Fulvue Drive-In.com
Current Reviews
In Stores Soon
 
In Stores Now
 
DVD Reviews, SACD Reviews Essays Interviews Contact Us Meet the Staff
An Explanation of Our Rating System Search  
Category:    Home > Reviews > Comedy > Fantasy > Animation > Soundtrack > Bell, Book & Candle/1,001 Arabian Nights (Mr. Magoo) CD Soundtrack

Bell, Book & Candle/1,001 Arabian Nights (FSM CD)

 

Sound: B     Music: B

 

 

In another great single CD soundtrack double feature, Film Score Monthly.com’s FSM CD soundtrack series continues with music by George Duning to two very notable late 1950s films.  One is Bell, Book & Candle, the other 1958 pairing of James Stewart and Kim Novak in an interesting film about witchcraft and female empowerment that makes for a decent flipside to their work in Alfred Hitchcock’s Vertigo.  The other is the charming and interesting 1959 animated version of 1,001 Arabian Nights with Mr Magoo.

 

The scores have some common denominators in what may be mystical and potentially is, though the animated feature has its vocal moments and is more fantasy oriented.  This is a great pairing of scores and some really enjoyable music.  The former was the kind of film that made Columbia Pictures go from a smaller studio to a major one, while the animated feature was the first for the great UPA Studios, made of extremely talented animators who went on strike against Walt Disney.  The company they formed changed animation forever and this will be of especially strong interest to animation buffs.  Like the films, the music can be considered truly delightful and is highly recommended.

 

The PCM 2.0 16bit/44.1kHz Stereo sound shows some of its age in the source material’s background hiss, but some nice, articulate soundstage has still been derived from the 3-track ½” soundmaster to Candle and ¼” stereo album tape for Nights.  It is a pleasant surprise in both cases and DVD versions should sound no worse.  Duning seems to have been lucky to have a good ear, good skills and the right producers and engineers working with him, because FSM’s CD of his 1963 Toy In The Attic (also reviewed elsewhere on this site) also had good sound fidelity.  The booklet included has the usual excellent new liner notes, classic documents, picture reproductions and information about each track.  You can order, listen to select tracks and more by visiting www.filmscoremonthly.com and get more information on these and other great FSM CD titles.  We’ll get to Duning’s The Devil At 4 O’clock FSM soundtrack next.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


Marketplace


 
 Copyright © MMIII through MMX fulvuedrive-in.com