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Dracula (album)

Dracula is a soundtrack performed by the Kronos Quartet, with music composed by Philip Glass, for the 1931 film Dracula.[1][2]

Dracula
Soundtrack album by
Released27 August 1999 (1999-08-27)
RecordedAugust 1998
GenreContemporary classical
LabelNonesuch Records (#79542)
ProducerJudith Sherman, Michael Riesman, Kurt Munkacsi
Kronos Quartet chronology

Genesis and performance edit

The movie (directed by Tod Browning and starring Bela Lugosi) could be shown to audiences both as a silent movie and as a talkie, though conversation was limited to basic narrative elements. Unusually, it did not have a specific score and only two pieces of music on its soundtrack: Tchaikovsky's Swan Lake during the opening credits, and the overture of Wagner's Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg during a scene at an opera.[3]

Glass was commissioned to write the score by Universal Studios Home Entertainment, which released the movie with the Glass-soundtrack on VHS and DVD in 1999. According to Glass, the choice of chamber music played by a string quartet rather than an orchestral score followed from the movie's setting, "libraries and drawing rooms and gardens."[3]

Kronos and Glass (on piano) performed the score during viewings of the movie across the United States in 1999 and 2000 to promote the album.[4][5][6][7][8] Other promotion efforts by Universal, which was trying to "reinvigorate and re-market" their Classical Monsters catalog, included discounts for buyers of multiple CDs, and a trailer for the movie on copies of the video release of The Mummy.[3]

Philip Glass and the Kronos Quartet edit

Glass and the Quartet have collaborated on a number of albums. Kronos first recorded a Glass composition on the 1985 soundtrack Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters. In 1986, they contributed two tracks to his Songs from Liquid Days. In that same year they recorded a composition of his for their 1986 album Kronos Quartet, their first album on Nonesuch Records, which also releases Glass's music. In 1993, they recorded Kronos Quartet Performs Philip Glass, containing his String Quartets nos. 2, 4, and 5; the latter is the first piece Glass wrote specifically for Kronos. A number of compositions played by Kronos are found on the Philip Glass 10-CD collection Glass Box: A Nonesuch Retrospective, released in 2008.

Critical reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic     [9]

The soundtrack and the performances thereof have received mixed reviews. Entertainment Weekly was very positive, praising the "hypnotic new score,"[1] while The Essential Monster Movie Guide calls the score "unnecessary,"[10] and a Lugosi-biography calls it "ill-considered."[11]

Negative reviews abounded: Allan Kozinn of The New York Times remarked that "the project seems not to have inspired Mr. Glass....Heard alone on CD it is harmless enough, but coupled with the film it does more harm than good."[12] The San Francisco Chronicle said, in anticipation of a performance with the composer on piano, "after previewing CD and video, it is painfully evident that this composer and this film are mismatched." It continued, "Glass' constant score simply sounds busy, its gloomy arpeggios merely getting in the way. The few chords that accompany moments of shock verge on the cheesy....the Glass music seems to suck away the film's life blood. Who's the vampire now?"[2] Likewise negative, but this time after a live performance of the movie and music at Royce Hall, on the UCLA campus, was Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times: "As a public event, however, the Royce concert, performed by Glass and the Kronos Quartet and conducted by Michael Riesman, was a distinct disappointment."[13]

Others were more positive. Roger Ebert praised the score, writing: "The Glass score is effective in the way it suggests not just moody creepiness, but the urgency and need behind Dracula's vampirism. It evokes a blood-thirst that is 500 years old."[14] Self-proclaimed "film purists" Bill Hunt and Todd Doogan called the soundtrack "quite cool" and commented that it "fits the film perfectly."[15] After commenting on what he called the low artistic quality of the film, Philip Kennicott of The Washington Post said: "The delightful thing about Glass's music for film is that there's no need for it. It is a pure artistic addition to something that was not wanting in the first place; and in that act, Glass confirms a kind of reverence for the original. It is, artistically if not financially, an act of selfless collaboration with a partner—the film—that might be considered the culturally undead."[16] Bradley Bambarger, in Billboard, praised the soundtrack as "one of Glass' most lyrical, moving works, regardless of genre."[4] Mark Allender's review on Allmusic likewise ranks the soundtrack very high in Glass's oeuvre:

The music is absolutely beautiful, augmented by the raw, woody sounds of the Kronos Quartet. No refined or reverbed string sounds here; you hear the naked, scratchy sound of a bow on a string all the way through, playing in the interwoven arpeggiated style that is unmistakably Glass. Complex chord structures and dense rhythms permeate the record, making it musically satisfying for both the pedestrian and the sophisticate ear. This will certainly stand out as one of the premiere works in Glass' soundtrack portfolio.[17]

Track listing edit

All music is composed by Philip Glass

No.TitleLength
1."Dracula"1:12
2."Journey to the Inn"0:43
3."The Inn"1:16
4."The Crypt"1:16
5."Carriage Without a Driver"2:11
6."The Castle"3:10
7."The Drawing Room"1:06
8."'Excellent, Mr. Renfield'"2:46
9."The Three Consorts of Dracula"1:30
10."The Storm"1:29
11."Horrible Tragedy"1:22
12."London Fog"1:15
13."In the Theatre"2:48
14."Lucy's Bitten"2:18
15."Seward Sanatorium"2:57
16."Renfield"2:57
17."In His Cell"1:31
18."When the Dream Comes"2:07
19."Dracula Enters"3:59
20."Or a Wolf"4:38
21."Women in White"3:07
22."Renfield in the Drawing Room"3:26
23."Dr. van Helsing and Dracula"3:26
24."Mina on the Terrace"4:42
25."Mina's Bedroom/The Abbey"3:53
26."The End of Dracula"4:06

Releases and format edit

 
Alternate cover.

The album was released by Nonesuch with two different covers. One was black with the name "DRACULA" in a panel with an ornamented border; the version currently available has a colored drawing of Count Dracula resembling the movie poster. Unlike most other Kronos releases on Nonesuch, this album does not come as an MP3 download.[18] The soundtrack was included in a 5-CD compilation of Philip Glass soundtracks, released in 2001 (Nonesuch 79660).[4]

Credits edit

Musicians edit

Production edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Raftery, Brian M.; Troy Patterson (1999-09-03). "Fast Forward, The Latest from the Home-Video Front: A Score with a Bite". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2009-05-12.
  2. ^ a b Ulrich, Allan (1999-10-28). "Glass score takes bite out of Dracula: Composer joins Kronos Quartet at Paramount screening". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2009-05-12.
  3. ^ a b c Bessman, Jim (1999-09-04). "Glass scores Dracula for Universal; Will Tour in Support". Billboard. p. 93. Retrieved 2009-05-13.
  4. ^ a b c Bambarger, Bradley (2001-11-03). "Rev. of Philip Glass, Glass on Film". Billboard. p. 41. Retrieved 2009-05-13.
  5. ^ Horsley, Paul (2000-11-01). "The Glass Monster Menagerie: Composer, Kronos Quartet Turn Dracula into Performance Art". The Kansas City Star. p. F6.
  6. ^ Dyer, Richard (2002-02-01). "A 'Nuevo' Sound from Kronos". The Boston Globe.
  7. ^ Economy, Jeff (2000-10-27). "A Triple Treat of Dracula". Chicago Tribune. p. 3.
  8. ^ "Calendar". The Alcalde. November–December 2000. Retrieved 2009-05-13.
  9. ^ Allmusic review
  10. ^ Jones, Stephen; Forrest J. Ackerman (2000). The Essential Monster Movie Guide: A Century of Creature Features on Film, TV and Video. Watson-Guptill. p. 113. ISBN 978-0-8230-7936-0.
  11. ^ Lennig, Arthur (2003). The immortal count: the life and films of Bela Lugosi. Lexington: UP of Kentucky. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-8131-2273-1.
  12. ^ Kozinn, Allan (1999-10-28). "Music Review: Dracula Hears Philip Glass and Gets Thirsty". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-05-13.
  13. ^ Turan, Kenneth (1999-11-01). "Weekend Reviews; Performance Review; Live Musical Accompaniment Drains Dracula of Its Scariness". Los Angeles Times. p. F3. Retrieved 2009-05-12.
  14. ^ Dracula (1931) review by Roger Ebert, September 19, 1999
  15. ^ Hunt, Bill; Todd Doogan (2003). The Digital Bits Insider's Guide to DVD. McGraw-Hill Professional. pp. 241–42. ISBN 978-0-07-141852-2.
  16. ^ Kennicott, Philip (2000-09-12). "Dracula: Philip Glass Honors the Undead". The Washington Post. p. C03. Retrieved 2009-05-12.
  17. ^ Allender, Mark W.B. "Rev. of Dracula". Allmusic. Retrieved 2009-05-13.
  18. ^ "Philip Glass + Kronos Quartet: Dracula". Nonesuch Records. Retrieved 2009-05-12.

dracula, album, another, soundtrack, album, john, williams, discography, dracula, soundtrack, performed, kronos, quartet, with, music, composed, philip, glass, 1931, film, dracula, draculasoundtrack, album, kronos, quartetreleased27, august, 1999, 1999, record. For another soundtrack album see John Williams discography Dracula is a soundtrack performed by the Kronos Quartet with music composed by Philip Glass for the 1931 film Dracula 1 2 DraculaSoundtrack album by Kronos QuartetReleased27 August 1999 1999 08 27 RecordedAugust 1998GenreContemporary classicalLabelNonesuch Records 79542 ProducerJudith Sherman Michael Riesman Kurt MunkacsiKronos Quartet chronologyJohn Adams John s Book of Alleged Dances 1999 Dracula 1999 Caravan 2000 Contents 1 Genesis and performance 2 Philip Glass and the Kronos Quartet 3 Critical reception 4 Track listing 5 Releases and format 6 Credits 6 1 Musicians 6 2 Production 7 See also 8 ReferencesGenesis and performance editThe movie directed by Tod Browning and starring Bela Lugosi could be shown to audiences both as a silent movie and as a talkie though conversation was limited to basic narrative elements Unusually it did not have a specific score and only two pieces of music on its soundtrack Tchaikovsky s Swan Lake during the opening credits and the overture of Wagner s Die Meistersinger von Nurnberg during a scene at an opera 3 Glass was commissioned to write the score by Universal Studios Home Entertainment which released the movie with the Glass soundtrack on VHS and DVD in 1999 According to Glass the choice of chamber music played by a string quartet rather than an orchestral score followed from the movie s setting libraries and drawing rooms and gardens 3 Kronos and Glass on piano performed the score during viewings of the movie across the United States in 1999 and 2000 to promote the album 4 5 6 7 8 Other promotion efforts by Universal which was trying to reinvigorate and re market their Classical Monsters catalog included discounts for buyers of multiple CDs and a trailer for the movie on copies of the video release of The Mummy 3 Philip Glass and the Kronos Quartet editGlass and the Quartet have collaborated on a number of albums Kronos first recorded a Glass composition on the 1985 soundtrack Mishima A Life in Four Chapters In 1986 they contributed two tracks to his Songs from Liquid Days In that same year they recorded a composition of his for their 1986 album Kronos Quartet their first album on Nonesuch Records which also releases Glass s music In 1993 they recorded Kronos Quartet Performs Philip Glass containing his String Quartets nos 2 4 and 5 the latter is the first piece Glass wrote specifically for Kronos A number of compositions played by Kronos are found on the Philip Glass 10 CD collection Glass Box A Nonesuch Retrospective released in 2008 Critical reception editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllmusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 9 The soundtrack and the performances thereof have received mixed reviews Entertainment Weekly was very positive praising the hypnotic new score 1 while The Essential Monster Movie Guide calls the score unnecessary 10 and a Lugosi biography calls it ill considered 11 Negative reviews abounded Allan Kozinn of The New York Times remarked that the project seems not to have inspired Mr Glass Heard alone on CD it is harmless enough but coupled with the film it does more harm than good 12 The San Francisco Chronicle said in anticipation of a performance with the composer on piano after previewing CD and video it is painfully evident that this composer and this film are mismatched It continued Glass constant score simply sounds busy its gloomy arpeggios merely getting in the way The few chords that accompany moments of shock verge on the cheesy the Glass music seems to suck away the film s life blood Who s the vampire now 2 Likewise negative but this time after a live performance of the movie and music at Royce Hall on the UCLA campus was Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times As a public event however the Royce concert performed by Glass and the Kronos Quartet and conducted by Michael Riesman was a distinct disappointment 13 Others were more positive Roger Ebert praised the score writing The Glass score is effective in the way it suggests not just moody creepiness but the urgency and need behind Dracula s vampirism It evokes a blood thirst that is 500 years old 14 Self proclaimed film purists Bill Hunt and Todd Doogan called the soundtrack quite cool and commented that it fits the film perfectly 15 After commenting on what he called the low artistic quality of the film Philip Kennicott of The Washington Post said The delightful thing about Glass s music for film is that there s no need for it It is a pure artistic addition to something that was not wanting in the first place and in that act Glass confirms a kind of reverence for the original It is artistically if not financially an act of selfless collaboration with a partner the film that might be considered the culturally undead 16 Bradley Bambarger in Billboard praised the soundtrack as one of Glass most lyrical moving works regardless of genre 4 Mark Allender s review on Allmusic likewise ranks the soundtrack very high in Glass s oeuvre The music is absolutely beautiful augmented by the raw woody sounds of the Kronos Quartet No refined or reverbed string sounds here you hear the naked scratchy sound of a bow on a string all the way through playing in the interwoven arpeggiated style that is unmistakably Glass Complex chord structures and dense rhythms permeate the record making it musically satisfying for both the pedestrian and the sophisticate ear This will certainly stand out as one of the premiere works in Glass soundtrack portfolio 17 Track listing editAll music is composed by Philip GlassNo TitleLength1 Dracula 1 122 Journey to the Inn 0 433 The Inn 1 164 The Crypt 1 165 Carriage Without a Driver 2 116 The Castle 3 107 The Drawing Room 1 068 Excellent Mr Renfield 2 469 The Three Consorts of Dracula 1 3010 The Storm 1 2911 Horrible Tragedy 1 2212 London Fog 1 1513 In the Theatre 2 4814 Lucy s Bitten 2 1815 Seward Sanatorium 2 5716 Renfield 2 5717 In His Cell 1 3118 When the Dream Comes 2 0719 Dracula Enters 3 5920 Or a Wolf 4 3821 Women in White 3 0722 Renfield in the Drawing Room 3 2623 Dr van Helsing and Dracula 3 2624 Mina on the Terrace 4 4225 Mina s Bedroom The Abbey 3 5326 The End of Dracula 4 06Releases and format edit nbsp Alternate cover The album was released by Nonesuch with two different covers One was black with the name DRACULA in a panel with an ornamented border the version currently available has a colored drawing of Count Dracula resembling the movie poster Unlike most other Kronos releases on Nonesuch this album does not come as an MP3 download 18 The soundtrack was included in a 5 CD compilation of Philip Glass soundtracks released in 2001 Nonesuch 79660 4 Credits editMusicians edit David Harrington violin John Sherba violin Hank Dutt viola Joan Jeanrenaud cello Production edit Recorded at Skywalker Sound Nicasio California Bob Levy engineerSee also editList of 1999 albumsReferences edit a b Raftery Brian M Troy Patterson 1999 09 03 Fast Forward The Latest from the Home Video Front A Score with a Bite Entertainment Weekly Retrieved 2009 05 12 a b Ulrich Allan 1999 10 28 Glass score takes bite out of Dracula Composer joins Kronos Quartet at Paramount screening San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 2009 05 12 a b c Bessman Jim 1999 09 04 Glass scores Dracula for Universal Will Tour in Support Billboard p 93 Retrieved 2009 05 13 a b c Bambarger Bradley 2001 11 03 Rev of Philip Glass Glass on Film Billboard p 41 Retrieved 2009 05 13 Horsley Paul 2000 11 01 The Glass Monster Menagerie Composer Kronos Quartet Turn Dracula into Performance Art The Kansas City Star p F6 Dyer Richard 2002 02 01 A Nuevo Sound from Kronos The Boston Globe Economy Jeff 2000 10 27 A Triple Treat of Dracula Chicago Tribune p 3 Calendar The Alcalde November December 2000 Retrieved 2009 05 13 Allmusic review Jones Stephen Forrest J Ackerman 2000 The Essential Monster Movie Guide A Century of Creature Features on Film TV and Video Watson Guptill p 113 ISBN 978 0 8230 7936 0 Lennig Arthur 2003 The immortal count the life and films of Bela Lugosi Lexington UP of Kentucky p 28 ISBN 978 0 8131 2273 1 Kozinn Allan 1999 10 28 Music Review Dracula Hears Philip Glass and Gets Thirsty The New York Times Retrieved 2009 05 13 Turan Kenneth 1999 11 01 Weekend Reviews Performance Review Live Musical Accompaniment Drains Dracula of Its Scariness Los Angeles Times p F3 Retrieved 2009 05 12 Dracula 1931 review by Roger Ebert September 19 1999 Hunt Bill Todd Doogan 2003 The Digital Bits Insider s Guide to DVD McGraw Hill Professional pp 241 42 ISBN 978 0 07 141852 2 Kennicott Philip 2000 09 12 Dracula Philip Glass Honors the Undead The Washington Post p C03 Retrieved 2009 05 12 Allender Mark W B Rev of Dracula Allmusic Retrieved 2009 05 13 Philip Glass Kronos Quartet Dracula Nonesuch Records Retrieved 2009 05 12 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dracula album amp oldid 1219214794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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