Soylent Green/Demon
Seed Soundtracks (Limited Edition
CD)
Sound: B+ (both)
Music for Soylent Green: B+
Demon Seed: B+
Two more examples of the original M-G-M Studio’s attempts
to have another 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) are examined on the double
feature, single CD soundtrack for Richard Fleischer’s Soylent Green
(1973) and Donald Cammell’s Demon Seed (1977). Both films are thinking Science Fiction genre works that succeed
more often then they fail, but are also flawed film works. Unbelievably, neither of these films ever
had their fine soundtracks released, but they are here and in stereo for the
first time. Each film was issued
monophonically in its theatrical release, a legacy that follows all home video
versions, including the new Soylent Green DVD Warner Bros. just issued.
That is an important point for this music, because for a
score recorded in 1973, Fred Myrow’s score has held up remarkably well on a
sonic level. The masters held up
exceptionally well. I always liked this
music, but could never before here how rich, deep, layered, and detailed it was
until this CD. Previously, the only way
to hear the score was on isolated FM analog tracks on the old letterboxed 12”
MGM/UA LaserDisc, which was monophonic and only included the music used in the
film. This CD has just about all that,
plus five works not used. What it is
missing is a cue used briefly when Shirl (Leigh Taylor-Young is playing a
counsel, stand-alone video game. Since
no such thing existed in 1973, they had to make up one, but still did not have
electronic sound for it. An orchestral
arrangement was made to give the impression of a space wars game. Even if they found it, it looks like there would
have been no room on this single disc.
It was enough of a revelation to hear the music isolated
many years ago from the film. That is
all the more reason, especially after watching the film probably several
hundred times (including a long series of friends who had never seen it), that
this CD was such a big surprise. Just
when I thought I was familiar with the score, it was like never having really
heard the music, which is exceptionally recorded, engineered, produced, and
detailed. Warner missed a priceless
opportunity to do a remix of the film in 5.1 or even Pro Logic, because the
score is that amazing in both content and presentation. The three track magnetic stereo masters
endure well.
The only thing that dates it is the Muzak and laid-back
Soft Rock/Lite Jazz-style of the times, yet even that works from an era of
Civil unrest and the beginnings of pro-Environmental movements. It is a product of its time, ahead of that
time, which is more obvious in the electronic and experimental sections of the
score. With some orchestrations by
Gerald Fried (see his Limited Horror CD set elsewhere on this site), and
director Richard Fleischer’s son Mark Fleischer even contributed a few pieces
for the film, you get a complete, well-rounded work that does a great job of
backing up the film’s narrative. That
includes the murder thriller, the personal experiences of certain characters,
what has happened to the society, and the dark foreboding of something ugly
about to happen.
If you have sent he film, you know some of it is
unintentionally funny, while other parts date oddly, but it is really a decent
film and it would play even better if the music score were presented in stereo
with the film. This CD proves that,
which is a great treat stand-alone. The
same can be said for Demon Seed, composed by Jerry Fielding. This is a more electronic score, but a very
effective one both dramatically and musically.
Fielding is best known for his theme song to TV’s original
The Bionic Woman from 1976, but that turns out to be atypical of the
kinds of music he was stretching out to do in his later composing years. Demon Seed is the most realized and
fullest-length of what he pulled off.
Some of it has dated because the sounds and the music have become
somewhat more commonplace since 1977, including Electronica music of all
places. It is very effective in this
electronic variant of the woman trapped in the “old, dark house”, something
that had already occurred in the classic black and white episode of TV’s The
Avengers entitled The House That Jack Built, where the house is
fully automated and a death trap. It
just lacks the omnipresent self-aware computer being that Proteus is in this
film.
There are a few unused music cues in this section as well.
All of which are just as good as the rest of the score. Combined with the previous score, this CD is
packed with great, for-real movie music like we rarely hear today. It also covers two underrated gems from the
latter half of the last golden age of cinematic Science Fiction before
Fantasy/Space Opera Star Wars brought that great period to an end. Many even confuse Star Wars for real
Science Fiction, which it is not. This
double score disc is a strong reminder of that, but get it while you can. It can be ordered exclusively at www.filmscoremonthly.com and only
3,000 copies have been pressed.
- Nicholas Sheffo