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Shamus (Jerry Goldsmith) (1973)
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Average: 2.46 Stars
***** 5 5 Stars
**** 11 4 Stars
*** 21 3 Stars
** 25 2 Stars
* 20 1 Stars
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Composed, Conducted, and Produced by:
Total Time: 25:46
• 1. Main Title (4:10)
• 2. A Real Dog No. 1 (0:42)
• 3. The Warehouse (4:06)
• 4. A Real Dog No. 2 (0:50)
• 5. Here I Come - Part I (0:28)
• 6. Here I Come - Part II (2:22)
• 7. Getting Acquainted - Part I (1:37)
• 8. Getting Acquainted - Part II (1:31)
• 9. Surprise Visit (2:14)
• 10. A Broken Limb (5:03)
• 11. Stay in My Life (2:25)


Album Cover Art
Intrada Records
(June, 2021)
The sole album from Intrada Records in 2021 was limited to an unknown quantity and available only through soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $22.
The insert includes detailed information about the score and film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,352
Written 9/24/24
Buy it... if you believe that Jerry Goldsmith could credibly whip up some urban coolness with electric bass and guitar alongside his synthetic keyboarding, but that blend is a little more bizarre than you may be ready for.

Avoid it... if convincing style is your target in any Goldsmith detective score, this one largely missing the mark because the tone varies between serious intent and parody as it tries to straddle musical genres.

Goldsmith
Goldsmith
Shamus: (Jerry Goldsmith) Designed as a vehicle for lead actor Burt Reynolds with hopes of a film or television franchise to follow, 1973's Shamus is a tough-guy comedy mystery with Reynolds as a very imperfect private detective. He is hired by a diamond dealer to investigate some stolen goods and finds himself entangled in an elaborate plot that invariably leads right back to the dealer. More importantly, the plot allows Reynolds to strut around New York and bust bad guy ass while bedding various women. The movie debuted just after he had notoriously posed for the centerfold of Cosmo magazine, so the hairy chest routine was obviously a major attraction. Unfortunately, after a promising opening sequence, the rest of the movie was a predictable bore, and it was shrugged out of the theaters and failed to spawn the desired television spin-off despite a pilot test. The movie came at a time when the music in gritty urban films was turning towards rock and funk, and while that influence definitely had an impact on the soundtrack for Shamus, the amount of music in the finished product is surprisingly minimal. Only about 26 minutes of original score was written by Jerry Goldsmith for movie, a huge portion of story's middle unscored and lacking even much source material. The composer was dealing with the industry-wide stylistic shift substantially caused by Isaac Hayes' award-winning score for Shaft a few years earlier. The end result of his attempt to meet the genre with this style yields a grungier 1970's version of Our Man Flint and In Like Flint, and it's not among Goldsmith's better sideshow ventures. The composer was perfectly capable of writing jazzy and bluesy music for the mystery and thriller genres involving detectives, but his attempt to strive further towards the funk realm simply sounds weird in conjunction with his own mannerisms. In a general sense, his approach to Shamus is fine, but his execution brought a slew of oddball instrumental contributors that don't gel at any time in the score. Adding to the frustration of this missed opportunity to generate a healthy dose of coolness is Goldsmith's rather limited and limp narrative, leaving listeners with a very short, head-scratching work best left in obscurity.

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