stereoelf
08-01-2011, 04:28 PM
Requested by jasondellar.



Tracks:
01 The Crucible
02 John Procotor
03 The Village
04 Reverend Hale
05 Meeting at the Inn
06 Tituba's Confession
07 Judge Danforth Arrives
08 Vengeance
09 Elizabeth Accused
10 Hale Leaves the Village
11 Taking Elizabeth
12 Interrogation
13 The Hanging
14 Abigail Disappears
15 The Beach
16 Proctor Confesses
17 Forgive Us (The Crucible)

320Kps|130Mb|RCA

http://forums.ffshrine.org/f92/monster-club-horror-thread-119586/6.html
Post #128

Kirov
08-01-2011, 07:35 PM
Thanks for this!

Musicman1980
08-02-2011, 04:21 AM
thanks!!

Boris31
08-02-2011, 10:07 AM
Coolness !!! Thanks !!!

Isaias Caetano
06-01-2012, 05:05 AM
Pode Re-Upload?

arctictundra13
09-06-2012, 04:30 AM
Anyone still have this? Thanks!

Isaias Caetano
09-06-2012, 04:55 PM
Obrigdo pelo link

---------- Post added at 12:55 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:20 PM ----------

Here is a review of The Crucible Fenton and CD Covers and 1 Poster

Poster:
The Crucible Movie Poster - Internet Movie Poster Awards Gallery (http://www.impawards.com/1996/crucible.html)
Cover Front & Tray
The Artwork Department: The Crucible (http://thecrimelounge3.blogspot.com.br/2009/03/crucible.html)


George Fenton (born 19 October 1950) is a British composer best known for his work writing film scores and music for television, although he also writes music for the theatre. His real name is George Howe but he is better known by his pseudonym of George Fenton.





Editorial Review: Written 2/10/12 - Filmtracks
Fenton

The Crucible: (George Fenton) Human stupidity is the topic of Arthur Miller's famous play, "The Crucible," which recounts the events of the laughably primordial Salem witch trials. Religious persecution has a rich history in the world, and in the 1690's Massachusetts incident, these senseless acts were efforts to serve the purposes of marital infidelity and jealousy over men. Several imaginative girls pretended to be under the spell of the devil (behavior that would be considered cool and hip at parties just 400 years later) and blamed a number of people in the town for causing their faked medical conditions with witchcraft. Innocent people were hanged in response to the idiotic, prevailing religious customs of the era, all because judges and other governmental institutions were taken advantage of by these girls' whims. When Miller wrote his play in the early 1950's, he was making a thinly-veiled connection between the persecution of the Salem era and the actions of Senator Joe McCarthy and the House Committee on Unamerican Activities that was attempting to root out communists at the time. He returned to the topic in 1996, when he spent a significant amount of time adapting his story into a screenplay for a film to be shot by Nicholas Hytner. Miller was nominated for an Academy Award for his efforts, and the cast, anchored by Daniel Day-Lewis, Winona Ryder, and Joan Allen, was widely praised as well. The story's metaphorical meaning wasn't as potent in the mid-1990's, however, and the movie, despite a reasonably impressive critical reception, failed miserably at the box office. Continuing his collaboration with Hytner was composer George Fenton, who was in between his period of frequent Academy Award recognition in the 1980's and early 1990's and the Emmy-defined post-2000 period dominated by his work for nature documentary programs. Fenton was a major name in Hollywood at the time, his music for the drama genre popular with the art house crowd. His involvement with The Crucible followed directly from The Madness of King George and was one of the production's attempts to push strongly for similar awards recognition. While Fenton's style could stray wildly at times even back then (this trait is more familiar in the 2000's for listeners who compare his documentary music with an endless series of silly comedies), he featured a pretty static orchestral drama mode that was being challenged by Thomas Newman and Richard Robbins by the 1990's, and The Crucible is very standard within that sound.

Understandably, when approaching the musical sound for The Crucible, Fenton was aware of the fact that the purpose of Miller's story and the production as a whole was to function as a commentary on persecution in the modern era as well as that of Salem's past. While there are some percussive and string techniques in his score that aide in addressing the actual period of the story, Fenton also employs a number of methods that are clearly meant to streamline the music for modern consumption. The use of flowing string romance with noble brass backing was not new in the 1990's, of course, but John Barry had popularized it for pop culture digestion. The application of subtle electronic tones is perhaps the most interesting aspect of The Crucible, a technique of purely creepy atmosphere that whines in the treble during moments of suspense and anguish. Varied percussive tones also slap away, both in drums and struck metal, the most understandable representations of behavior associated with witchcraft. The instrumentation becomes increasingly conventional as the score progresses, content to dwell upon the tortured interpersonal relationships as they reach their bitter ends. When this happens, Fenton's thematic constructs begin to grow, culminating in the touching "The Beach" and "Proctor Confesses." You won't find yourself recalling these themes after the score is finished, however, because their very slight stature and generic classical progressions are badly underdeveloped in the score and offer none of the warmth that you hear in other Fenton scores of the era, including Shadowlands most notably. Even in "Forgive Us (Crucible End Credits)," the composer barely registers with his string and oboe meanderings, the lack of depth a major detriment in the rather passionless performance. The score's most interesting passages come early, highlighted by "Dancing in the Forest," which opens with a Presumed Innocent-like electronic motif of mystery and churns with increasing intensity as it approaches its forceful ensemble rhythms for the witchcraft ceremony that opens the film. Similarly, "The Village" is the score's leading nod to the age, with folk sensibilities and a meter not unfamiliar to Basil Poledouris. Snare rhythms and pounding timpani in "Judge Danforth Arrives" announce the heavy hand of the law, but these performances are likewise sparse. The score's lack of compelling bass accompaniment is its greatest weakness, a cue like "Vengeance" expressing hints of the dread that needed to exist to simmering levels in other cues. In sum, Fenton's approach to The Crucible is adequate but underwhelming, a definite disappointment for his enthusiasts. There's nothing technically wrong with his music, but a total absence of passion is its downfall.


*********************

Amazon.com has the tracklist with the sequence of the story of the film

1. Salem, 1692: The Crucible Front Titiles: Dancing In The Forest
2. Salem, 1692: John Proctor
3. Salem, 1692: The Village
4. The Witch Hunt Begins: Reverend Hale
5. The Witch Hunt Begins: Meeting At The Inn
6. The Witch Hunt Begins: Tituba's Confession
7. The Witch Hunt Begins: Judge Danforth Arrives
8. The Witch Hunt Begins: Vengeance
9. Accusation: Elizabeth Accused
10. Accusation: Hale Leaves The Village
11. Accusation: Taking Elizabeth
12. Accusation: Interrogation
13. Accusation: The Hanging
14. Accusation: Abigail Disappears
15. Resolution: The Beach
16. Resolution: Proctor Confesses
17. Resolution: Forgive Us (End Credits)



This and the contribution they can offer fans Fenton