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Review of Raggedy Man (Jerry Goldsmith)
Composed, Conducted, and Produced by:
Jerry Goldsmith
Labels and Dates:
Varèse Sarabande
(1991)

Varèse Sarabande
(March 15th, 2019)

Availability:
The 1991 album was the seventh entry of Varèse Sarabande's original CD Club series, VCL 9102.07. It was limited to 1,500 numbered copies and sold for over $150 after selling out. The 2019 Varèse re-issue was limited to 1,000 copies and available initially through soundtrack specialty outlets for $20 before quickly selling out as well. The label did, however, continue offering a digital option for the re-issue.
Album 1 Cover
1991 Varèse
Album 2 Cover
2019 Varèse

FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... only if your love of highly personal, intimate Jerry Goldsmith themes from the 1960's and 1970's for small ensembles has no boundaries despite their occasional redundancy.

Avoid it... if your affinity for Goldsmith's light dramas cannot justify a highly disjointed yet repetitive score that offers very little new material for the learned enthusiast of the composer.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
Raggedy Man: (Jerry Goldsmith) One of a few films directed by regular production designer Jack Fisk, Raggedy Man suffers from a very odd, disjointed script that can't decide if it's a wholesome love story or a cheap slasher film. Debuting in the early 1980's, it could have been either, and despite a flourishing acting performance by Fisk's wife, Sissy Spacek, along with generally outstanding art direction and cinematography, the film's strange plot dooms it. Starring as the sole telephone operator in a small Texas town during World War II, Spacek's character meets a traveling sailor and the film essentially follows the innocent emotional attachment that the two feel towards each other and the woman's two young boys. The colors of the film are very deeply rooted in the early 1940's, with the time capsule effect very well conveyed. But the movie goes all awry with the involvement of a scarecrow type of character, a "raggedy man," a group of loudmouth men who have a keen eye for the operator, and a strikingly violent and disturbing end. Critically, the film performed well, though there was widespread sentiment that the narrative should have kept its focus on the budding love story rather than the larger symbolism that the violent elements are supposed to represent. This strange pairing of movie genres presented a challenge for whoever scored the film, for the original music would have to somehow strike the same balance without losing cohesion. Composer Jerry Goldsmith was no stranger to small-scale drama, the humbling vistas of Americana, or the brazen violence that exists in his horror ventures. His qualifications in the department of sensitive, highly personal woodwind themes extends from A Patch of Blue to A Girl Named Sooner, and it is this type of intimacy that Goldsmith would largely abandon later in his career in favor of the increasingly romantic sound of a full ensemble behind his solo highlights. As hard as it might be to imagine for enthusiasts of his more modern, digital age works, Goldsmith had received award nominations for scores like A Patch of Blue, making him a very credible choice for a small-scale, personal project like Raggedy Man. Unfortunately, Goldsmith's score predictably suffers from the same identity crisis as the film itself. As expected, he establishes a gorgeous primary theme for the location and character, but it will instantly remind listeners of several of his others in both the drama and Western genres, and he repeats that theme here until it's beaten like a dead horse.

Performed with subdued elegance in the opening and closing titles of Raggedy Man by acoustic guitar, flute, and harmonica, Goldsmith's lovely theme expands to include a light string accompaniment. The only problem is that this theme is nearly identical to the primary idea that appeared the next year in Poltergeist. It subsequently shares traits with every theme attributed to "Carol Anne's Theme" thereafter and will present some challenges to those who have little tolerance for self-repetition from composers in general. The similarities wouldn't be so bothersome if the structures and the use of strings and woodwinds weren't so identical, including the swirling interlude sequence. Even if the theme doesn't remind you of Poltergeist, then it could draw comparisons in its note for note borrowing from Magic, too (and that's not just because of the presence of a harmonica), as well as the aforementioned light drama projects. It could be argued that Goldsmith already wrote the most emotionally gripping version of this music in A Patch of Blue. Another difficulty with Raggedy Man is the lack of focus caused by the film's wayward plot. A oddly playful hoedown/carnival-like motif, softer than similar insanity-inducing incarnations of the same idea in Goldsmith's other scores, melds with a Mexican theme and mingles ultimately with a shockingly sharp series of horror cues late in the score. Jabbing, violent strings and brass attacks similar to those in Leviathan completely destroy whatever mood the softer moments of the score create for you. After repeating its purely small-town heart with simple instrumental authenticity several times, the composer hits you with subdued versions of the electronic "dooing" sound effect from the Blaster Beam of Star Trek: The Motion Picture fame in "Runaways." After the "Mexican Tune," complete with Spanish vocal adaptation (sadly the most engaging recording from Goldsmith in the score), the mood of the work is permanently disrupted by the horrifying "End of Calvin" mayhem. The score was released on a 1991 album as the seventh entry in Varèse Sarabande's original club series and sold for hundreds of dollars after disappearing from the market. About ten years later, a bootleg with 25 additional minutes of music appeared in circulation, though this expanded version suffers from terrible sound quality, short cue lengths, and the same disjointed feel to the contents in the rest of the score. Varèse re-issued its prior album for a limited, "encore" CD run in 2019, selling out within days but joined by an enduring digital download option. Overall, the main theme is very sweet, but it's highly redundant for Goldsmith, and it alone cannot carry an otherwise unsettled and brief score.  **
TRACK LISTINGS:
All Albums:
Total Time: 33:58

• 1. Main Title (3:53)
• 2. Henry and Harry (5:11)
• 3. Number Please (4:34)
• 4. The Kite (4:40)
• 5. Runaways (6:28)
• 6. Mexican Tune (2:57)
• 7. End of Calvin (3:54)
• 8. End Title (2:09)
NOTES & QUOTES:
The insert of the 1991 Varèse album includes no extra information about the score or film. That of the 2019 re-issue offers details about both.
Copyright © 1997-2024, Filmtracks Publications. All rights reserved.
The reviews and other textual content contained on the filmtracks.com site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Christian Clemmensen at Filmtracks Publications. All artwork and sound clips from Raggedy Man are Copyright © 1991, 2019, Varèse Sarabande, Varèse Sarabande and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 8/10/97 and last updated 6/24/22.