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FA7001 Città violenta / Violent City
Auther: Jonathan Broxton

ENNIO MORRICONE REVIEWS, Part 9-88

ENNIO MORRICONE REVIEWS, Part IX

February 7, 2021

In this ninth installment of my series looking at the early careers of iconic composers, we take a look at half a dozen scores written by the legendary Ennio Morricone in 1970. The scores include an intense action thriller, a revenge-themed war film, a historical epic drama that sounds like a dance party, an abstract score for a crime drama, and two scores containing what many people consider to be two of his all-time greatest themes, one of which is my personal all time favorite Morricone love theme!

CITTÀ VIOLENTA [VIOLENT CITY] (1970)

Città Violenta is an Italian-French action film directed by Sergio Sollima, starring Charles Bronson, Jill Ireland and Telly Savalas. Bronson plays professional assassin Jeff Heston, who is holidaying in the Virgin Islands with his mistress Vanessa (Ireland), but is shot and left for dead by an unknown assailant. Heston survives, but is imprisoned after being framed for a murder he did not commit; years later, Heston is released from prison and tracks Vanessa to New Orleans, where he finds that she is now married to Weber (Savalas), the crime boss who framed him. However, when Heston refuses to join Weber’s gang, the hunter becomes the hunted, and he finds himself running for his life through the Big Easy.

Ennio Morricone’s score is built around two recurring main themes. The first, “Città Violenta,” is a dirty and gritty theme for orchestra, wailing guitars, and darkly insistent pianos, which gradually emerges into a strident melody that many may see as a forerunner to the theme he wrote for Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight some 45 years later. The use of a nervous dulcimer in the theme’s second half is vintage Morricone, and the whole thing speaks to Heston’s dangerous lifestyle. The second recurring theme, “Con Estrema Dolcezza,” is a love theme for Heston and Vanessa, and is a quintessential romantic melody for strings and woodwinds, although the unusual addition of an echoing guitar in the background gives it an unexpectedly menacing quality.

The rest of the score is built out from the stylistics of these two ideas. Cues like “Rito Finale” and “Norme Con Ironie” offer more low-key variations on the main Città Violenta theme. Elsewhere, pieces like “Mille Volte Un Grido” are abstract and dissonant suspense tracks for banks of throbbing guitars and unusual synthetic textures, while other cues such as “Momento Estremo” are softer and more intimate, often featuring prominent performances from woodwinds and harpsichord. There are also one or two groovy light rock action tracks – “Svolta Definitiva,” “Disperatamente” – that enhance further the grittiness of the New Orleans setting, with “Disperatamente” being especially notable for its strange, breathless vocals.

The soundtrack to Città Violenta has been released many times over the years. The version reviewed here is the one released by Italian label GDM Records in 2012; the main theme also features on many of the dozens of Morricone compilation albums released over the years.

Track Listing: 1. Città Violenta (2:24), 2. Rito Finale (3:05), 3. Mille Volte Un Grido (2:31), 4. Città Violenta #2 (1:17), 5. Momento Estremo (3:18), 6. Con Estrema Dolcezza (2:41), 7. Svolta Definitiva (4:37), 8. Norme Con Ironie (3:55), 9. Riflessione (1:27), 10. Disperatamente (2:53), 11. Rito Finale #2 (1:29), 12. Con Estrema Dolcezza #2 (3:08), 13. Rito Finale #3 (2:34), 14. Città Violenta #3 (2:40), 15. Dolcemente Acre (3:15), 16. Città Violenta #4 (4:52), 17. Sospensione Sovrapposta (1:40), 18. A Caissa (2:24), 19. Città Violenta #5 (5:00), 20. Con Estrema Dolcezza #3 (1:09), 21. Riassunto (3:07). GDM/Legend 4218, 59 minutes 26 seconds.

Feb. 7, 2021
Film Appreciation on This Website
Online music audition
001
Citta' Violenta (02:24)
002
Rito Finale (03:05)
003
Mille Volte Un Grido (02:31)
004
Momento Estremo (03:17)
005
Con Estrema Dolcezza (02:39)
006
Svolta Deginitiva (04:37)
007
Norme Con Ironie (03:55)
008
Riflessione (01:27)
009
Disperatamente (02:53)
010
Rito Finale (01:29)
011
Dolcemente Acre (03:14)
012
Sospensione Sovrapposta (01:41)
013
A Caissa (02:24)
014
Riassunto (03:07)
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)
2023.12.10
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