THE COLD SPOT
The Words & the Music of Frankenstein
Artwork
Vitals
· Year: 1999
Track list
  1. Word of Friendly Waning
  2. Toast
  3. Grand Appassionato
  4. Bride of Frankenstein
  5. Prologue
  6. I'm Glad to See the Monster Roasted
  7. He Hated Fritz
  8. Search Every Ravine
  9. Bring Him To The Village
10. A Toast
11. Grand Appassionato
12. The Bride Of Frankenstein Main Title
13. Prologue
14. I'm Glad To See The Monster Roasted
15. Monster Entrance
16. The Monster! It's Alive!
17. Processional March
18. Forget? If Only I Could Forget
19. A Strange Apparition / Pretorius' Entrance
20. You'll Need A Coat
21. Pastorale
22. Chase Music / Crucifixion / Monster Breaks Out
23. We Better Get Away From These Parts
24. The Hermit's Fiddle (Ave Maria)
25. Alone - Bad, Friend - Good
26. The Music Of Friends (Ave Maria)
27. This Is The Fiend
28. The Fire In The Hut / Graveyard
29. Dance Macabre / Female Monster Music
30. Monster Enters / Monster Theme
31. In The Tower Pt. 1
32. In The Tower Pt. 2
33. Creation Pt. 1
34. Creation Pt. 1 / Female Monster Music
35. Creation Pt. 2
36. She Hate Me . . . Like Others
37. Explosion Pt. 1
38. Explosion Pt. 2
39. The Son of Frankenstein Main Title
40. It Wasn't My Father's Fault
41. The Message
42. The General
43. The Discovery
44. The Examination
45. Has He Asked You To Rob Any Graves?
46. The Result Of The Examination
47. The Giant / Looking For A Monster
48. The Evil Flute
49. I Scare Him To Death
50. The Evil Flute
51. Don't Touch Him, Frankenstein!
52. [Spoiler removed]
53. There's A Monster Afoot
54. The Monster Appears / The Monster's Lament
55. Monster On A Rampage / The Menace Destroyed
56. Herewith I Deed To You
Products
Amazon.com
· CD
Synopsis
Music and dialogue from James Whale's Frankenstein and Bride of Frankenstein, as well as from Son of Frankenstein.
ReviewsSUBMIT YOUR REVIEW
Jack Witzig
RATING
Out of 100
51
The Words & the Music of Frankenstein doesn't feature a whole lot of music, but it does have many words. This album will probably appeal most to people who've seen James Whale's film and its sequels, but the story has achieved such notoriety that it still stands a shot at being entertaining to the unfamiliar. Then again, the sounds of the monster stumbling around--of what interest is that to anyone?

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