In Cold Blood (soundtrack)

In Cold Blood is a 1967 film score for the film In Cold Blood, composed, arranged and conducted by Quincy Jones. The soundtrack album was released on the Colgems label in 1967.[1][2]

In Cold Blood
Soundtrack album by
Released1967
Recorded1967
at RCA Victor's Music Center Of The World
GenreFilm score
Length31:41
LabelColgems
COM/COS 107
ProducerNeely Plumb
Quincy Jones chronology
In the Heat of the Night
(1967)
In Cold Blood
(1967)
For Love of Ivy
(1968)

Truman Capote lobbied unsuccessfully to have Jones removed from the film. According to Jones, Capote called director Richard Brooks and said "Richard, I don't understand why you've got a Negro doing the music for a film with no people of color in it.' And Richard Brooks said, 'Fuck you, he's doing the music".[3] Capote later apologized to Jones.

The Vinyl Factory said "The opening title track, with its galloping drums and corrosive strings, lets you know you are entering a bleak musical terrain. "Perry's Theme", which begins with a beatific Spanish guitar, mutates into something terrifying, as strings rise and fall ominously. With its harrowing organ blasts, "Murder Scene" is a haunting aural crime photo. At the time, this menacing soundtrack was considered a convention breaker not only for Jones, but also for black composers in Hollywood".[4]

Track listing

All compositions by Quincy Jones

  1. "In Cold Blood" − 2:48
  2. "Clutter Family Theme" − 2:03
  3. "Hangin' Paper" − 2:10
  4. "Down Clutter's Lane" − 2:43
  5. "Seduction" − 2:35
  6. "Perry's Theme" − 3:20
  7. "Lonely Bottles" − 2:34
  8. "No Witnesses" − 2:13
  9. "I'll Have to Kill You" − 2:25
  10. "Nina" (Lyrics by Gil Bernal) − 3:56
  11. "Murder Scene" − 2:02
  12. "The Corner" − 2:52

Personnel

References

  1. Soundtrack Collector: album entry accessed January 17, 2018
  2. Edwards, D & Callahan, M. Colgems Album Discography, accessed January 17, 2018
  3. "Quincy Jones Has a Story About That". GQ. Retrieved 4 February 2018.
  4. 10 definitive Quincy Jones soundtracks from the '60s and '70s, The Vinyl Factory, accessed January 17, 2018
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