Alamo - The Green Leaves Of Summer - Dimitri Tiomkin
- 03. The Alamo - Davy Crockett - Dimitri Tiomkin
- 04. The Big Country - The Welcoming / Finale - Jerome Moross
- 05. The Big Valley - Main Theme - George Dunning
- 06. Blazing Saddles - Blazing Saddles - John Morris
- 07. Bonanza - Main Theme - Ray Evans & Jay Livingston
- 08. Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid - Raindrops Keep Fallin'
On My Head - Burt Bacharach & Hal David
- 09. The Comancheros - Mcbain/Main Title - Elmer Bernstein
- 10. Duel In The Sun - Main Title/Legend/Orizaba - Dimitri Tiomkin
- 11. A Fistful Of Dynamite - Duck You Sucker - Ennio Morricone
- 12. For A Few Dollars More - Main Theme - Ennio Morricone
- 13. Friendly Persuasion - Thee I Love - Dimitri Tiomkin
- 14. Giant - Main Theme - Dimitri Tiomkin
- 15. The Good, The Bad And The Ugly - Main Theme - Ennio Morricone
- 16. The Good, The Bad And The Ugly - The Ecstasy Of Gold -
Ennio Morricone
- 17. Gunfight At The O.K Corral - Suite - Dimitri Tiomkin &
Ned Washington
- 18. Hang 'em High - Main Theme - Dominic Frontiere
- 19. The Hanging Tree - Main Title - Max Steiner
Disc Two
- 01. High Chaparral - Main Theme - David Rose
- 02. How The West Was Won - Prelude / The Land - Alfred Newman
& Jay Darby
- 03. High Noon - Do Not Forsake Me Oh My Darlin' - Dimitri Tiomkin
& Ned Washington
- 04. The Jayhawkers - The Lynching / Two Brothers / The Jayhawkers
- Jerome Moross
- 05. The Lone Ranger - William Tell Overture: Finale - Rossini
- 06. Nevada Smith - Main Title - Alfred Newman
- 07. Old Gringo - Main Themes - Lee Holdridge
- 08. Once Upon A Time in the West - Man with the Harmonica -
Ennio Morricone
- 09. One-Eyed Jacks - Main Title - Hugo Friedhofer
- 10. The Proud Rebel - Main Titles - Jerome Moross
- 11: The Quick And The Dead - End Titles - Alan Silvestri
- 12. Quigley Down Under - End Titles - Basil Poledouris
- 13. Rio Bravo - Rio Bravo / De Guella - Dimitri Tiomkin &
Paul Francis Webster
- 14. The Scalphunters - Main Title - Elmer Bernstein
- 15. Shane - Main Theme: The Call Of The Faraway Hills - Victor
Young
- 16. The Shootist - Main Title - Elmer Bernstein
- 17. The Unforgiven - The Need For Love - Dimitri Tiomkin
- 18. Viva Zapata - Gathering Forces - Alex North
- 19. The Virginian - Main Theme - Percy Faith
The title of this release is a contraction in terms. Music
that wasn't included on the predecessor, The Essential Western Film Music
collection, by definition can not be "essential". Pedantry aside, this is a
good collection of slightly less than essential Western film music, some newly
recorded, some drawn from previous Silva Screen releases and in certain cases
already well recycled on other compilations from the label. One can quibble
with certain things - why include a pastiche song from Blazing Saddles
(John Morris sending up ballads from such movies as High Noon and Gunfight
at the OK Corral) or the inappropriate but popular song from Butch Cassidy
and the Sundance Kid yet ignore the modern master of the genre completely?
Who? Bruce Broughton of course. Why is there nothing here from Silverado,
or more importantly Tombstone - I will give no ground to anyone in arguing
this is the most essential Western score since Once Upon A Time in the West.
Hell, pardner, alongside The Big Country and The Magnificent Seven
its one of the three greatest traditional Western scores ever written. More
controversially still, what are TV themes doing on a collection of film music?
Music from Bonanza, High Chaparral and The Virginian have
no place here.
Of the music that truly deserves a place there is a lot of
Dimitri Tiomkin, which in its own way is as difficult to capture in a re-recording
as is the sound of Ennio Morricone's famed Spaghetti Western scores. The Prague
Philharmonic do Tiomkin proud, his rousing music from Duel in the Sun
shinning with excitement. Likewise, while Morricone purists will always wince
at any reinterpretation of the master's unique orchestrations, cues from For
A Few Dollars More and The Good, The Bad and The Ugly come across
well. The latter's "Main Title" may not have the sheer spine tingling power
of the original but soprano Charlotte Kinder does an excellent job of reproducing
the wordless female vocals of "The Ecstasy of Gold". Jason Howard tackles not
only the Blazing Saddles spoof, but also the songs it parodies, and while
his voice has a rather different character to Frankie Lane his interpretations
work as orchestral ballads in their own right. Gunfight at the OK Corral
is nevertheless absolutely destroyed by the addition of gunfire sound effects
in the action music. The outcome is cheap and tacky, but then Tiomkin's music
for the shootout isn't in the same league as Broughton's scoring of the same
event in Tombstone.
Elsewhere in the collection there is a lot of good music by
such luminaries as Elmer Bernstein, Max Steiner and Jerome Moross, and while
I have been rather critical this collection does represent excellent value,
offering a lot of otherwise hard to find or unobtainable themes and suites.
It may be churlish to nitpick, but as a Western fan I find one of my favourite
genres all but extinct these days and would prefer such tributes to its glory
days to be out-and-out triumphs rather than marred however slightly by parody,
pop, sound effects and TV music. Silva Screen too are letting standards slip
in other ways, cutting corners by omitting any booklet notes on the films or
music. The cover painting by Gary Carter is wonderfully evocative and looks
especially fine on the card slipcase. You can see more at http://www.wildwestart.com/carter/carter.html
It's well worth a look.
Gary S Dalkin