Lalo Schifrin – There’s a Whole Lalo Schifrin Goin’ On (2013)
BAND/ARTIST: Lalo Schifrin
- Title: There’s a Whole Lalo Schifrin Goin’ On
- Year Of Release: 2013
- Label: Emarcy
- Genre: Jazz
- Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log,scans)
- Total Time: 40:08
- Total Size: 417 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Artist: Lalo Schifrin
Title Of Album: There’s a Whole Lalo Schifrin Goin’ On
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Emarcy
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,scans)
Bitrate: Lossless
Total Time: 40:08
Total Size: 270 mb
Tracklist:
1. Lalo Schifrin - Secret Code Synthesizer (2:31)
2. Lalo Schifrin - Dissolving (2:32)
3. Lalo Schifrin - Machinations (2:45)
4. Lalo Schifrin - Bride of the Wind (2:38)
5. Lalo Schifrin - Life Insurance (2:09)
6. Lalo Schifrin - How to Open at Will the Most Beautiful Window (3:03)
7. Lalo Schifrin - Vaccinated Mushrooms (2:16)
8. Lalo Schifrin - Two Petals, a Flower and a Young Girl (2:45)
9. Lalo Schifrin - Wheat Germ Landscapes (2:44)
10. Lalo Schifrin - Gentle Earthquake (3:32)
11. Lalo Schifrin - Hawks Versus Doves (2:29)
12. Lalo Schifrin - Bonus Track : Lucille (2:45)
13. Lalo Schifrin - Bonus Track : Self-Destruct (2:39)
14. Lalo Schifrin - Bonus Track : Another Side of Harry (2:28)
15. Lalo Schifrin - Bonus Track : Blues a Go-Go (2:52)
For the first time on CD (with four bonus tracks), the imaginary soundtrack which Lalo Schifrin might have written for Luis Bunuel.
Though it may seem unlikely that Frank Zappa had much of an influence on the work of Lalo Schifrin, one can detect some cultural crossover on There’s a Whole Lalo Schifrin Goin’ On. Schifrin was as much a jazz-pop genius as ever, but on this album rock rhythms, musical satire, sound effects, and exotica are all used as camp in a way that is eerily reminiscent of Zappa’s more thoughtful efforts.
Schifrin being Schifrin, every cut has a distinct and catchy melody, but there are whimsical and satirical themes embedded in the music. Nowhere is this more obvious than in “Hawks Vs. Doves,” in which a cheery carnival-like theme is played in counterpoint to a martial air, each interfering with the other. Elsewhere, Schifrin uses unusual percussion, dissonance, and tense, sonically fragmented piano to create soundscapes that are unlike most of the rest of his work. “Secret Code” integrates tabla drums, not a common instrument in American jazz of the time, with a cold, flute-like synthesizer — probably the first time those two instruments were used together. This album was ahead of its time in terms of instrumentation, but was a product of its time in that established ways of doing things were being challenged. Fans of Lalo Schifrin’s work will find this to rank with his best, and those not familiar with anything but the Mission Impossible theme will be drawn in further by the eccentric genius displayed here.
“This album,” says Lalo today, “was a rather absurd writing-challenge, like self-provocation as a composer. I asked myself what would have happened if Luis Bunuel had been writing music. Would he have been capable of finding notes that were equivalent to Surrealism?”
Completed by a few other Schifrin gems from the Universal archives, this album is the zaniest work ever recorded by the Argentinean master, the soundtrack to an imaginary film revered by a nucleus of faithful fans around the world. “Don’t listen seriously to this album,” he sums up, “the whole thing’s a gag, a musical satire like an extravagant plunge into Surrealism.”
Though it may seem unlikely that Frank Zappa had much of an influence on the work of Lalo Schifrin, one can detect some cultural crossover on There’s a Whole Lalo Schifrin Goin’ On. Schifrin was as much a jazz-pop genius as ever, but on this album rock rhythms, musical satire, sound effects, and exotica are all used as camp in a way that is eerily reminiscent of Zappa’s more thoughtful efforts.
Schifrin being Schifrin, every cut has a distinct and catchy melody, but there are whimsical and satirical themes embedded in the music. Nowhere is this more obvious than in “Hawks Vs. Doves,” in which a cheery carnival-like theme is played in counterpoint to a martial air, each interfering with the other. Elsewhere, Schifrin uses unusual percussion, dissonance, and tense, sonically fragmented piano to create soundscapes that are unlike most of the rest of his work. “Secret Code” integrates tabla drums, not a common instrument in American jazz of the time, with a cold, flute-like synthesizer — probably the first time those two instruments were used together. This album was ahead of its time in terms of instrumentation, but was a product of its time in that established ways of doing things were being challenged. Fans of Lalo Schifrin’s work will find this to rank with his best, and those not familiar with anything but the Mission Impossible theme will be drawn in further by the eccentric genius displayed here.
“This album,” says Lalo today, “was a rather absurd writing-challenge, like self-provocation as a composer. I asked myself what would have happened if Luis Bunuel had been writing music. Would he have been capable of finding notes that were equivalent to Surrealism?”
Completed by a few other Schifrin gems from the Universal archives, this album is the zaniest work ever recorded by the Argentinean master, the soundtrack to an imaginary film revered by a nucleus of faithful fans around the world. “Don’t listen seriously to this album,” he sums up, “the whole thing’s a gag, a musical satire like an extravagant plunge into Surrealism.”
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