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            Casablanca – Classic film scores 
              for Humphrey Bogart   
              Max STEINER (1888-1971)  
              Casablanca (Warner, 1943) [8:36]  
              Passage to Marseilles (Warner, 1944) [3:55]  
              The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (Warner, 1948) [7:46]  
              The Big Sleep (Warner, 1946) [2:41]  
              The Caine Mutiny (Columbia, 1954) 2:33]  
              Virginia City (Warner, 1940) [4:15]  
              Key Largo (Warner, 1948) [5:12]  
              Franz WAXMAN 
              (1906-1967)   
              To Have and Have Not (Warner, 1944) [1:43]  
              The Two Mrs Carrolls (Warner, 1947) [4:26]  
              Frederick HOLLANDER 
              (1896- 1976)  
              Sabrina (Paramount, 1954) [2:53]  
              Victor YOUNG 
              (1900-1956)  
              The Left Hand of God (20th Century Fox, 1955) 
              [3:39]  
              Miklós RÓZSA 
              (1907-1995)  
              Sahara (Columbia, 1943) [2:36]  
                
              The National Philharmonic Orchestra/Charles Gerhardt  
              rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 6-7 September 1973  
                
              RCA RED SEAL 88697 77937 (distributed by Sony Music Entertainment) 
              [51:07]   
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                  This compilation was first released in 1974 in the old LP format 
                  as RCA ARL1-0422. It was one of the first in a series of 13 
                  recordings. It ran to 15 if you include Gerhardt’s recording 
                  of John Williams’s Star Wars and Close Encounters 
                  of the Third Kind – and more specifically, in this context, 
                  of classical film scores from Hollywood’s halcyon days. The 
                  latter was a collection of excerpts from the 13 LPs plus extras 
                  like Studio fanfares and Dimitri Tiomkin’s music from The 
                  Thing, Bernard Herrmann’s King of The Khyber Rifles 
                  music and that of Daniele Amfitheatrof for Salome. This 
                  latest reissue boasts a new remastering. The sound is very good 
                  but then so it was back in the 1970s when Kenneth Wilkinson 
                  was in charge of its production in London’s Kingsway Hall. The 
                  packaging has been redesigned presumably to differentiate it 
                  from the earlier CD reissues - surely it cannot compare with 
                  the striking original LP design reproduced on the back cover 
                  of this present album’s booklet and shown above.  
                     
                  The films of major Warner Bros stars were assigned equally significant 
                  musical support, scores written, more often than not, by Max 
                  Steiner who tackled some 155 films over 30 years at the studio. 
                  The best of these are now committed to disc and  this 
                  album includes some of his most impressive contributions. Those 
                  of us of a certain age are treated, at the commencement of the 
                  first and last selections, to Steiner’s stirring Warner Bros 
                  fanfare. This was heard behind their Shield logo before the 
                  film’s opening credits rolled. Shame we are not treated to this 
                  fanfare for today’s Warner films? Max Steiner was a master at 
                  setting a story’s atmosphere, heightening its drama and manipulating 
                  the emotions of the audience.  
                     
                 
                Casablanca, one of the most successful films ever, is 
                  really a collection of arrangements of patriotic tunes and variations 
                  on the Herman Hupfield song ‘As Time Goes By’. Similar musical 
                  treatments underscored Passage to Marseilles. More representative 
                  of Steiner’s original music are the remaining scores here. The 
                  Caine Mutiny has one of Max’s most memorable and rousing 
                  marches. The Big Sleep has a sweeping romantic waltz 
                  tune for this tale of murder and mayhem. The Treasure of 
                  the Sierra Madre has a magnificent colourful score for this 
                  adventure story set in Mexico  
                  with music suggestive of the greed and madness for gold that 
                  underlies the tale. He also picks up on the story’s comedy, 
                  sentimentality, nobility plus the skirmishes with bandits. Steiner 
                  scored some 30 westerns and they are represented here by Virginia 
                  City which starred Bogart as a snarling half-breed outlaw 
                  pitted against Errol Flynn and Randolph Scott. The ‘Stagecoach’ 
                  sequence heard is very evocative and the Love Scene is another 
                  of Steiner’s tenderly romantic creations. My personal favourite 
                  amongst these gems is the score for Key Largo. There 
                  we had Bogart and Bacall up against ruthless gangster Edward 
                  G. Robinson. Here Steiner (shown above) creates a towering 
                  score that has great nobility and material suggesting a battle 
                  against dark maelstrom forces.  
                     
                  Franz Waxman is here in the evocative ‘Main Title: Martinique’ 
                  from To Have and Have Not. His music for the The Two 
                  Mrs Carrolls follows: the mad artist, Bogart is a wife killer 
                  and the music is sinister and sinuous. This is one of 
                  the most tensely melodramatic scores for any film noir. 
                  It’s another case of the music being far superior to the film. 
                  The lovely Audrey Hepburn starred opposite Bogart as a crusty 
                  old bachelor in the romantic comedy, Sabrina for which 
                  Frederick (or Friedrich) Hollander wrote an enchanting fairy-tale 
                  score. Included here is the Main Title and ‘The Larrabee Estate’. 
                  Victor Young, who wrote some of the loveliest melodies for Hollywood, 
                  is represented by the sweetly sentimental ‘Love Theme’ from 
                  The Left Hand of God. Miklós Rózsa’s music for Sahara, 
                  another wartime adventure, is very redolent of wide and desolate 
                  desert expanses under a merciless sun; the film’s ‘Main Title’ 
                  evocative and heroic music is included here.  
                     
                  The album booklet has the original LP liner notes written by 
                  Rudy Behlmer but unfortunately without all the film stills that 
                  decorated the LP’s back cover.  
                     
                  A very welcome return to an early release in the much-admired 
                  series of Classic Film Scores. An ideal introduction 
                  to film music of Hollywood’s Golden Age.  
                     
                  Ian Lace  
                     
                   
                   
                   
                 
                
                                                                
                  
                  
                
                 
                   
                 
                 
             
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