Last Updated 11/02/2024 07:23 PM EDT
LOG IN
CART
Cart Items :
Sub Total :
artist
label
title
catalog #
any field
advanced
New Releases
Artists
Labels
Forthcoming
Best Sellers
Reviews
Jobs
soundclips
[All Countries]
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium
Brazil
Canada
Chile
China
Colombia
Croatia
Czech Republic
Denmark
Egypt
Europe
Finland
France
Germany
Greece
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Korea
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nigeria
Norway
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Puerto Rico
Romania
Russian Federation
Scotland
Senegal
Slovenia
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan
Thailand
Turkey
UK
Ukraine
United States
Uruguay
World's Leading Terrorist State
World's Misleading Terrorist State
[All Formats]
Book
Cassette
CD
Clothing
Digital
DVD
MISC
VHS
Vinyl
[All Genres]
CLASSICAL
COMEDY
ELECTRONIC
EXPERIMENTAL
HIPHOP
JAZZ
Misc
ROCK
WORLD
artist
catalog #
label
title
any field
Tweet
Send Email
PRICE:
$15.00
$15.00
IN STOCK
ARTIST
VA
TITLE
Ciao! Manhattan
FORMAT
CD
LABEL
CINEWAX
CATALOG #
CINE 809CD
CINE 809CD
GENRE
SOUNDTRACK
RELEASE DATE
4/21/2017
"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 Woman'. 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-fictionalized 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 Dancing', 'To Give All Your Love Away', 'I Can't Make It Anymore'), John Phillips ('Malibu People') and Byrds/Flying Burrito Brothers member Skip Battin, who performs Kim Fowley's 'Citizen Kane'. Other artists are less well-known, including actor Kim Milford, who sings the stirring 'Justice', 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."
Other releases on CINEWAX
Other releases by VA