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John Barry - High Road To China: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (1983) Remastered Limited Edition 2010

Posted By: Efgrapha
John Barry - High Road To China: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (1983) Remastered Limited Edition 2010

John Barry - High Road To China: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (1983) Limited Edition 2010
EAC | FLAC (Image) + cue.+log ~ 389 Mb | Mp3, CBR320 kbps ~ 181 Mb | Scans included
Soundtrack, Score | Label: BSX Records | # BSXCD 8864 | 01:06:56

BUYSOUNDTRAX Records present HIGH ROAD TO CHINA, featuring music composed and conducted by John Barry for the 1983 action adventure film directed by Brian G. Hutton (SOL MADRID, WHERE EAGLES DARE, KELLY’S HEROES), based on a book by Jon Cleary, starring Tom Selleck, Bess Armstrong, Jack Weston, Wilford Brimley, Robert Morley, Cassandra Gava and the great Brian Blessed as the Suleman Khan.

Released in 1983, HIGH ROAD TO CHINA begins in Istanbul, 1920 and tells the story of spoiled heiress Eve Tozer (Bess Armstrong) who has come from London to find her father, Bradley (Wilford Brimley), a brilliant inventor/entrepreneur who has gone missing. The London courts have been convinced by Bradley’s former business partner, Bentik, that he is dead and if he can’t be located in three weeks, his assets will go to his ex-partner. And these assets include Eve’s trust fund and inheritance. Following her father’s trail, which leads outside of Istanbul, Eve is forced to hire a down-and-out alcoholic pilot, Patrick O’Malley (Tom Selleck, in his first starring motion picture role) and his partner, Struts (Jack Weston) as they appear to be the only reliable pilots in the whole country. Taking flight in O’Malley’s planes, named Dorothy and Lillian (after sisters Dorothy and Lillian Gish, who were popular actresses of the time), the trio travels from Afghanistan, into Nepal, where they cross paths with the Suleman Khan (Brian Blessed) and finally into China, where they must outwit a Chinese warlord. Additional obstacles are thrown in their path by Bentik, who is determined to prevent them from finding Bradley and returning to London in time.

To support the romance and adventure elements of the film, producers Raymond Chow and Fred Weintraub turned to veteran composer John Barry. His music for HIGH ROAD TO CHINA includes an exciting flying motif and a love theme that could only been have been penned by one man, along with the kind of travelogue style music the composer would write for a James Bond film and adaptations of various period source cues indicative of the 1920s.

Born in 1933, in York, England, composer John Barry is known the world over for his work on the James Bond series, beginning in 1963 with FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE and scoring nearly all of the Bond films up until 1987 with THE LIVING DAYLIGHTS. He has received the Academy Award four times for his work on BORN FREE, THE LION IN WINTER, OUT OF AFRICA and DANCES WITH WOLVES. He has also received a Grammy for his score to DANCES WITH WOLVES. In addition, he has been nominated multiple times for his work by BAFTA, EMI, the Emmys and the Golden Globes. In England, he was awarded the title of Officer of the Order Of The British Empire for his services in music. In France, he holds the title of Commander in the National Order Of Arts And Letters. He has composed music for films such as ZULU, THE IPCRESS FILE, BORN FREE, THE LAST VALLEY, MARY, QUEEN OF SCOTS, ROBIN AND MARIAN, BODY HEAT, FRANCES, CHAPLIN, INDECENT PROPOSAL, ENIGMA and many more.

Previously released twice on compact disc, BUYSOUNDTRAX Records presents the original motion picture soundtrack to HIGH ROAD TO CHINA, featuring music composed and conducted by John Barry, newly remastered by Digital Outland, correcting the digital anomalies of previous releases and including a specially prepared suite of music from the film. THIS IS A LIMITED EDITION OF 1500 UNITS

High Road to China: (John Barry) The 1983 adventure High Road to China was meant to be actor Tom Selleck's victorious transition from television to feature films and introduce a rival to the "Indiana Jones" franchise. In the Brian G. Hutton movie, Selleck is a drunken, depressed pilot hired in the 1920's by a British heiress to help find her captured father and thus ensure that his riches transfer to her. With those somewhat curious parameters in mind, the film doesn't ask you to sympathize with any of its leads, but it rather entertains you with its aerial journey from Turkey to Afghanistan, Nepal, and ultimately China. With a budding but never realized relationship between the Selleck's rogue and the heiress (who is revealed to be deceiving her partner in that she's a skilled pilot herself and simply needs his planes to make the rescue attempt herself), the film balances a bittersweet romantic element with the stunning aerial photography central to its appeal. No doubt a logical hire for the scoring assignment at the time was John Barry, who was well equipped to not only provide the flowing romanticism necessary by those two main features of the story, but also the stock suspense that accompanies attempts by other interested parties in killing off the heiress. Barry was balancing two major sides of his career at the time: the continuing formula of the James Bond scores and the bloated, string-dominated lyricism that would eventually yield two Academy Award wins for the composer. Collectors made cynical by Barry's consistency in these efforts throughout the decades have rejected both sounds, flocking instead towards the few efforts by the composer that do not squarely fit in one of those two genres. For these listeners, High Road to China is truly a nightmare of redundancy. In the film, the majority of music heard is actually source material consisting of jazz and classical pieces from the era. Barry wrote two of these source cues, and most of the others are standards that mainstream cinema-goers will likely recognize. The score itself offers absolutely nothing new to the composer's career, but it does have the advantage of stating Barry's obvious mannerisms with a more effective voice than many of his other similar scores.

Composed a few years after Raise the Titanic and a few before Out of Africa, the score for High Road to China is a clear mix of the two. Barry returns to his robust and repetitive title theme structure of the same grand nature as Raise the Titanic while utilizing the heavier dramatic base of Out of Africa, accentuated by low rumblings of the tuba at regular intervals. The score's two primary melodies are almost always present. The title theme doubles as the "love theme," an overwhelmingly lush and straight-forward string melody of melodramatic weight, contributed to by Barry's standard, broad brass counterpoint. Like Dances With Wolves, Barry's secondary, more rhythmic theme for the film is the superior attraction, however. From the inspiration of daring flight, this theme soars with determination and majesty over a churning string rhythm. The expansive gong hits and medium to high brass layers utilized during this theme are an exceptionally bold twist on the usual kind of propulsive action music that populated Barry's scores for the Bond franchise at the time. Its keen sense of movement rivals On Her Majesty's Secret Service, especially in its bass and drum use, and the lofty attitude will remind of Moonraker's primary theme as well. For the rugged and mountainous setting of the film, this secondary adventure theme is, despite its simplistic construct, quite effective. In a nice touch, Barry's chugging snare drums well represent a biplane engine. A saxophone over acoustic guitar in the final cue is an echo of Body Heat. Lovely viola counterpoint to a woodwind performance of the love theme in "One Eye Open" is unusually textured for this kind of Barry romanticism, as are the layers of very high violins in the finale cue. A few secondary motifs do exist for the villains of the film, stomping to percussive rhythms as usual for the composer and conveying equally generic progressions of slight dread. Altogether, High Road to China is extremely representative of Barry's best mannerisms of this era, though be aware of its inherent constriction of creativity. The sound quality enjoyed by this score has never been as clear as in other Barry recordings, unfortunately, and a suite from High Road to China long remained a request for the producers at Silva Screen Records, with whom The City of Prague Philharmonic often performed adept re-recordings of Barry's music.

On album, High Road to China has been released three times digitally, and all of these products lack the vibrant, dynamic stereo soundscape existing in other Barry features of the era. Still, for enduring defenders of the composer's simple romanticism, the content of the music outweighs any audio deficiencies, standing alongside Out of Africa and Dances With Wolves as a dramatic necessity in any Barry collection. The score's history on CD began in 1990, released as the second album in the Soundtrack Collector's Special Editions (SCSE) series. A much coveted collector's item within the film music community, only 2,750 copies of this debut CD of High Road to China were made available to the public. On the secondary market, they sold for up to $150 in auctions during the middle of the 1990's. By the end of the decade, though, an unexpected extra stock of original copies of those CDs was made available through Amazon.com (listed as an "import") for $21 apiece, greatly reducing demand. In 2000, the Super Tracks specialty label released a limited promotional album with two extra minutes of score and the full compliment of source material to make the presentation complete. With the addition of the traditional source music and the two source cues written by Barry, the 2000 album contains every moment of music heard in the film. The two source cues and additional score material by Barry are unexciting, not worth the price of the expanded album alone, and fans should be aware that the mastering of this product yielded a fair number of digital artifacts (typically referred to as "pops") that reduce the listening experience. Additionally, the 2000 album condenses the original score into a 32-minute suite that combines cues unnecessarily (and sometimes to the omission of the natural conclusions to some). In 2009, the producers of that CD rectified the sound anomalies as part of another release of the 2000 album's contents in limited form. Unfortunately, that BSX Records re-release of High Road to China maintained the same somewhat disconcerting suite format and even added another nine-minute custom arrangement of major cues at the end. Ultimately, any of the albums will suffice for collectors (all contain the most notable music, including some for scenes that were cut from the final release of the film), but there remains an allure to the 1990 album's presentation despite lesser sound quality than on the 2009 product. On the whole, this score has a more adventurous spirit than many of Barry's other lush works, and its increasingly better availability on album should satisfy all the demand this film and score can muster.

FilmTracks.com

John Barry - High Road To China: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (1983) Remastered Limited Edition 2010


~ John Barry at Allmusic
~ John Barry at Wiki

~ Film at IMDB
~ Film at Wiki

Tracklist:

01. Main Title / A Nasty Headache (02:12)
02. The Flying Lesson (01:19)
03. Look Out Charlie! / A Hurried Exit (02:10)
04. On Еo Waziri / Khan (01:29)
05. Escape From Waziri / Eve & Struts (03:20)
06. On to India / Arrival In Katmandu / Struts Approaches (04:25)
07. The Dogfight / Journey To China / Anymore Surprises / The General's Cannon (06:12)
08. You'll Get Your Money / One Eye Open (03:07)
09. Raid On Wong's Camp / Finale & End Credits (07:23)

Source Music:

10. Mohamet's Dance (01:44)
11. Waziri Source (02:58)
12. Salon Source (00:48)
13. Charleston (01:29)
14. Love Me Tender (03:57)
15. When The Saints Come Marching In (02:15)
16. Jeanie (02:24)
17. Mill Stream (02:30)
18. Revelry (02:14)
19. Swinging At The Riverside (01:51)
20. Allemande From The Bach French Suite #5 In G Major (03:34)

Bonus Tracks:

21. Suite From High Road To China (09:27)


Exact Audio Copy V1.0 beta 3 from 29. August 2011

EAC extraction logfile from 12. February 2012, 12:21

John Barry / High Road To China

Used drive : TSSTcorpCDDVDW SH-S202H Adapter: 0 ID: 0

Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No

Read offset correction : 6
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

Used output format : Internal WAV Routines
Sample format : 44.100 Hz; 16 Bit; Stereo


TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
1 | 0:00.00 | 2:12.48 | 0 | 9947
2 | 2:12.48 | 1:19.05 | 9948 | 15877
3 | 3:31.53 | 2:10.57 | 15878 | 25684
4 | 5:42.35 | 1:29.10 | 25685 | 32369
5 | 7:11.45 | 3:20.18 | 32370 | 47387
6 | 10:31.63 | 4:25.22 | 47388 | 67284
7 | 14:57.10 | 6:12.46 | 67285 | 95230
8 | 21:09.56 | 3:07.17 | 95231 | 109272
9 | 24:16.73 | 7:23.17 | 109273 | 142514
10 | 31:40.15 | 1:44.14 | 142515 | 150328
11 | 33:24.29 | 2:58.15 | 150329 | 163693
12 | 36:22.44 | 0:48.23 | 163694 | 167316
13 | 37:10.67 | 1:29.14 | 167317 | 174005
14 | 38:40.06 | 3:57.15 | 174006 | 191795
15 | 42:37.21 | 2:15.68 | 191796 | 201988
16 | 44:53.14 | 2:24.62 | 201989 | 212850
17 | 47:18.01 | 2:30.63 | 212851 | 224163
18 | 49:48.64 | 2:14.54 | 224164 | 234267
19 | 52:03.43 | 1:51.05 | 234268 | 242597
20 | 53:54.48 | 3:34.38 | 242598 | 258685
21 | 57:29.11 | 9:27.10 | 258686 | 301220


Range status and errors

Selected range

Filename D:\Torrent\Мои раздачи\High Road To China\John Barry - High Road To China.wav

Peak level 98.7 %
Extraction speed 8.1 X
Range quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 7A536A14
Copy CRC 7A536A14
Copy OK

No errors occurred


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Track 13 accurately ripped (confidence 3) [F8A58CDA] (AR v2)
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Track 18 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [A374A17D] (AR v2)
Track 19 accurately ripped (confidence 3) [F44D965A] (AR v2)
Track 20 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [9D4ED447] (AR v2)
Track 21 accurately ripped (confidence 2) [970AFEC1] (AR v2)

All tracks accurately ripped

End of status report

==== Log checksum E38F9F5B3F37F98A179402275B5E216992524D3CFD90A6C9055CDA33436A3C2E ====

foobar2000 1.2 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2016-03-31 21:12:21

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Analyzed: John Barry / High Road To China
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR9 -1.50 dB -13.98 dB 2:13 01-Main Title / A Nasty Headache
DR9 -0.19 dB -11.92 dB 1:19 02-The Flying Lesson
DR10 -1.10 dB -15.32 dB 2:11 03-Look Out Charlie! / A Hurried Exit
DR9 -0.82 dB -12.51 dB 1:29 04-On Еo Waziri / Khan
DR9 -0.35 dB -12.07 dB 3:20 05-Escape From Waziri / Eve & Struts
DR9 -0.97 dB -13.36 dB 4:25 06-On to India / Arrival In Katmandu / Struts Approaches
DR9 -0.11 dB -13.94 dB 6:13 07-The Dogfight / Journey To China / Anymore Surprises / The General's Cannon
DR11 -2.49 dB -18.14 dB 3:07 08-You'll Get Your Money / One Eye Open
DR10 -0.34 dB -14.01 dB 7:23 09-Raid On Wong's Camp / Finale & End Credits
DR16 -4.98 dB -22.50 dB 1:44 10-Mohamet's Dance
DR17 -5.35 dB -26.35 dB 2:58 11-Waziri Source
DR10 -4.33 dB -18.28 dB 0:48 12-Salon Source
DR12 -1.88 dB -15.63 dB 1:29 13-Charleston
DR13 -1.88 dB -17.95 dB 3:57 14-Love Me Tender
DR13 -0.96 dB -17.36 dB 2:16 15-When The Saints Come Marching In
DR12 -1.11 dB -19.43 dB 2:25 16-Jeanie
DR12 -0.83 dB -17.84 dB 2:31 17-Mill Stream
DR12 -2.81 dB -19.71 dB 2:15 18-Revelry
DR13 -0.67 dB -15.73 dB 1:51 19-Swinging At The Riverside
DR13 -10.34 dB -25.70 dB 3:35 20-Allemande From The Bach French Suite #5 In G Major
DR10 -0.55 dB -13.08 dB 9:27 21-Suite From High Road To China
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Number of tracks: 21
Official DR value: DR11

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 16
Bitrate: 755 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================

John Barry - High Road To China: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (1983) Remastered Limited Edition 2010

John Barry - High Road To China: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (1983) Remastered Limited Edition 2010

All thanks to original uploader - Composer's fan

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