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FA6511 Per qualche dollaro in più / For a few dollars more
Auther: Jonathan Broxton

ENNIO MORRICONE REVIEWS, Part I-16

PER QUALCHE DOLLARO IN PIÚ [FOR A FEW DOLLARS MORE] (1965)

Per Qualche Dollaro in Piú – For a Few Dollars More – is the second instaliment of director Sergio Leone’s Dollars Trilogy, released in November 1965, a year after the original A Fistful of Dollars. Clint Eastwood returns to play the iconic Man With No Name, this time teaming up with fellow bounty hunter, Colonel Douglas Mortimer (Lee Van Cleef), to stop the reign of terror of a deranged bandito named El Indio (Gianmaria Volonte). It’s desperately violent film about greed and revenge, but was an enormously popular success, and again proved influential in terms of the progression of Leone, Eastwood, and composer Ennio Morricone.

Truthfully, Morricone’s music is a direct continuation of the spaghetti western sound established A Fistful of Dollars, with similar orchestrations and similar thematic application; nevertheless, several individual pieces stand out as being worthy of special note. The main title theme, “Per Qualche Dollaro in Più,” is one those pieces Morricone wrote which sounds awful on paper, yet somehow works perfectly in context – a raw, aggressive, rhythmic piece for strings and percussion featuring several spaghetti western staples: the twangy sound of a Jew’s harp, Alessandro Alessandroni’s whistling, gruff male voice chanting, solo recorder, electric and acoustic guitars. It’s still astonishing to me how Morricone came up with these disparate sounds and made them define an entire genre.

Elsewhere, the “La Resa dei Conti” theme has some unexpected conflicting tonal qualities that come to light through the use of different instruments under a variation on the main theme from the first film, including a church organ which gives it a definite ecclesiastical overtone. “Il Vizio d’Uccidere” is a pretty romantic theme for solo electric guitar, solo oboe, strings, and choir, which has a soothing, almost tragic quality, before becoming more lively in its second half. “Addio Colonnello” overflows with emotion, a gorgeous combination of reflective woodwinds, sighing strings, noble brass, and an increasingly prominent choir. “Poker d’Assi” is a piece of raucous honky tonk saloon piano music. “Carillon,” which reprises and expands upon the lullabyish glockenspiel motif also heard in “La Resa dei Conti,” speaks directly to the plot point in the film regarding Indio’s musical pocket watch, which he plays before engaging in gun duels, only firing when the chimes have ended.

As is the case with all Morricone spaghetti western soundtracks, For a Few Dollars More has been released dozens of times on vinyl LP, cassette, and CD over the years. I personally have the 2004 CD edition released by BMG Ricordi, and I am satisfied with the music included, but there is an expanded version released by GDM Music which features bonus cues rendered in mono, and several original songs.

Track Listing: 1. La Resa dei Conti (3:06), 2. Osservatori Osservati (2:02), 3. Il Vizio d’Uccidere (2:24), 4. Il Colpo (2:21), 5. Addio Colonnello (1:44), 6. Per Qualche Dollaro in Più (2:50), 7. Poker d’Assi (1:16), 8. La Resa dei Conti – Duello Finale (2:33), 9. Carillon (1:10). BMG Ricordi LC00316 , 19 minutes 25 seconds.

August 13, 2017
Online music audition
No
Name
Listen
001
Per Qualche Dollaro in Piu (03:50)
002
Sequence 02 (with music clock!)(01:13)
003
Sequence 03 (02:53)
004
Observatori Osservati (02:05)
005
Poker D'Assi (01:22)
006
Sequence 6 (02:42)
007
Sequence 7 (00:46)
008
Sequence 8 (with music clock) (02:16)
009
Sequence 9 (02:25)
010
Sequence 10 (01:16)
011
La Resa Dei Conti (with music clock) (03:08)
012
Sequence 12 (01:58)
013
Sequence 13 (01:20)
014
Carillon (with music clock) (01:10)
015
Il Vizio De Ucccideri (02:28)
016
Sequence 16 (with music clock) (02:!1)
017
El Colpo (02:26)
018
Sequence 18 (00:54)
019
Sequence 19 (with music clock) (01:15)
020
Addio Colonnello (01:45)
021
Occhio Per Occhio (Italian Version . mono) (03:01)
022
Eye For An Eye (English version) (03:01)
Attachment: About Jonathan Broxton
Jon is a film music critic and journalist, who since 1997 has been the editor and chief reviewer for Movie Music UK, one of the world’s most popular English-language film music websites, and is the president of the International Film Music Critics Association (IFMCA). Over the last 20+ years Jon has written over 3,000 reviews and articles and conducted numerous composer interviews. In print, Jon has written reviews and articles for publications such as Film Score Monthly, Soundtrack Magazine and Music from the Movies, and has written liner notes for two of Prometheus Records’ classic Basil Poledouris score releases, “Amanda” and “Flyers/Fire on the Mountain”. He also contributed a chapter to Tom Hoover’s book “Soundtrack Nation: Interviews with Today’s Top Professionals in Film, Videogame, and Television Scoring”, published in 2011. In the late 1990s Jon was a film music consultant to the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra in London, and worked with them on the films “Relative Values” with music by John Debney, and “The Ring of the Buddha” with music by Oliver Heise, as well as on a series of concerts with Randy Newman. In 2012, Jon chaired one of the “festival academies” at the 5th Annual Film Music Festival in Krakow, Poland. He is a member of the Society of Composers and Lyricists, the premier nonprofit organization for composers, lyricists, and songwriters working motion pictures, television, and multimedia. (Here)
2023.11.15
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