1981年电影《Raggedy Man》原声,限量发行1500张。
by Jason Ankeny
Raggedy Man evokes the small-scale dramatic scores that highlight Jerry Goldsmith's formative years in Hollywood. Recalling
A Patch of Blue
and
A Girl Named Sooner
(the latter can be found as half of a two-CD set with the soundtrack to
Flim-Flam Man
) with its intimate woodwinds and melancholy strings, the music nevertheless buckles under the weight of a scattershot approach that incorporates elements of horror, carnival-like motifs, and even a Spanish-language vocal theme. Employing acoustic guitar, flute and harmonica, Goldsmith establishes a lyrical Americana sensibility that regrettably erodes as the score keeps pace with the onscreen narrative -- the violent bursts of strings and brass that punctuate the soundtrack's second half completely undermine the thoughtful mood introduced at the outset, and render Raggedy Man a frustratingly disjointed experience that's more like two or three incomplete scores than one accomplished whole worthy of its composer.