fbpx
Wikipedia

Audrey's Dance

"Audrey's Dance" is an instrumental song by American composer Angelo Badalamenti for the television series Twin Peaks, appearing as the third track on the soundtrack album Soundtrack from Twin Peaks (1990). Like the rest of the soundtrack, it was produced by both Badalamenti and show creator David Lynch. "Audrey's Dance" first appeared in the show's pilot, aired on April 8, 1990. Named after the character Audrey Horne, the song was memorably featured in "Episode 2" when Audrey dances along to the jukebox in the Double R Diner.

"Audrey's Dance"
Cover of the Twin Peaks song book (1990)
Song by Angelo Badalamenti
from the album Soundtrack from Twin Peaks
ReleasedSeptember 11, 1990
Genre
Length5:15
LabelWarner Bros.
Songwriter(s)Angelo Badalamenti
Producer(s)

"Audrey's Dance" has a cool jazz style with a distinctive "walking" bassline, rhythmic finger snaps, and drums played with brushes. The song shares stylistic elements and melodic motifs with other songs on the Twin Peaks soundtrack, and several variations and alternate arrangements of the song were used throughout the show's run. Despite its title, the song frequently accompanied characters other than Audrey, particularly Bobby Briggs. "Audrey's Dance" was reprised in a key scene from "Part 16" of the 2017 limited revival of Twin Peaks.

Composition edit

"Audrey's Dance" is a jazz song in the cool jazz style.[1] The song has also been compared to lounge music.[2] Royal S. Brown wrote that the song has "a kind of nacht swing style that simultaneously captures the good old days the town would like to live in and the queasy angst of the modern period it is stuck with," and called it "a perfect musical translation of a major facet of Lynch's vision."[3]

Along with other jazz music in Twin Peaks, such as the song "Freshly Squeezed", "Audrey's Dance" is composed around a distinctive "walking" bassline, with a note on each beat.[4] The bass descends and then ascends on a chromatic scale on an octave starting with C, accompanied by improvisation on other instruments rooted in the C blues scale.[4]

The Twin Peaks walking bassline in "Audrey's Dance"[5]
 

Badalamenti wrote the song with multiple harmonic suspensions; in his words, "For this song, I got involved in the use of suspensions ... [which are] dissonant notes that work in chords that rub against the melody ... and create a nice tension, and sometimes you take that dissonance, resolve it, and go to another melody."[6] For example, the song makes repeated use of a dissonant chord that the Australian writer and musician Clare Nina Norelli called "the Audrey chord": G–C–F♯.[7]

The "Audrey chord"[8]
 

The chord, used in the intro on a synthesized vibraphone, contains a tritone, a sinister-sounding musical interval historically associated with the devil.[8] Further dissonance in the song comes from the big band-style brass instruments and clarinet, which build into a "near-deafening cacophony".[9] According to Norelli, the cumulative effect of the song's unresolved harmonic elements is a "dreamscape" that is "not only dreamy but downright spooky, and it feels as if someone has been placed under some sort of nightmarish trance."[10] "Audrey's Dance" borrows motifs from "Laura Palmer's Theme"—first sporadic melodies such as the "Dark Introduction" and the "Doom" motif, then an extended climactic use of the "Climb" motif, which is interrupted before returning to the "Doom" motif at the conclusion.[10]

The percussion is marked by finger snapping and drumming with distinctive brushwork on a snare drum by Grady Tate. Kinny Landrum, who performed synthesizer for the Twin Peaks soundtrack, was inspired to add the snaps by the song "Cool" from the musical West Side Story. Landrum recognized Richard Beymer—who plays Benjamin Horne in Twin Peaks—from his role as Tony in the 1961 film version of West Side Story.[11] Although Lynch and Badalamenti were initially reluctant to include the finger snaps, the choice proved to be fortuitous, and the show managed to include various moments of actors snapping their fingers in time to the music.[12]

Related compositions and variations edit

The main version of "Audrey's Dance" appears on Soundtrack from Twin Peaks, released on September 11, 1990 by Warner Bros.[13] A number of variations on the song appeared in Twin Peaks, including versions with different instrumental arrangements and speeds. There are also distinct songs based on "Audrey's Dance" like "Sneaky Audrey", a short musical cue that typically accompanied Audrey Horne's investigation.[14] Many of these variations were released on the 2011 compilation The Twin Peaks Archive. An early demo version of the track, titled "Slow Cool Jazz", features a solo performance by Badalamenti on Rhodes piano.[15]

Outside of Twin Peaks, the song "Up in Flame"—written by Lynch and Badalamenti—features a similar walking bassline and other compositional elements.[16] A version of "Up in Flames" performed by Julee Cruise appeared in Industrial Symphony No. 1—a musical play directed by Lynch also starring Nicolas Cage, Laura Dern, and Michael J. Anderson—and a performance by blues singer Koko Taylor appeared in the Lynch film Wild at Heart (1990).[16]

Usage in Twin Peaks edit

Seasons one and two (1990–91) edit

 
"Audrey's Dance" in "Episode 2". Audrey Horne says "God, I love this music. Isn't it too dreamy?" before dancing to the jukebox in the Double R Diner.

"Audrey's Dance" is used as both diegetic music—that is, music that characters in the show can hear—as well as (non-diegetic) background music, making it one of a few songs on the Twin Peaks soundtrack that also exists within the universe of the show.[17] Despite its title, "Audrey's Dance" was not originally intended to be associated with Audrey Horne (played by Sherilyn Fenn), a character who was "[o]riginally conceived as a background figure of no specific importance."[18] In early cue sheets for the Twin Peaks pilot episode, the song was called "Cool, Cool Kyle" and "Bobby's Theme", suggesting an intended connection to Dale Cooper (played by Kyle MacLachlan) and Bobby Briggs (played by Dana Ashbrook).[15] From the beginning of the show onward, the song is associated with multiple characters beyond Audrey. In the pilot, the song is identified with Dale Cooper, Bobby Briggs, and Bobby's friend Mike Nelson.[19] Norelli suggests that the explicit association with Audrey Horne was an afterthought.[15]

The song first appears in the pilot, where it is used alongside scenes with Dale Cooper and Bobby Briggs.[20] It appears in "Episode 1" when Audrey dances to the song in the office of her father, Benjamin Horne, at the Great Northern Hotel; Benjamin Horne takes the needle off the record, stopping the song, and tells his daughter to stop playing loud music in his office.[21] Audrey dances to the song again in "Episode 2", where she chooses the song from a jukebox at the Double R Diner.[17] Fenn improvised the dance on the spot without choreography or rehearsal, as Lynch had rewritten the scene to include the dance at the last minute.[18] According to Fenn,

The day where Audrey dances in the diner I came to the set and David said, "We're going to get some cappuccinos and rewrite this scene and at the end you’re just gonna stand up and start to groove to this really cool, sexy, jazzy thing that Angelo and I just wrote! It's Audrey's theme, you're just gonna get lost in that music!" I said, "What do you mean? I just worked this scene out with my teacher!" I was so nervous, [laughs] but I love him and trust him and said okay. I didn't know sometimes what I was doing, to be honest. He knows the world and if you trust him and go into it, you'll fly if you don’t think about it too much."[22]

Critics have praised the scene and the use of "Audrey's Dance" in "Episode 2", calling it "Audrey's most famous moment ... without question"[18] and "one of Twin Peaks' most iconic moments."[17] David Bushman and Arthur Smith also called the scene "iconic" and opined that "[i]t's a tableau that feels oddly suspended in time, mesmerizingly erotic, faintly nostalgic, and mildly unsettling, though it's hard to put your finger on just why—in other words, it's pure Twin Peaks, and we love it."[23]

Twin Peaks: The Return (2017) edit

The song made a surprise reappearance in "Part 16" of the 2017 third season of Twin Peaks when Audrey dances to the song at the Roadhouse.[18] Similar to the dance in "Episode 2", Fenn improvised the dance in "Part 16" with minimal direction from Lynch—although when the director asked her to dance like she had in 1990, Fenn protested "I'm not 24, I'm frickin' 52 and I can't do it the same."[18] "Audrey's Dance" also plays in reverse over the episode's credit sequence.[24] The band on stage, portrayed by extras who were actual musicians, accurately reflects the instrumentation of the song with two clarinet players, an upright bassist, a drummer playing with brushes, and a pianist (playing Johnny Jewel's Rhodes piano).[25]

Dean Hurley, the music supervisor for the third season, said the song had been used in the original series as a "hypnotic thing where [Audrey is] almost overtaken and goes into a trance dancing to the song". The use of the song in the third season was intended to convey a similar effect. Hurley continued:

Something's going on with her—you know, it's anyone's guess what it is—but that music cue is somehow pivotal to the whole thing. And I mean, I can't even speak to it because I don't know what's going on. But something's going on. And I think that something is defined in David's head and why he wanted to do, specifically, this 'Audrey's Dance' reprise and work that into her storyline.[25]

Samples and cover versions edit

San Francisco-based rapper Andre Nickatina sampled "Audrey's Dance" for his 1995 track "Straight 2 the Point", which is not a rap song per se but a series of name drops over a beat.[26] At Danish music site Heartbeats.dk, Fabian Hansen wrote (translated into English) that "with its tough jazz beat and creepy keys, 'Audrey's Dance' is actually quite impeccable as a musical backdrop for gangsta attitudes."[26]

In 2016, experimental rock band Xiu Xiu covered "Audrey's Dance" on Plays the Music of Twin Peaks.[27] The rendition was praised in Pitchfork, whose contributor Daniel Dylan Wray wrote that the band's "usual sonic attack was mellowed considerably by the rich ambience of Badalamenti's original" and that their cover "feels both experimental yet deeply attuned to what made Twin Peaks such a fascinating listen—and watch, of course—in the first place."[27] Tom Marsh of The Quietus wrote "[t]here's something really satisfying about hearing the vibraphone theme to 'Audrey's Dance' suddenly pop up over a scratchy, subterranean bedrock of electronic drums and synth squiggles," calling the cover "a pretty perfect marriage of styles, and when guitar squawls, skitter percussion and random beeps complicate the mix, it sounds jazzy but never like a cacophony, because those Badalamenti vibraphone and piano motifs guide us through."[28]

Reception edit

Brian Coney at The Quietus praised "Audrey's Dance" as an example of the Twin Peaks soundtrack's "genre-warping range."[29] In particular, Coney highlighted the song's "slinking bass-line, jarring woodwinds, brushed percussion, finger-clicks and vibraphone: equal parts suggestive and sinister, its woozy lounge sway implies proposition and deceit in unison, each off-kilter stab symbolising the unpredictability of the show's high-school femme fatale Audrey Horne."[29]

Vulture named the reprise of "Audrey's Dance" as the best musical TV moment of 2017.[30] Critic Sean T. Collins wrote that the "unexpected" use of the song prompted the audience "to contemplate nostalgia, aging, the folly of youth, the regrets of adulthood, the nature of reality, music, magic, and whether the mistakes of the past can ever truly be put right — Twin Peaks: The Return in musical form. No other cue this year was more complex, more resonant, or more intriguing."[30]

Jason Heller at The A.V. Club noted that Twin Peaks and "Audrey's Dance" were a key stylistic influence on the late-90s swing revival, "a missing link between old-school exotica and Cocktail Nation."[31]

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Norelli 2017, p. 91.
  2. ^ Cills, Hazel (September 6, 2016). "Twin Peaks's Score Is as Alluring as Ever in 2016". MTV News. from the original on September 24, 2017. Retrieved April 25, 2018.
  3. ^ Brown 2007, p. 89.
  4. ^ a b Norelli 2017, p. 92.
  5. ^ Badalamenti & Lynch 1990, p. 12.
  6. ^ Ivie, Devon (May 12, 2017). "Angelo Badalamenti Tells the Stories Behind 5 Twin Peaks Songs". Vulture. from the original on March 13, 2018. Retrieved April 25, 2018.
  7. ^ Norelli 2017, p. 105.
  8. ^ a b Norelli 2017, p. 106.
  9. ^ Norelli 2017, p. 107–108.
  10. ^ a b Norelli 2017, p. 107.
  11. ^ Combs, Jim (November 1990), "Wrapped in Plastic: Would You Believe Midi Cables?", Keyboard
  12. ^ Norelli 2017, p. 95–96.
  13. ^ Anon. (1990). Music from Twin Peaks (Liner notes). Angelo Badalamenti. Warner Bros. Records. 7599-26316-2.
  14. ^ Norelli 2017, p. 112–113.
  15. ^ a b c Norelli 2017, p. 59.
  16. ^ a b Norelli 2017, p. 112.
  17. ^ a b c Norelli 2017, p. 109.
  18. ^ a b c d e Conterio, Martyn (September 30, 2017). "Dissecting Audrey's Dance with Twin Peaks star Sherilyn Fenn". Little White Lies. from the original on January 30, 2018. Retrieved April 15, 2018.
  19. ^ Kalinak 1995, p. 87.
  20. ^ Norelli 2017, p. 108.
  21. ^ Norelli 2017, pp. 108–109.
  22. ^ Dukes 2014, pp. 78–79.
  23. ^ Bushman & Smith 2016, Chapter 20: There Was a Fish in the Percolator – Memorable Moments in Twin Peaks.
  24. ^ Ivie, Devon (August 29, 2017). "So, What's Going on With Audrey Horne in Twin Peaks: The Return?". Vulture. from the original on October 10, 2017. Retrieved April 18, 2018.
  25. ^ a b DJ Morgan (August 27, 2017). "The Music of Twin Peaks: The Return: Eddie Vedder". KEXP.org. from the original on 2017-10-04. Retrieved April 18, 2018.
  26. ^ a b Hansen, Fabian (May 19, 2017). "Moby og The KLF møder Twin Peaks: 5 samples vi kan lide" [Moby and The KLF meet Twin Peaks: 5 samples we like]. Heartbeats.dk (in Danish). from the original on April 19, 2018. Retrieved April 18, 2018.
  27. ^ a b Wray, Daniel Dylan (May 19, 2017). "10 Songs That Sample 'Twin Peaks' Well". Pitchfork. from the original on October 15, 2017. Retrieved April 18, 2018.
  28. ^ Marsh, Tom (April 22, 2016). "Xiu Xiu – Plays the Music of Twin Peaks". The Quietus. Archived from the original on April 19, 2018. Retrieved April 18, 2018.
  29. ^ a b Coney, Brian (September 10, 2016). "Reviews – Angelo Badalamenti – Twin Peaks Original Score". The Quietus. Archived from the original on April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  30. ^ a b Collins, Sean T. (December 20, 2017). "The 10 Best Musical TV Moments of 2017". Vulture. New York Media. from the original on January 4, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018.
  31. ^ Heller, Jason (August 27, 2014). "In the '90s, Cocktail Nation offered a swingin' alternative to alternative rock". The A.V. Club. from the original on April 22, 2018. Retrieved April 22, 2018.

Bibliography edit

audrey, dance, instrumental, song, american, composer, angelo, badalamenti, television, series, twin, peaks, appearing, third, track, soundtrack, album, soundtrack, from, twin, peaks, 1990, like, rest, soundtrack, produced, both, badalamenti, show, creator, da. Audrey s Dance is an instrumental song by American composer Angelo Badalamenti for the television series Twin Peaks appearing as the third track on the soundtrack album Soundtrack from Twin Peaks 1990 Like the rest of the soundtrack it was produced by both Badalamenti and show creator David Lynch Audrey s Dance first appeared in the show s pilot aired on April 8 1990 Named after the character Audrey Horne the song was memorably featured in Episode 2 when Audrey dances along to the jukebox in the Double R Diner Audrey s Dance Cover of the Twin Peaks song book 1990 Song by Angelo Badalamentifrom the album Soundtrack from Twin PeaksReleasedSeptember 11 1990GenreCool jazzLength5 15LabelWarner Bros Songwriter s Angelo BadalamentiProducer s Angelo BadalamentiDavid Lynch Audrey s Dance has a cool jazz style with a distinctive walking bassline rhythmic finger snaps and drums played with brushes The song shares stylistic elements and melodic motifs with other songs on the Twin Peaks soundtrack and several variations and alternate arrangements of the song were used throughout the show s run Despite its title the song frequently accompanied characters other than Audrey particularly Bobby Briggs Audrey s Dance was reprised in a key scene from Part 16 of the 2017 limited revival of Twin Peaks Contents 1 Composition 1 1 Related compositions and variations 2 Usage in Twin Peaks 2 1 Seasons one and two 1990 91 2 2 Twin Peaks The Return 2017 3 Samples and cover versions 4 Reception 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 BibliographyComposition edit Audrey s Dance is a jazz song in the cool jazz style 1 The song has also been compared to lounge music 2 Royal S Brown wrote that the song has a kind of nacht swing style that simultaneously captures the good old days the town would like to live in and the queasy angst of the modern period it is stuck with and called it a perfect musical translation of a major facet of Lynch s vision 3 Along with other jazz music in Twin Peaks such as the song Freshly Squeezed Audrey s Dance is composed around a distinctive walking bassline with a note on each beat 4 The bass descends and then ascends on a chromatic scale on an octave starting with C accompanied by improvisation on other instruments rooted in the C blues scale 4 The Twin Peaks walking bassline in Audrey s Dance 5 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file Badalamenti wrote the song with multiple harmonic suspensions in his words For this song I got involved in the use of suspensions which are dissonant notes that work in chords that rub against the melody and create a nice tension and sometimes you take that dissonance resolve it and go to another melody 6 For example the song makes repeated use of a dissonant chord that the Australian writer and musician Clare Nina Norelli called the Audrey chord G C F 7 The Audrey chord 8 nbsp source Audio playback is not supported in your browser You can download the audio file The chord used in the intro on a synthesized vibraphone contains a tritone a sinister sounding musical interval historically associated with the devil 8 Further dissonance in the song comes from the big band style brass instruments and clarinet which build into a near deafening cacophony 9 According to Norelli the cumulative effect of the song s unresolved harmonic elements is a dreamscape that is not only dreamy but downright spooky and it feels as if someone has been placed under some sort of nightmarish trance 10 Audrey s Dance borrows motifs from Laura Palmer s Theme first sporadic melodies such as the Dark Introduction and the Doom motif then an extended climactic use of the Climb motif which is interrupted before returning to the Doom motif at the conclusion 10 The percussion is marked by finger snapping and drumming with distinctive brushwork on a snare drum by Grady Tate Kinny Landrum who performed synthesizer for the Twin Peaks soundtrack was inspired to add the snaps by the song Cool from the musical West Side Story Landrum recognized Richard Beymer who plays Benjamin Horne in Twin Peaks from his role as Tony in the 1961 film version of West Side Story 11 Although Lynch and Badalamenti were initially reluctant to include the finger snaps the choice proved to be fortuitous and the show managed to include various moments of actors snapping their fingers in time to the music 12 Related compositions and variations edit The main version of Audrey s Dance appears on Soundtrack from Twin Peaks released on September 11 1990 by Warner Bros 13 A number of variations on the song appeared in Twin Peaks including versions with different instrumental arrangements and speeds There are also distinct songs based on Audrey s Dance like Sneaky Audrey a short musical cue that typically accompanied Audrey Horne s investigation 14 Many of these variations were released on the 2011 compilation The Twin Peaks Archive An early demo version of the track titled Slow Cool Jazz features a solo performance by Badalamenti on Rhodes piano 15 Outside of Twin Peaks the song Up in Flame written by Lynch and Badalamenti features a similar walking bassline and other compositional elements 16 A version of Up in Flames performed by Julee Cruise appeared in Industrial Symphony No 1 a musical play directed by Lynch also starring Nicolas Cage Laura Dern and Michael J Anderson and a performance by blues singer Koko Taylor appeared in the Lynch film Wild at Heart 1990 16 Usage in Twin Peaks editSeasons one and two 1990 91 edit nbsp Audrey s Dance in Episode 2 Audrey Horne says God I love this music Isn t it too dreamy before dancing to the jukebox in the Double R Diner Audrey s Dance is used as both diegetic music that is music that characters in the show can hear as well as non diegetic background music making it one of a few songs on the Twin Peaks soundtrack that also exists within the universe of the show 17 Despite its title Audrey s Dance was not originally intended to be associated with Audrey Horne played by Sherilyn Fenn a character who was o riginally conceived as a background figure of no specific importance 18 In early cue sheets for the Twin Peaks pilot episode the song was called Cool Cool Kyle and Bobby s Theme suggesting an intended connection to Dale Cooper played by Kyle MacLachlan and Bobby Briggs played by Dana Ashbrook 15 From the beginning of the show onward the song is associated with multiple characters beyond Audrey In the pilot the song is identified with Dale Cooper Bobby Briggs and Bobby s friend Mike Nelson 19 Norelli suggests that the explicit association with Audrey Horne was an afterthought 15 The song first appears in the pilot where it is used alongside scenes with Dale Cooper and Bobby Briggs 20 It appears in Episode 1 when Audrey dances to the song in the office of her father Benjamin Horne at the Great Northern Hotel Benjamin Horne takes the needle off the record stopping the song and tells his daughter to stop playing loud music in his office 21 Audrey dances to the song again in Episode 2 where she chooses the song from a jukebox at the Double R Diner 17 Fenn improvised the dance on the spot without choreography or rehearsal as Lynch had rewritten the scene to include the dance at the last minute 18 According to Fenn The day where Audrey dances in the diner I came to the set and David said We re going to get some cappuccinos and rewrite this scene and at the end you re just gonna stand up and start to groove to this really cool sexy jazzy thing that Angelo and I just wrote It s Audrey s theme you re just gonna get lost in that music I said What do you mean I just worked this scene out with my teacher I was so nervous laughs but I love him and trust him and said okay I didn t know sometimes what I was doing to be honest He knows the world and if you trust him and go into it you ll fly if you don t think about it too much 22 Critics have praised the scene and the use of Audrey s Dance in Episode 2 calling it Audrey s most famous moment without question 18 and one of Twin Peaks most iconic moments 17 David Bushman and Arthur Smith also called the scene iconic and opined that i t s a tableau that feels oddly suspended in time mesmerizingly erotic faintly nostalgic and mildly unsettling though it s hard to put your finger on just why in other words it s pure Twin Peaks and we love it 23 Twin Peaks The Return 2017 edit The song made a surprise reappearance in Part 16 of the 2017 third season of Twin Peaks when Audrey dances to the song at the Roadhouse 18 Similar to the dance in Episode 2 Fenn improvised the dance in Part 16 with minimal direction from Lynch although when the director asked her to dance like she had in 1990 Fenn protested I m not 24 I m frickin 52 and I can t do it the same 18 Audrey s Dance also plays in reverse over the episode s credit sequence 24 The band on stage portrayed by extras who were actual musicians accurately reflects the instrumentation of the song with two clarinet players an upright bassist a drummer playing with brushes and a pianist playing Johnny Jewel s Rhodes piano 25 Dean Hurley the music supervisor for the third season said the song had been used in the original series as a hypnotic thing where Audrey is almost overtaken and goes into a trance dancing to the song The use of the song in the third season was intended to convey a similar effect Hurley continued Something s going on with her you know it s anyone s guess what it is but that music cue is somehow pivotal to the whole thing And I mean I can t even speak to it because I don t know what s going on But something s going on And I think that something is defined in David s head and why he wanted to do specifically this Audrey s Dance reprise and work that into her storyline 25 Samples and cover versions editSan Francisco based rapper Andre Nickatina sampled Audrey s Dance for his 1995 track Straight 2 the Point which is not a rap song per se but a series of name drops over a beat 26 At Danish music site Heartbeats dk Fabian Hansen wrote translated into English that with its tough jazz beat and creepy keys Audrey s Dance is actually quite impeccable as a musical backdrop for gangsta attitudes 26 In 2016 experimental rock band Xiu Xiu covered Audrey s Dance on Plays the Music of Twin Peaks 27 The rendition was praised in Pitchfork whose contributor Daniel Dylan Wray wrote that the band s usual sonic attack was mellowed considerably by the rich ambience of Badalamenti s original and that their cover feels both experimental yet deeply attuned to what made Twin Peaks such a fascinating listen and watch of course in the first place 27 Tom Marsh of The Quietus wrote t here s something really satisfying about hearing the vibraphone theme to Audrey s Dance suddenly pop up over a scratchy subterranean bedrock of electronic drums and synth squiggles calling the cover a pretty perfect marriage of styles and when guitar squawls skitter percussion and random beeps complicate the mix it sounds jazzy but never like a cacophony because those Badalamenti vibraphone and piano motifs guide us through 28 Reception editBrian Coney at The Quietus praised Audrey s Dance as an example of the Twin Peaks soundtrack s genre warping range 29 In particular Coney highlighted the song s slinking bass line jarring woodwinds brushed percussion finger clicks and vibraphone equal parts suggestive and sinister its woozy lounge sway implies proposition and deceit in unison each off kilter stab symbolising the unpredictability of the show s high school femme fatale Audrey Horne 29 Vulture named the reprise of Audrey s Dance as the best musical TV moment of 2017 30 Critic Sean T Collins wrote that the unexpected use of the song prompted the audience to contemplate nostalgia aging the folly of youth the regrets of adulthood the nature of reality music magic and whether the mistakes of the past can ever truly be put right Twin Peaks The Return in musical form No other cue this year was more complex more resonant or more intriguing 30 Jason Heller at The A V Club noted that Twin Peaks and Audrey s Dance were a key stylistic influence on the late 90s swing revival a missing link between old school exotica and Cocktail Nation 31 References editFootnotes edit Norelli 2017 p 91 Cills Hazel September 6 2016 Twin Peaks s Score Is as Alluring as Ever in 2016 MTV News Archived from the original on September 24 2017 Retrieved April 25 2018 Brown 2007 p 89 a b Norelli 2017 p 92 Badalamenti amp Lynch 1990 p 12 Ivie Devon May 12 2017 Angelo Badalamenti Tells the Stories Behind 5 Twin Peaks Songs Vulture Archived from the original on March 13 2018 Retrieved April 25 2018 Norelli 2017 p 105 a b Norelli 2017 p 106 Norelli 2017 p 107 108 a b Norelli 2017 p 107 Combs Jim November 1990 Wrapped in Plastic Would You Believe Midi Cables Keyboard Norelli 2017 p 95 96 Anon 1990 Music from Twin Peaks Liner notes Angelo Badalamenti Warner Bros Records 7599 26316 2 Norelli 2017 p 112 113 a b c Norelli 2017 p 59 a b Norelli 2017 p 112 a b c Norelli 2017 p 109 a b c d e Conterio Martyn September 30 2017 Dissecting Audrey s Dance with Twin Peaks star Sherilyn Fenn Little White Lies Archived from the original on January 30 2018 Retrieved April 15 2018 Kalinak 1995 p 87 Norelli 2017 p 108 Norelli 2017 pp 108 109 Dukes 2014 pp 78 79 Bushman amp Smith 2016 Chapter 20 There Was a Fish in the Percolator Memorable Moments in Twin Peaks Ivie Devon August 29 2017 So What s Going on With Audrey Horne in Twin Peaks The Return Vulture Archived from the original on October 10 2017 Retrieved April 18 2018 a b DJ Morgan August 27 2017 The Music of Twin Peaks The Return Eddie Vedder KEXP org Archived from the original on 2017 10 04 Retrieved April 18 2018 a b Hansen Fabian May 19 2017 Moby og The KLF moder Twin Peaks 5 samples vi kan lide Moby and The KLF meet Twin Peaks 5 samples we like Heartbeats dk in Danish Archived from the original on April 19 2018 Retrieved April 18 2018 a b Wray Daniel Dylan May 19 2017 10 Songs That Sample Twin Peaks Well Pitchfork Archived from the original on October 15 2017 Retrieved April 18 2018 Marsh Tom April 22 2016 Xiu Xiu Plays the Music of Twin Peaks The Quietus Archived from the original on April 19 2018 Retrieved April 18 2018 a b Coney Brian September 10 2016 Reviews Angelo Badalamenti Twin Peaks Original Score The Quietus Archived from the original on April 22 2018 Retrieved April 22 2018 a b Collins Sean T December 20 2017 The 10 Best Musical TV Moments of 2017 Vulture New York Media Archived from the original on January 4 2018 Retrieved April 22 2018 Heller Jason August 27 2014 In the 90s Cocktail Nation offered a swingin alternative to alternative rock The A V Club Archived from the original on April 22 2018 Retrieved April 22 2018 Bibliography edit Badalamenti Angelo Lynch David 1990 Twin Peaks song book Arrangement by Edwin McLean introduction by Bruce Pollock Cherry Lane Music Company ISBN 0 89524 613 9 Brown Royal S 2007 Film Musings A Selected Anthology from Fanfare Magazine Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 5856 5 Bushman David Smith Arthur 2016 Twin Peaks FAQ All That s Left to Know About a Place Both Wonderful and Strange Milwaukee Wisconsin Hal Leonard Corporation ISBN 978 1 4950 6389 3 Dukes Brad 2014 Reflections An Oral History of Twin Peaks Nashville Tennessee short Tall Press ISBN 978 0 615 96883 4 Kalinak Kathryn 1995 Disturbing the Guests with This Racket Music and Twin Peaks In Lavery David ed Full of Secrets Critical Approaches toTwin Peaks Detroit Wayne State University Press p 82 ISBN 978 0 8143 2506 3 Norelli Clare Nina 2017 Soundtrack from Twin Peaks 33 Vol 120 New York Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 5013 2301 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Audrey 27s Dance amp oldid 1206158001, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.