Lalo Schifrin
Man On A Swing OST (1974)
Wewantsounds
The late 60s and early 70s have always been objects of intrigue in the 21st century, one notable example being the wide-ranging coverage of the late β60s in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon A Time In Hollywood (2019). A similarly eclectic focus on this era is the best way to describe Lalo Schifrinβs enthralling soundtrack for the psychological thriller Man On A Swing (1974). Almost half a century following its original release, the soundtrack has recently been remastered for vinyl, accompanied with bonus tracks and alternative takes.
A legend of big band and Latin American music, Schifrin celebrates his contemporaries through a time capsule that is often as reinterpretative as it is faithful to the bounds of the filmβs genre. The groove of songs like βRadio Sourceβ and βOn The Moveβ come across as the albumβs safer zones, as Schifrin struggles to expand on the tropes of the thriller film score. The album immediately becomes more exciting where a songβs stylistic choice appears misplaced, reinventing what is intended to thrill and terrify an audience. For example, the soft sounds influenced by bossa nova and lounge jazz emerge tenderly on βJuke Box Sourceβ, but by βJanetβs Mazurkaβ, such sounds carry with them an element of spectral unfamiliarity. This mystique shines even more brightly when Schifrin draws on his experience in the horror film genre on tracks like βRosehaven Hotelβ and βPenultima Tranceβ β effectively broadening a Hollywood thriller into a work of art interacting with the haunted, turmoiled house of Americaβs socio-political landscape.
ArtistΒ Links
SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: LALO SCHIFRIN – MAN ON A SWING OST (1974)
Rohan Chakraborty