La Vie D'artiste - Ost - Gane, Tim & Sean O'hagan

| Subject to supplier availability | |
| Format | CD |
| Available | 17-09-2007 |
| Sourced | Australia |
$26.99 |
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Tim Gane and Sean O’Hagan (respectively of Stereolab and High Llamas fame) put their heads together to pen the music for a new French comedy ‘La Vie d’Artiste’, which will be screened in France this September, with a release elsewhere following not long after. This is the first time they’ve worked together as a double act since their one-record band, Turn On, released a self-titled album in 1996. When originally approached by the director, Marc Fitoussi (a huge fan of both the High Llamas and Stereolab), he wanted them to deliver something that captured what he loved about both bands and reached the heights of classic film composers like Ennio Morricone, François de Roubaix and Piero Picconi. A big challenge and one that took a lot of time to achieve, but they rose it and delivered both an apt and outstanding original score. The film itself follows the life of three separate artists - lives which inadvertently affect one another: a singer wishes to break free from her days of waitressing, a teacher strives to be a writer (finally driven to stealing the work of a pupil) and a would-be Broadway actress feels frustrated in her cartoon voiceover day job. The soundtrack, a humble touch of everything we ever loved about Stereolab, gracefully reflects the cast as they each strive to create their own destinies.
Tim Gane and Sean O’Hagan (respectively of Stereolab and High Llamas fame) put their heads together to pen the music for a new French comedy ‘La Vie d’Artiste’, which will be screened in France this September, with a release elsewhere following not long after. This is the first time they’ve worked together as a double act since their one-record band, Turn On, released a self-titled album in 1996. When originally approached by the director, Marc Fitoussi (a huge fan of both the High Llamas and Stereolab), he wanted them to deliver something that captured what he loved about both bands and reached the heights of classic film composers like Ennio Morricone, François de Roubaix and Piero Picconi. A big challenge and one that took a lot of time to achieve, but they rose it and delivered both an apt and outstanding original score. The film itself follows the life of three separate artists - lives which inadvertently affect one another: a singer wishes to break free from her days of waitressing, a teacher strives to be a writer (finally driven to stealing the work of a pupil) and a would-be Broadway actress feels frustrated in her cartoon voiceover day job. The soundtrack, a humble touch of everything we ever loved about Stereolab, gracefully reflects the cast as they each strive to create their own destinies.
Track Listing
Disc 1:
- La Vie d'Artiste (Generique)
- Ecrivain Ou Professeur?
- Les Prix Litteraires
- Yoko Johnson
- La Vie D'artiste (Sous Les Arcades)
- Metro, Boulot, Hippo
- Une Nuit Passee A Ecrire
- Dans Le Poste De Television
- Le Manuscrit De Frederic
- La Vie d'Artiste (L'autographe)
- Soudain, Joseph Costals!
- Bertrand Entre Dans Un Tunnel
- En Pyjama
- Alice Sur Scene
- La Consecration
- Cora Prend La Fuite
- C'est Extra
- Une Star Du Manga
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