Carl Davis D.W. Griffith's Intolerance
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CD Details
- Released: August 16, 2019
- Originally Released: 2019
- Label: Carl Davis Collection
Tracks:
- 1.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraOut of the Cradle
- 2.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraThe Dear One
- 3.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraOld Paris (The Court)
- 4.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraBrown Eyes
- 5.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraStrike
- 6.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraBabylon (The Love Temple)
- 7.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraUplifters
- 8.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraThe Siege of Babylon
- 9.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraFire Machine and Defeat of Cyrus
- 10.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraThe Boy's Return and Victory Celebration
- 11.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraSacred Dance
- 12.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraSeduction, Murder and Trial
- 13.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraLast Dawn
- 14.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraSt. Bartholomew's Day Massacre
- 15.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraLast Sacrement
- 16.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraProsper's Rescue Attempt and Via Dolorosa
- 17.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraBabylon's Last Bacchanale
- 18.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraThe Death of Brown Eyes
- 19.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraCyrus at the Gates
- 20.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraThe Fall of Babylon
- 21.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraThe Walk to the Scaffold
- 22.Carl Davis & Luxembourg Radio Symphony OrchestraApotheosis
Product Description:
Carl Davis writes of this release: How exciting to revisit this recording made in Luxembourg in 1986 as a soundtrack for what was then the Thames Silents. The team of directors and producers, Kevin Brownlow and David Gill and myself were delivering up to three restorations of full length feature films a year and I was about to embark on the 1925 Ben Hur score as soon as I had finished Intolerance. The recording of the score followed two live performances of the film with the RTL Orchestra so they were more than ready. The main Intolerance theme which spanned the entire 2 hours 40 minutes score had already passed into the orchestras history- it was hummable and quoted at times of stress. Since the initial burst of performances in Leeds (its premiere), London (The Dominium) and Luxembourg, there have been performances in France and Germany as well as in New York of its recent reissuing on DVD with remastered sound and new material from the Library of Congress. Performing the score to this extraordinary film is always challenging but deeply rewarding. The films theme has never dated and the international crises of 1917 are as relevant today When will we learn?