The Prize (Limited Edition CD Soundtrack)
Sound: B Music:
B
In 1963, Jerry Goldsmith was put into an odd
position. M-G-M wanted another action
hit like they had with the 1959 Alfred Hitchcock film North By Northwest. When they got the writer of that film,
Ernest Lehman, to adapt the espionage thriller The Prize, they went all
out to put together what they hoped would be a winning film. This left Goldsmith trying to come up with a
score that would have the expectations of something Bernard Herrmann would do.
What resulted instead was a very different score in which
Goldsmith did not compromise himself into being a secondary film composer, and
his soundtrack for The Prize debuting the original film score with LP
soundtrack re-recordings, is now available as a limited edition CD from the FSM
label of the magazine Film Score Monthly. There are only 3,000 copies of this pressing, which can be
ordered exclusively from them at www.filmscoremonthly.com
with many other such exclusives.
For the film, journeyman director Mark Robson would helm
the project and the stars would include Paul Newman, Elke Sommer, Diane Baker,
Kevin McCarthy, and Edward G. Robinson.
Despite the high-class cast and intentions, but the film lands up being
a pastiche of all the elements Lehman and Robson could fit from all the
big-budget VistaVision films like North By Northwest that Hitchcock was
doing in the 1950s. This film was shot
in less expensive Panavision. We’ll
save a review of the film for when the DVD is covered on this site, which
brings us back to the music.
It turns out that The Prize becomes an important
transitional score for Goldsmith, who had recently done some of his best early
work on TV’s original Twilight Zone (1959-1964) and John Huston’s Freud
(1962). The Spy craze arrived the
same year, though it had not built up to its peak yet. As the James Bond films were less
psychological versions of Hitchcock films, with more blatant sex and action,
that narrative transition would be somehow mirrored by a musical one. Luck may be a term we could use, but
Goldsmith would be ahead of the game that’s to The Prize, which allowed
him to be a few steps ahead of the many other composers of Spy product when
TV’s The Man from U.N.C.L.E. showed up.
That, the Flint films, and many other great works he would pull off in
the 1960s owe something to his diverse work here. The transition going on here also makes this a strange work, one
that feels as claustrophobic as a nightclub, yet as open as a street fight.
That same year, John Barry did his seminal Bond score for From
Russia, with Love (just re-issued on Capitol CD), and Henry Mancini did his
amazing score for Stanley Donen’s Charade (available in an amazing
audiophile XRCD2 from JVC that is strongly recommended, but also a limited
edition). They are the defining works
of the genre at the time, but Goldsmith would catch up, as all three would
continue to define that genre’s music.
This CD also sounds good, especially considering its
age. There is very rarely any
distortion trouble at all, and the entire 36 tracks are in stereo, though the
re-recordings for some LP compilation are slightly different sounding that the
body of the CD. They are included as
bonus tracks and the fidelity is a sliver less than what precedes it. For fans of music, Spies, and Goldsmith,
this is one to hear.
- Nicholas Sheffo