Giorgio Moroder ROCKS
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sistermorphine71 — 16 years ago(August 09, 2009 02:20 PM)
I absolutely LOVE the soundtrack to this movie. I love the chase music but I really like the main theme, which is particularly powerful as it builds when he escapes at the end. Giorgio Moroder is fantastic, and I also love the Cat People soundtrack as well as the music to Scarface.
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Gus-69 — 16 years ago(October 22, 2009 10:44 PM)
His music for SCARFACE kicks ass too.
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luadress-a — 15 years ago(April 09, 2010 08:42 AM)
Yeah, great music!
I have the soundtrack on CD but its a little different from the music in the movie. Actually I think the movie version of The Chase is better.
Is there another issue with the original soundtrack? -
sistermorphine71 — 15 years ago(June 09, 2010 04:27 PM)
Is there another issue with the original soundtrack?
If you find out, let me know! I have the cd as well and I definitely noticed a difference in the main theme, which I love, but I do prefer the music in the movie. -
A_Gooner — 15 years ago(April 14, 2010 09:30 AM)
Moroder is not the Godfarther of Techno or House, he was the King of Disco

Disco later on heavily influenced House, coupled with soul, funk and gospel. Techno was a different sound that was inspired by euro-synth sounds coming from Germany and the UK and it grew mostly around Detroit with the likes of Juan Atkins and the lot. The initial techno sounds were dry and industrial but eventually gained lots of soul elements as the likes of Kenny Larkin and Robert Hood came in. -
MilesCo — 15 years ago(May 24, 2010 11:13 AM)
He does indeed.
"The Chase" was used in a March 2010 episode of The Simpsons ("Stealing first Base"
http://www.imdb.com/board/11607507/soundtrack
). The tune was used only briefly, but to great effect, during a skateboarding sequence. It certainly got
my
attention. I thought it had an early '80s New Wave sound to it, and being a fan of early '80s nostalgia, I did a little research and discovered that it was from
Midnight Express.
(I was off just a little in the timelineafter listening to the whole 8-minute track, I realize that it does have more of a late-1970s disco sound to it.) Even though I hadn't actually heard that particular tune before, it was evocative of that era and reminded me of the music and pop culture of the time. (Despite being just a kid back then, it really took me back!) -
fivefids — 15 years ago(July 23, 2010 06:01 AM)
I remember the first time I saw this picture in the theater and thinking "The Chase", great piece that it is, sounded much like a song by a local group here. There was an album, released in 1977, by a group called "Cain." The album was called "Stinger" and on that album there is a song called "Thanks A Lot Houston" about an out of control space capsule which is getting no help from "ground control." Anyway, "The Chase" sounds eerily like "Thanks A Lot Houston" and I always wondered if wasn't "Borrowed" from it.
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photonphon — 15 years ago(August 14, 2010 01:20 AM)
Let us not forget that the radio program "Coast 2 Coast AM" - a popular psuedo-science and paranormal radio station uses 'the Chase' nightly. Awesome and enlightening radio program if you haven't been initiated. "From the high desert" baby.
Steal this sig. -
YankeeDood — 14 years ago(January 30, 2012 10:18 PM)
I agree Moroder is an aweosme composer, but you are a trendy idiot for putting "ROCKS" in your title. Especially because it's not rock to begin with, it's synth. Ditto head.
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jztzt — 14 years ago(February 05, 2012 11:40 AM)
The score envelopes the film quite nicely. It's mellow and sad at times, and tense in other times. It fits nicely into the film's settings and atmosphere. It invokes pathos for Billy. Too bad the soundtrack release was a re-recording and not the actual film versions of the score. For instance, they modified the chase cue to made it more disco. The film cue had a faster pace and was more piercing.
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ChitoRaffferty — 13 years ago(May 04, 2012 06:57 PM)
to made it more disco."
Disco was just about to end. It left as quickly as it appeared, no more play lists. Moroder did some great work: a sound so identifiable with the times.
" See dat scenery floatin by, you're now approaching NewportRI." Cole Porter -
JarJarRocks — 11 years ago(July 14, 2014 02:37 AM)
I think the soundtrack to Midnight Express sounds completely out of place, like it should have been in a sci fi robot film, and that is why I absolutely love it. They would never in a million years have done anything like that now, and it was also very, very unusual in 1978.
It takes what could have been a pretty dark and boring movie, and makes it fresh, exciting and entertaining. The music made me love the movie.
Giorgio was extremely ahead of his time with the music, especially Chase, and I also would like to applaud the film makers for having the cojones to put that kind of music it into a very serious movie like this.
My jaw kind of dropped when I heard Chase in the movie. I knew the movie was from 1978, but suddenly this awesome track appeared. A track that in my opinion sounded much more like an 80's track, and still sound amazing by today's standards.
I honestly thought for a second that the movie was a redux, with new music put into it. It sounds like the movie version had synth drums (which was more usual a few years later) while the album version had real drums. And that's probably why the movie version sound much more modern than the other.