Showing posts with label James Bond. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Bond. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Bob Stanley digs a bit deeper into the John Barry soundtrack archives

Ace's new Something's Up collection thankfully focuses on composer John Barry's swingin' 60s peak years – Bond and beyond!


Writes compiler Bob Stanley: 

"I’ve put a new John Barry comp together. I’m quite excited. Bond themes, plus obscurities from Man In The Middle, Dutchman, The Chase (US single version)…magical stuff." 

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“Something’s Up!” – Ace's latest archival dig into the soundtrack recordings of John Barry soundtrack recordings – is the ultimate collection of the distinctive, darkly beautiful John Barry Sound – spy movies, swinging comedies, and social realism.  Compiled by Saint Etienne's  Bob Stanley, “Something’s Up!” covers the era when London was the driver of popular culture, and John Barry went from being just another British arranger to an actual pop star. The press talked about his E-Type life and called Jane Birkin his “E-Type wife.”

At the heart of this was his work on the most beloved James Bond films. With 1964’s Goldfinger, 1965's Thunderball and 1967's You Only Live Twice, John Barry made Bond his own; his fame and fortune were secured. Further big commissions like The Ipcress File and The Quiller Memorandum came in, and Barry essentially the sound of the cold war spy movie. They also enabled Barry to pursue more unusual requests – the tense and controversial short movie Dutchman; Bryan Forbes’ tale of isolation and paranoia The Whisperers– for purely artistic reasons. He even tried his hand at  advertising work; ‘The Girl With The Sun In Her Hair’ is taken from a Sunsilk hampoo ad.

Other highlights of “Something’s Up!” include not only acknowledged classics (the Bond movies, The Knack, Born Free) but other now-obscure films whose soundtracks (King Rat, The Chase, Séance on a Wet Afternoon) are more widely discussed than the actual movies.

John Barry’s soundtracks were among the first to sell in numbers on record, often irrespective of whether the purchaser had seen the movie. He was a new breed; his music was designed to have a life of its own, on vinyl as well as celluloid. After the success of Ace's “The More Things Change: TV, Film and Studio Work 1968-73”, “Something’s Up!” will work a magic all of its own. Something's Up is set for release on September 27th but you can pre-order it directly from Ace Records right here.  Check out a few song clips following the tracklisting below. 



John Barry – Something's Up

Film, TV & Studio Work, 1964-67

01  The Syndicate

02  Oublie Ca

03  Seance On A Wet Afternoon'

04  Troubadour

05  Chicken Delhi Cold

06  Barbra's Theme

07  Goldfinger

08  The Chase

09  Theme From King Rat

10  A Man Alone

11  The Knack

12  Thunderball

13  Mr Kiss Kiss Bang Bang

14  Four In The Morning

15  Danny Scipio Theme

16  Theme from The Quiller Memorandum - Wednesday's Child

17  Something's Up!

18  The Girl With the Sun In Her Hair

19  Vendetta

20  The Whisperers

21  You Only Live Twice

22  Space March (Capsule In Space)

23  Dutchman

24  Seance On a Wet Afternoon

25  Theme from Born Free











Tuesday, February 20, 2024

Nancy Sinatra's "Something Pretty" issued with a classic Bond theme flip!

Check out Nancy's rare recording of "Something Pretty" along with her classic 1967 James Bond theme "You Only Live Twice."  



Light In The Attic have pressed up 500 white vinyl copies of the single which you can get from their site right here.  


Sunday, October 29, 2023

Happy Birthday percussion ace King Errisson!

Celebrating the birthday of King Errisson who got his break in Thunderball and played on Incredible Bongo Band's "Apache." 






LINKS 


Thursday, July 6, 2023

Soul Jazz limited run Studio One 007 box repackaged as 2LP set

The Studio One 007 RSD 7"-inch box set has been repackaged as a 2LP (and CD) set due from Soul Jazz on July 14th. 


Here's the scoop...

Soul Jazz Records are releasing this new 2xLP expanded version of Studio One 007 - Licenced to Ska: James Bond and other Film Soundtracks and TV Themes, originally only ever available as a long deleted 7” RSD box set. This new edition is fully remastered and expanded to a massive 18 super rare and killer cuts from the Studio One empire.

Featuring the Skatalites, Lee Perry, Jackie Mittoo, Bob Marley The Wailers. Roland Alphonso and The Soul Brothers, rare and classic tracks from Jamaica's no.1 record label, Studio One

Extensive sleeve-notes discuss the connections between James Bond, Jamaica and Ska music. Jamaica was the setting for Dr. No, Live and Let Die, The Man with the Golden Gun and the recent ‘No Time to Die’, and the home for Bond’s creator Ian Fleming. There is also an extended essay on The Skatalites and their post-modern love and ska-ification of all styles of music – from classical music to TV themes, from detective movies to Fiddler on the Roof!

Aside from the James Bond-related cuts this album also includes killer tracks from the secret agent 1969 spoof ‘Our Man Flint', the Clint Eastwood-starring Spaghetti Western ‘Hang ‘Em High’, the Brazilian movie masterpiece ‘Black Orpheus’ and more besides.

The vinyl album is presented in superb gatefold sleeve, with full inner and house bag. The album is also available for the first time ever on CD and comes in double walled-slipcase with 28-page outsized booklet.



Various Artists – Studio One 007

1 Jackie Mittoo and The Soul Brothers – James Bond

2 The Skatalites – Dick Tracy

3 The Soul Brothers – James Bond Girl

4 The Skatalites – Guns Of Navarone

5 Roland Alphonso and The Studio One Orchestra – From Russia With Love

6 The Soul Brothers – Thunderball

7 Jackie Mittoo – Hang 'Em High

8 The Soul Brothers – Mr Kiss Kiss Bang Bang

9 The Soul Brothers – 007

10 Lee Perry and The Wailers – Pussy Galore

11 The Soul Brothers – Mr. Flint

12 The Skatalites – Ball Of Fire

13 The Soul Brothers – James Bond Danger Man

14 The Soul Brothers – Lawman

15 The Skatalites – Black Orpheus

16 The Skatalites – Exodus

17 The Skatalites – Dr. Kildare

18 The Soul Brothers – Fiddler On The Roof





Thursday, November 3, 2022

Happy Birthday Lulu!

Celebrating Lulu's birthday with her Top Of The Pops performance of "The Man With The Golden Gun" and also "Where's Eddie."







Monday, April 4, 2022

Songs That Could Be Bond Themes: Guy Mitchell's "Ninety Nine Years" (1956)

Guy Mitchell voiced this John Benson Brooks tune played by Jimmy Carroll's band in '56. Does the tune sound familiar?


Thursday, December 10, 2020

David Gedge & friends remake their fave James Bond themes

David Gedge and Wedding Present pals knock out updated Bond themes on the fab 20-track Not From Where I'm Standing comp.


Here's the scoop...

Not From Where I'm Standing is a 2LP collection of 20 Bond themes covered by current and former members of The Wedding Present. 100% of the profits from its sale will be donated to the 'Campaign Against Living Miserably' (CALM).

Questioned about the origins of the project, David Gedge of The Wedding Present said: "Where do ideas like this come from? Well, I can tell you that this one was born during a soundcheck in New Zealand, in 2013, when the band were playing around with the main melody of the classic Bond theme 'You Only Live Twice'. We decided then that, one day, we should probably attempt to cover this amazing song. We ended up doing just that dur-ing the recording sessions for our 'Going, Going' album in Studios La Fabrique (Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France). And that was that. For a while, anyway. 

"During a later tour, drummer Charles Layton was driving the van and I was sitting in the front passenger seat. On journeys like these Charlie would often plant little seeds of ideas into my mind, knowing that I would go away, think about it, and then return with some kind of master plan. 'You should release a compilation of Bond songs,' he declared. And that was all that he needed to say, really. Most of the themes from the Bond films would effortlessly feature in a list of my favourite ever pieces of music, so I was never not going to be excited by the idea of re-imaginings of twenty of them!"

Get a copy of Not From Where I'm Standing from Rough Trade right here. Check the track list below followed by clips of David Gedge & Sleeper reprising "Mr. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang" and Simone White's understated version of "Goldfinger," Jetstream Pony's swing through "The Man With The Golden Gun" and a The Donalds knocking out a ramshackle live version of "Live & Let Die.  

Tracks: View To A Kill - Terry de Castro / James Bond Theme - The Sleazoids / Live And Let Die - The Donalds / Nobody Does It Better - Samuel Beer-Pearce / Die Another Day - The Ukrainians / You Only Live Twice - The Wedding Present / The World Is Not Enough - Maria Scaroni / For Your Eyes Only - Klee / Skyfall - Such Small Hands / Goldfinger - Simone White / Diamonds Are Forever - Cinerama / Thunderball - The Legendary Len Liggins / On Her Majesty’s Secret Service - Shaun Charman / Goldeneye - Follow The Moths / Tomorrow Never Dies - Danielle Wadey & Charles Layton / Mr Kiss Kiss Bang Bang - Sleeper featuring David Lewis Gedge / We Have All The Time In The World - David Lewis Gedge / The Man With The Golden Gun - Jetstream Pony / All Time High - Minitel / From Russia With Love - Graeme Ramsay






Sunday, September 22, 2019

That time Dizzy Gillespie cut a John Barry-style version of "Bésame Mucho"

Back in 1969, Dizzy Gillespie transformed "Bésame Mucho" into what sounds like a lost James Bond theme. 

Monday, May 28, 2018

John Barry vs. Jimmy Carroll

See if you can spot any similarity between John Barry's Bond theme and Guy Mitchell's Ninety Nine Years arranged by Jimmy Carroll from 1956. 



Monday, May 14, 2018

Happy Birthday Vic Flick!

Cheers to Vic Flick who played the original James Bond theme on his Clifford Essex Paragon Deluxe.

Friday, December 25, 2015

Radiohead's proposed theme song for Spectre

Here's Radiohead's superior unused theme for the Bond movie Spectre which Sam Smith claims he hasn't heard.