Описание
Various – Valley of the Dolls (Music From the Motion Picture Soundtrack) [New Vinyl]
Artist: Various
Title: Valley of the Dolls (Music From the Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Format: Vinyl
Genre: Soundtrack
UPC: 602557365924
Condition: New
Release Date: 2017
Record Label: Philips
Album Tracks
DISC 1:
1. The Sandpipers Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (Vocal) 2:25
2. Carrie Nations Come with the Gentle People (Vocal) 2:15
3. Carrie Nations Look on Up at the Bottom (Vocal) 2:45
4. Strawberry Alarm Clock Girl from the City (Vocal) Written-By Paul Marshall (4) 2:25
5. Carrie Nations in the Long Run (Vocal) 2:50
6. Stu Phillips Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (Instrumental) 2:25
DISC 2:
1. Carrie Nations Sweet Talkin’ Candy Man (Vocal) 2:00
2. Carrie Nations Find It (Vocal) Written-By Lynn Carey 2:00
3. Stu Phillips Ampersand (Instrumental) 2:15
4. Carrie Nations Once I Had a Love (Vocal) Written-By Lynn Carey 2:00
5. Strawberry Alarm Clock I’m Comin’ Home (Vocal) Written-By Paul Marshall 3:40
6. The Sandpipers Beyond the Valley of the Dolls (Vocal) 2:25
Limited vinyl LP pressing released to coincide with the film’s 50th Anniversary. Originally released in 1967, the Valley Of The Dolls soundtrack won an Academy Award for Best Music (Scoring of Music – Adaptation or Treatment). Valley of the Dolls is a drama based on the 1966 novel of the same name by Jacqueline Susann. It was directed by Mark Robson, produced by Robson and David Weisbart, and stars Barbara Parkins, Patty Duke, Sharon Tate, and Susan Hayward. The soundtrack was released in 1967. Dionne Warwick sang the title track; however, her version is not on the soundtrack album, only on the actual film soundtrack. According to Susann, she wrote her own lyric for the film title track as she felt that Dory Previn’s lyric did not establish the story background. Warwick was signed to Scepter Records at the time and could not contractually appear on the soundtrack album. Therefore, a re-recorded version appears on the LP Dionne Warwick in Valley of the Dolls. The film contains two versions of the theme song with different lyrics: one version plays over the opening credits, and the other, with the same lyrics as Warwick’s recorded version, is heard towards the end of the film.