Ry Cooder had well established himself as an instrumentalist, songwriter, bandleader, and session musician when he added another title to his résumé in 1980: film composer. Director Walter Hill invited
Cooder to compose and perform music for his historical western
The Long Riders, and the music was good enough that other filmmakers were soon knocking at
Cooder's door.
Soundtracks is a box set that collects the original soundtrack albums for seven films scored by
Ry Cooder --
The Long Riders; Paris, Texas;
Alamo Bay;
Crossroads; Blue City;
Johnny Handsome, and Trespass. A listen to these seven discs makes it clear
Cooder knew what he was doing right off the bat, and much of the best music in this set is contained on the first three discs. The Civil War songs and outlaw ballads that were adapted for
The Long Riders are given a treatment that merges past and present with skill and imagination, and the spare, atmospheric guitar work that dominates the Paris, Texas album is beautifully haunting late-night music, while the acoustic vs. electric textures of the
Alamo Bay song score make for a superb parallel to the violent culture clashes on screen. It may also be significant that those three albums are also matched with the three best films represented in this set, though there's some fine vintage blues workouts on
Crossroads, and the Trespass album includes "King of the Street," a surprisingly successful hip-hop-influenced track with
Cooder and percussionist
Jim Keltner tossing about edgy sounds and rhythms over dialogue samples from the film's stars,
Ice-T and
Ice Cube. Each of these albums is full of
Cooder's superb, goose pimple-inducing guitar work and rich musical thinking, and
Soundtracks has plenty to interest
Cooder's fans and music-minded film buffs. ~ Mark Deming