INTRADA Announces:
THE HOUSE ON TELEGRAPH HILL
Composed by SOL KAPLAN
10 NORTH FREDERICK
Composed by LEIGH HARLINE
INTRADA Special Collection Volume 176
20th Century Fox's The House On Telegraph Hill (1951) is a woman-in-jeopardy tale that begins deep in noir territory, offering a protagonist telling her own story in flashback and almost immediately confessing to the sin that sets the plot gears grinding: she has stolen the identity of a dead woman. Sol Kaplan's score features echoes of Miklos Rozsa (a virtuoso of noir tension) and Herrmann (a virtuoso of tension period) and that's no accident: Kaplan is working firmly in a tradition of which these two were the masters. For all its dazzling versatility what particularly distinguishes Sol Kaplan’s music is its fine-tuned strangeness—its tone of taut yet almost other-worldly eeriness.
Leigh Harline’s score for Ten North Frederick hints at something possibly worse: knowing that everything has already happened, and there’s nothing that can be done to change it. He cleverly begins with a cue that might, at first listen, seem like the opener for a Disney film: a genial piece of modern Americana. But then during the last few bars of the cue, a subtle modulation to minor chording suggests that all is not right. The lonely yearning of the main character becomes the central inspiration for this brief but almost inexpressibly poignant score. Ten North Frederick (1958 is a melodrama focusing on the tragic private life of an ambitious politician -- more bitter than sweet, a startlingly resigned story about a middle-aged man (Gary Cooper) whose half-hearted attempts to run for lieutenant governor are dashed by a series of domestic problems that eventually find him hitting the bottle.
This release is limited to 1000 units.
INTRADA Special Collection Vol. 176
Retail Price: $19.99
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For track listing and sound samples, please visit
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