Kritzerland is proud to present a world premiere limited edition CD release.
Legend Of The Lost was produced by John Wayne’s Batjac Productions, and starred the Duke and Rosanno Brazzi as the two men. The dame was Sophia Loren, and the fourth character was the Sahara desert. It’s an odd film, both intimate (basically a three-character drama) and epic (the Sahara) - a tale of treasure, lust, and sand, not necessarily in that order. Wayne plays a guide in hock up to his ears to the police captain in Timbuktu, Loren plays a woman who has been known to pick pockets and pick up men, and Brazzi plays a man in search of his long-lost father, who, in search of a Lost City has presumably perished in the desert. Oh, and the treasure - there’s always the treasure - that the long-lost father was in search of. It’s actually a very entertaining film, with Duke his usual heroic self, Loren looking luscious whether traipsing in the sand or bathing by moonlight, and Brazzi feeling tortured and tormented. Henry Hathaway, with whom Wayne did many films, directed, and the film was gorgeously photographed by the brilliant Jack Cardiff in Technirama and Technicolor.
The score was by Italy’s Angelo Francesco Lavagnino. Lavagnino was one of Italy’s finest film composers and certainly one of its most prolific, beginning his career in 1948. His voice was unique - one could always tell a Lavagnino score immediately. His music is exotic and melodic and unique. Some of his best work included the films The Naked Maja, The Last Days of Pompeii, The Colossus of Rhodes, Esther and the King, Imperial Venus, Orson Welles’ Chimes at Midnight, and tons of sword-and-sandal films, Italian sci-fi, and spaghetti westerns. Standing tall among his scores is Legend Of The Lost. His music for the film is dreamy, mysterious, romantic, and captures the moods of the nights and days of the desert almost like a tone poem. You can feel the heat beating down in the music, feel the shifting of the sands, feel the passion of two men in love with the same woman - Lavagnino’s melodies are sinuous and sensual.
The tapes for Legend Of The Lost are long lost but thankfully about thirty-two of the film’s forty minutes of music was found in Italy and it is those thirty-two minutes we present here. Even though we’d love to say it’s the complete score, we figured thirty-two minutes is better than no minutes, especially of primo Lavagnino. Missing were the film’s main title, which we’ve taken from the DVD, and even though we had the film’s final cue in its entirety it was missing the choral overlay, so we’ve included a bit of that, also from the DVD. Sound is in clean, crisp mono. - Courtesy, Kritzerland
トラックリスト
1. Main Title 2. Timbuktu 3. Smoky Cafe 4. The Sahara 5. Bathing in the Desert At Night 6. Desert Conversation 7. Chasing a Mirage 8. Finding Water / The Lost City 9. I Have No Dreams 10. Skeletons 11. Two Men and a Woman 12. Miracle In The Desert 13. End Title (film version with chorus)
ジョン・ウェイン主演、1957年のアドヴェンチャー映画「失われたものゝ伝説」のサウンドトラックがついに世界初リリース!1000枚限定盤!ほぼ全てのマスターテープが発見され、このリリースとなったが、発見されなかった“メイン・タイトル”のみ、DVDからモノラル音源にて収録しています。
トラックリストサハラの奥地に眠る伝説の古代都市を求めて、宣教師と彼に惹かれた女性が旅だった。アメリカ人のジョー(J・ウェイン)は、財宝の分け前を目当てに、道案内を引き受ける。幾多の苦難を乗り越えて、一行はついに伝説の都市にたどり着くが……。監督:ヘンリー・ハサウェイ。出演: ジョン・ウェイン、ソフィア・ローレン。1957年米・伊。
“TWO MEN AND A DAME”
Kritzerland is proud to present a world premiere limited edition CD release.
Legend Of The Lost was produced by John Wayne’s Batjac Productions, and starred the Duke and Rosanno Brazzi as the two men. The dame was Sophia Loren, and the fourth character was the Sahara desert. It’s an odd film, both intimate (basically a three-character drama) and epic (the Sahara) - a tale of treasure, lust, and sand, not necessarily in that order. Wayne plays a guide in hock up to his ears to the police captain in Timbuktu, Loren plays a woman who has been known to pick pockets and pick up men, and Brazzi plays a man in search of his long-lost father, who, in search of a Lost City has presumably perished in the desert. Oh, and the treasure - there’s always the treasure - that the long-lost father was in search of. It’s actually a very entertaining film, with Duke his usual heroic self, Loren looking luscious whether traipsing in the sand or bathing by moonlight, and Brazzi feeling tortured and tormented. Henry Hathaway, with whom Wayne did many films, directed, and the film was gorgeously photographed by the brilliant Jack Cardiff in Technirama and Technicolor.
The score was by Italy’s Angelo Francesco Lavagnino. Lavagnino was one of Italy’s finest film composers and certainly one of its most prolific, beginning his career in 1948. His voice was unique - one could always tell a Lavagnino score immediately. His music is exotic and melodic and unique. Some of his best work included the films The Naked Maja, The Last Days of Pompeii, The Colossus of Rhodes, Esther and the King, Imperial Venus, Orson Welles’ Chimes at Midnight, and tons of sword-and-sandal films, Italian sci-fi, and spaghetti westerns. Standing tall among his scores is Legend Of The Lost. His music for the film is dreamy, mysterious, romantic, and captures the moods of the nights and days of the desert almost like a tone poem. You can feel the heat beating down in the music, feel the shifting of the sands, feel the passion of two men in love with the same woman - Lavagnino’s melodies are sinuous and sensual.
The tapes for Legend Of The Lost are long lost but thankfully about thirty-two of the film’s forty minutes of music was found in Italy and it is those thirty-two minutes we present here. Even though we’d love to say it’s the complete score, we figured thirty-two minutes is better than no minutes, especially of primo Lavagnino. Missing were the film’s main title, which we’ve taken from the DVD, and even though we had the film’s final cue in its entirety it was missing the choral overlay, so we’ve included a bit of that, also from the DVD. Sound is in clean, crisp mono. - Courtesy, Kritzerland
1. Main Title
2. Timbuktu
3. Smoky Cafe
4. The Sahara
5. Bathing in the Desert At Night
6. Desert Conversation
7. Chasing a Mirage
8. Finding Water / The Lost City
9. I Have No Dreams
10. Skeletons
11. Two Men and a Woman
12. Miracle In The Desert
13. End Title (film version with chorus)