v/a - ciao! manhattan original motion picture soundtrack - cinewax - vinyl
CINE 809LP - 95073 - uslp - €29.50New Copy
Genre: Soundtracks
1. Angel Shock - Gino Piserchio
2. Malibu People - John Phillip
3. Bad karma [dialogue]
4. Citizen Kane - Skip Battin & Kim Fowle
5. To Give All Your Love Away - Richie Have
6. Driving Verdecchio - Gino Piserchi
7. Turn the whole world on just for a moment... - [dialogu
8. Night Riders - Gino Piserchi
9. Open the door - [dialogu
10. I can't Make It Anymore - Richie Havens
11. Wake up! - (dialogue)
12. Justice - Kim Milfor
13. Revolution of the Youth - Gino Piserch
14. Anyway I'm a star! - [dialogu
15. Doctor Feelgood - Gino Piserchi
16. Meth burns your brain cells out... - [dialogu
17. Shouldn't All The World Be Dancing? - Richie Have
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Edie Sedgwick was the true “It Girl†of the Pop Art age; a woman who famously said she wanted "to turn the world on just for a moment". Part of Andy Warhol's Factory for a year in the mid-'60s, she is widely believed to have inspired The Velvet Underground's “Femme Fatale†as well as Bob Dylan's “Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat†and “Just Like A Womanâ€.
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1973's Ciao! Manhattan, the model and actor's final film, gave some indication of why she inspired such devotion. Written and directed by Factory affiliates John Palmer and David Weisman, the movie tells a quasi-fictionalised account – a chronicle à clef in Weisman's words – of Sedgewick's journey from New York to Santa Barbara.
In the film, Sedgwick is Susan Superstar, a New Yorker who winds up living in a drained Santa Barbara swimming pool in a narcotic daze, life and art just a hair away from each other. Shot over a five year period, Sedgwick died of a barbiturate overdose at the age of 28 before filming wrapped in 1971.
For a movie starring some of rock's great muses, the soundtrack fittingly features cult figures of the era: Richie Havens (“Shouldn't All The World Be Dancingâ€, “To Give All Your Love Awayâ€, “I Can’t Make It Anymoreâ€), John Phillips (“Malibu Peopleâ€) and Byrds/Flying Burrito Brothers member Skip Battin, who performs Kim Fowley's “Citizen Kaneâ€. Other artists are less well-known, including actor Kim Milford, who sings the stirring “Justiceâ€, and Factory man Gino Piserchio, an artist and dear friend of Weisman, whose synthesizer compositions anchor the score.
Never before released in any format, this long-overdue pressing includes all of the above plus selected dialogue from the film, each snippet like a beat poem in its own way. The Village Voice once called Ciao! “The Citizen Kane of the drug generation"; deeply evocative of the era, the mood of the soundtrack captures the psychedelic spirit of the film, as well as the darkness and tragedy that characterized Edie's life.