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Scarface
(1983)
Album Cover Art
Composed, Co-Performed, and Produced by:
Giorgio Moroder

Co-Performed by:
Sylvester Levay
Kristian Schultze
Arthur Barrow
Richie Zito
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LABEL & RELEASE DATE
La-La Land Records
(June 14th, 2022)
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ALBUM AVAILABILITY
The original album with mostly songs and two score tracks (of eight minutes) was released on CD several times by MCA Records and remixed in 2003 by Geffen Records.

The 2022 La-La Land 2-CD set with the score and original mix of the songs is limited to 5,000 copies and available primarily through soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $30. The same presentation was commercially released digitally by Back Lot Music a few months after the La-La Land set.
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   Availability | Viewer Ratings | Comments | Track Listings | Notes
Buy it... only if you are an avid enthusiast of Giorgio Moroder's very dated style for the era or, more likely, you desire a faithful souvenir of a gangster film you love.

Avoid it... if you expect Moroder's fascinating ideas to coalesce into a truly functional film score, the muddy thematic handling a potentially bigger issue than his tiring electronic mannerisms.
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EDITORIAL REVIEW
FILMTRACKS TRAFFIC RANK: #2,253
WRITTEN 5/15/23
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Scarface: (Giorgio Moroder) For enthusiasts of gangster movies, the 1983 spectacle Scarface remains a giant pile of white powder. For those who find violence, cocaine use, racist stereotypes, foul language, and glorified violence abhorrent, the movie is wretchedly repulsive. Critics decried the Brian De Palma film at the time, and audience reactions were mixed, the film's flirtation with an "X" rating from the MPAA appealing to hardened crime drama fans. Over time, though, Scarface has earned significant respect in its genre despite its many ills, inspiring countless lyrics in hip hop songs and topping retrospective lists of culturally significant films. Al Pacino plays Tony Montana, a Cuban refugee who parlays his 1980 Miami arrival into a crime syndicate that makes him fabulously wealthy, knocking off other bosses and their henchmen as he accumulates power and endless piles of cocaine. He fearlessly and obsessively deals and kills his way to a monumental confrontation at the end of the film that leaves almost the entire cast dead, but not before some pithy, very meme-worthy dialogue. Montana's bizarre relationships with his wife and his sister are an intriguing but rather sick storyline on the side, his fascination with his sister particularly unnerving. These elements play directly into the music for Scarface, an endeavor helmed by popular Italian songwriter and producer Giorgio Moroder. At the very height of his popularity, the electronic music artist had transitioned into the film industry and won Academy Awards for Midnight Express and Flashdance, and he was just a few years away from doing the same for Top Gun. Along with Superman III and The NeverEnding Story, Scarface stands as testimony to Moroder's influence at the time, though his contributions to Scarface have long been somewhat controversial. The musician's new wave and electronic style wasn't immediately embraced in its context, and there was talk of replacing the score in later re-releases of the movie, but the filmmakers have always stood firm in retaining Moroder's music.

Moroder approached Scarface with its song soundtrack as his primary concern. The movie contains eight of his songs, with two others not making the cut. Many of these songs were utilized as source material in the various club scenes in the story, though radio usage also applied. The composer also recorded eight separate non-vocalized source pieces that spanned the ethnic, rock, and disco genres as well. Sometimes, these songs and source pieces bled together and were overlaid in the final mix of the picture. To Moroder, his scoring duties were a purely secondary concern. The post-production schedule on Scarface was so hectic that the "Main Title" represented the only time the film was edited specifically to the music. The rest was haphazardly spotted, arranged, and dropped into the picture by others without adequate coordination efforts by Moroder himself. Five electronic music artists arranged and performed the score, with Moroder writing the primary themes and lead arranger Sylvester Levay essentially making a score out of them. German keyboarder Kristian Schultze wrote music for the longer edit of finale battle scene, which might explain why "Finale" is comparatively terrible and does nothing to wrap up the score's themes. Moroder wrote the score's themes as if they were the instrumentals to songs, with opening riffs persisting as interludes to the melodies. The synthetic keyboards and percussion are extremely familiar to Moroder's style, too. It's not difficult to notice that the bulk of the songs for the movie sound all too alike, their generic early 1980's extension of disco mannerisms into the light rock and new wave genres defining nearly every one of them. The score is much the same, the synthesizers programmed similarly for song-like instrumental applications but the crew devising some creative ways of manipulating that sound into ethnic, suspense, and quasi-religious tones. Synthetic ethnic woodwind and jungle percussion were used for the story's South American settings, and that percussion was manipulated for a rattlesnake-like sound that does have a positive impact. Otherwise, however, the Latin element for the Miami and South American settings is not directly infused into much of the overall work.


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VIEWER RATINGS
114 TOTAL VOTES
Average: 3.13 Stars
***** 20 5 Stars
**** 26 4 Stars
*** 31 3 Stars
** 23 2 Stars
* 14 1 Stars
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Track Listings Icon
TRACK LISTINGS
Total Time: 156:02
CD 1: (77:14)
• 1. Main Title - Scarface (3:42)
• 2. Rebenga (2:10)
• 3. Chainsaw/Tony Rescued (3:54)
• 4. I Got the Yeyo (0:45)
• 5. Elvira (4:01)
• 6. Night Drive (0:30)
• 7. Gina (2:55)
• 8. She's Not For You (2:09)
• 9. Bolivia (1:09)
• 10. Sosa/Talk to Frank (2:33)
• 11. Omar Out/Don't Fuck Me (1:07)
• 12. Proposal (2:45)
• 13. Tony Spots Gina/Tony Slaps Gina/Tony Guilty/Shooters (2:48)
• 14. What About You?/Open Fire/Tony Escapes (2:48)
• 15. Just Paranoid (4:44)
• 16. Lopez Begs (1:35)
• 17. Bye Bernstein (1:56)
• 18. The World is Yours (2:06)
• 19. Plant the Plastic (1:30)
• 20. The Chase (4:05)
• 21. 409 Citrus Drive (4:52)
• 22. Paranoid Tony/Gina's Grief (2:30)
• 23. Back to the House (1:47)
• 24. Tony's Grief/Attack Begins/Crazy Gina/Attack Continues (4:09)
• 25. Gina Dead/Chi-Chi Wasted (1:15)
• 26. Finale (From the Motion Picture "Scarface") (3:28)
• 27. End Title - Scarface (6:36)
• 28. Trailer Music (Unused) (3:01)


CD 2: (78:48)

Original Soundtrack Album: (35:15)
• 1. Scarface (Push It to the Limit) - performed by Paul Engemann (2:58)
• 2. Rush, Rush (Album Version) - performed by Deborah Harry (3:38)
• 3. Turn Out the Light - performed by Amy Holland (3:31)
• 4. Vamos a Bailar - performed by Maria Conchita (3:43)
• 5. Tony's Theme (3:10)
• 6. She's On Fire - performed by Amy Holland (3:44)
• 7. Shake It Up - performed by Elizabeth Daily (3:45)
• 8. Dance Dance Dance - performed by Beth Andersen (2:34)
• 9. I'm Hot Tonight - performed by Elizabeth Daily (3:13)
• 10. Gina and Elvira's Theme (5:01)

Additional Music: (43:33)
• 11. Scarface (Push It to the Limit) (Extended Version) - performed by Paul Engemann (5:12)
• 12. Rush, Rush - performed by Deborah Harry (4:48)
• 13. Right Combination - performed by Beth Andersen (3:42)
• 14. Car Getaway Source (1:09)
• 15. Cuban I (2:37)
• 16. Cuban II (3:23)
• 17. Cuban III (2:27)
• 18. Muzak I (4:45)
• 19. Muzak II (3:18)
• 20. Muzak III (3:03)
• 21. Disco I (3:04)
• 22. Disco II (1:58)
• 23. Success - performed by Joe Esposito (4:00)

Notes Icon
NOTES AND QUOTES
The insert includes extensive information about the score and film.
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or redistributed without the prior written authority of Christian Clemmensen at Filmtracks Publications. All artwork and sound clips from Scarface are Copyright © 2022, La-La Land Records and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 5/15/23 (and not updated significantly since).
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