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I Agree!
The original version of this song was spread across the internet during the kazaa/napster days under the title "Last Flowers till the Hospital". It was supposedly a Radiohead b-side. For years I thought that was so, until I learned it was actually the theme to a spehgetti western. Its strange how much the original sounds like a Radiohead track.
I recall downloading it as a Radiohead song back then too, but recognized it as a Morricone creation straight off :-)
Hard to forget indeed.
She's still beautiful. So full of ego, the young...
The original version of this song was spread across the internet during the kazaa/napster days under the title "Last Flowers till the Hospital". It was supposedly a Radiohead b-side. For years I thought that was so, until I learned it was actually the theme to a spehgetti western. Its strange how much the original sounds like a Radiohead track.
Check out the movie, it is probably one of Sergio Leone's best despite the lack of a Clint. It does have a Bronson, a Robards, and a Fonda in a rare appearance as a villain. Absolute classic.
Tank fly boss walk jam nitty-gritty.... etc..
What were the skies like when you were young?
Yep, The Orb also sampled "The Man With The Harmonica (L'uomo Dell'armonica)" when they produced "Little Fluffy Clouds".
What were the skies like when you were young?
There were little fluffy clouds.
As Burt Lancaster commented in 'The Professionals' - "What a woman!"
The original version of this song was spread across the internet during the kazaa/napster days under the title "Last Flowers till the Hospital". It was supposedly a Radiohead b-side. For years I thought that was so, until I learned it was actually the theme to a spehgetti western. Its strange how much the original sounds like a Radiohead track.
Ehm... maybe it´s the Radiohead track which sounds like the original !!
(But this gets a 9 for sheer guts to cover Morricone)
Nothing beats the original version though.
It's not a question of beating it.
Sergio Leone shot scenes based on the music Ennio had pre-written and make
scenes as long as the SCORE DICTATED. wow.
I would have guessed Gorillaz !
Great film, great score, and I love this cover, too!
Nothing beats the original version though.
still chilling
Great film, great score, and I love this cover, too!
my favorite Henry Fonda flick
still chilling
Bill should do a Only Covers play list one day.
This is good stuff...
Imkirok wrote:
That's what I thought it was at first, too.
It was brought up a few times in this thread: this song is a cover of Ennio Morricone's "Man With A Harmonica" from the soundtrack to Sergio Leone's 1968 classic film, "Once Upon A Time In The West", which preceded Supertramp's song by several years. Many of the samples in this song are directly from that soundtrack, including the harmonica.
Harmonicas Are Shite - Fila Brazillia
Don't let the name put you off, it's a good song!
That's what I thought it was at first, too.
Yep this movie is a must see.
"...when he stops whittling, something's gonna happen."
(this track uses one of the themes)
Yep this movie is a must see.
(this track uses one of the themes)
Mix from one of the best westerns of all time. If you have not seen Once Upon A Time In The West , check it out
Don't know why, because hearing it now, I really like it. 8.
And i was. ;-)
Bleyfusz wrote:
kingart wrote:
I wouldn't say the greatest western ever, yippee. Kai yay.
Shane.
The Searchers.
The Wild Bunch.
To name just a few likely to be mentioned before Once Upon a Time in the West.
But Henry Fonda is one bad guy you love to hate. And it certainly is a candidate for the greatest music ever for a movie set in the west.
I wouldn't say the greatest western ever, yippee. Kai yay.
Shane.
The Searchers.
The Wild Bunch.
To name just a few likely to be mentioned before Once Upon a Time in the West.
But Henry Fonda is one bad guy you love to hate. And it certainly is a candidate for the greatest music ever for a movie set in the west.
Ha, that’s too funny
my favorite Henry Fonda flick
Film is a visual medium and music often gets in it's way. Ennio Morricone's soundtracks do not.
my favorite Henry Fonda flick
This is not a blatant ripoff.
This album is remixes of Ennio Morricone movie soundtrack tunes. The "Man with the Harmonica" was the theme song for Once Upon a Time in the West, filmed in 1965 according to IMDB. (Apparently Gatlinburger and I both failed to read prior comments before posting.)So, it appears this song predated Supertramp by 8 or 9 years, although the remix may indeed have been arranged to mimic Supertramp's soundscape. If you're suggesting Supertramp ripped off Signore Morricone, well, I completely missed that interpretation of your comment.
Yes, and aside from the fact that Supertramp's arrangement was influenced by the work of Ennio Morricone, three notes played on a harmonica does not constitute "a blatant rip-off". More importantly: why would anyone bother ripping off Supertramp?
This is not a blatant ripoff.
This album is remixes of Ennio Morricone movie soundtrack tunes. The "Man with the Harmonica" was the theme song for Once Upon a Time in the West, filmed in 1965 according to IMDB. (Apparently Gatlinburger and I both failed to read prior comments before posting.)
So, it appears this song predated Supertramp by 8 or 9 years, although the remix may indeed have been arranged to mimic Supertramp's soundscape. If you're suggesting Supertramp ripped off Signore Morricone, well, I completely missed that interpretation of your comment.
Exactly! And I would love to hear that now.
Perfect. And I'm sure the intro was used by The Orb. Little Fluffy Clouds if I'm not mistaken.
Harmonica is sampled from Supertramp, yes? I think it's the opening riff from "School" from Crime of the Century (1974).
Either that, or Supertramp sampled from the same harmonica?
Any experts on this one?
Um, if it sampled it is from 'Once Upon a Time in the West', a Sergio Leone movie with Charles Bronson (as The Man with the Harmonica), Jason Robards, Henry Fonda, Jack Elam, and Claudia Cardinale (drool...)
Harmonica is sampled from Supertramp, yes? I think it's the opening riff from "School" from Crime of the Century (1974).
Either that, or Supertramp sampled from the same harmonica?
Any experts on this one?
Also sounds like a Radiohead song, can't think of name right now. I think they are both using the exact harmonica sample or something.
Is this a comment remix?
This is a remix comment comment. A remix comment. A remix comment remix.
I guess you'd say, he's bell hung.
NOT FOR RP.
omg — thank you! i was having the hardest time placing the familiarity..... knew i had heard it somewhere before
And yes, they were discontinued, attributed to the 'too lonely' advertising music.
There is such a thing as irony.
NB I did like this after the intro however, plus the Harlem Nocturne following.
lucanecchi wrote:
I quote myself!!!
I can see you in the morning on your way to schooooooooool....
fingerpin wrote:
Haaaaaaaaaaaa! My thought exactly!
Which reminds me of my second trip to Morocco, way back in summer of '89. Me and my friends were sitting outside a café in the blistering heat, dust clouds rolling by and all, and made comments on each other's faces which where clearly based on certain cinematographic references. And eventually, the owner of the, well: saloon, had nothing better to do than putting on a Supertramp tape.
During the intro, we sat there almost petrified. And then ordered another coffee.
But where's the guitar sample from?
I quote myself!!!
Is this a comment remix?
And now we know!
(remix sucks!)
I quote myself!!!
Great, except he wasn't in this movie.
Haaaaaaaaaaaa! My thought exactly!
(remix sucks!)
Indeed
Oh man yes. That scene where you first see Claudia Cardinale, sticking her head out the window of the train? Holy smokes that woman was hot!
The opening scene, with Jack Elam and the fly, is priceless too. Great movie.
c.