Category Archives: For Sale

Coming Soon To Turntabling: Morricone on Dagored

Coming soon to Turntabling, some exquisite reissues from the mighty Italian label Dagored, very limited editions of only 500 each–do not miss these titles while supplies last!! All three of these classics are Ennio Morricone titles, and they won’t hang around long. We’ll post an update when these titles are available, and in the meantime you can check out the other giallo, horror, sci-fi, rare, and unusual titles in the Turntabling shop

Gli Occhi Freddi Della Paura

Cold Eyes Of Fear Morricone Soundtrack vinylTrack listing:

  • 1. Seguita
  • 2. Gli Occhi Freddi della Paura
  • 3. Evaporazione
  • 4. Notte e Misteri
  • 5. Urla nel Nulla
  • 6. Folle Folle
  • 7. Evanescente
  • 8. Dal Sogno e Ritorno
  • 9. Ritorno all’inizio
  • 10. Medley in eight parts “Gli Occhi Freddi della Paura”

Veruschka

Veruschka Morricone Vinyl Soundtrack DAGOREDTrack listing:

  • . Veruschka
  • 2. Intervallo I
  • 3. La Bambola
  • 4. Astratto I
  • 5. La Spiaggia
  • 6. Dopo L’Intervista
  • 7. Poesia Di Donna
  • 8. Le Fotografie
  • 9. La Bambola (#2)
  • 10. Intervallo II
  • 11. Magia
  • 12. Astratto III
  • 13. Veruschka (#2)
  • 14. Astratto II V
  • 15. Eruschka (#3)
  • 16. Astratto IV
  • 17. La Bambola (#3)
  • 18. Astratto V
  • 19. Poesia Di Donna (#2)
  • 20. La Spiaggia
  • 21. Astratto VI
  • 22. Poesia Di Donna (#3)
  • 23. La Bambola (#4)
  • 24. Veruschka (#4)

Le Foto Proibite Di Una Signora Per Bene

Le Photo Morricone soundtrack vinyl record DagoredTrack listing:

  • 1. Le Foto Proibite Di Una Signora Per Bene
  • 2. Qui Ci Scappa Il Morto
  • 3. Amore Come Dolore
  • 4. Bella, Cara, Dolce, Buona Mogliettina Per Bene
  • 5. Allegretto Per Signora
  • 6. Intermezzino Pop
  • 7. Caduta Nell’Inconscio
  • 8. Nel Vuoto
  • 9. Secondo Intermezzino Pop
  • 10. Percussivamente
  • 11. Quelle Foto
  • 12. Solo Eco
  • 13. Qui Ci Scappa Il Morto (Alternate Version)

Goblin Soundtracks: Amo Non Amo

Goblin Amo Non Amo vinyl cinevox
1979 saw Goblin working on the soundtrack for this Italian film starring Jaqueline Bisset and Terence Stamp. Believe it or not, the title track was informed more by Burt Bacharach than prog, but the old classic proggy Goblin sound does rear its head on parts of this soundtrack.

Have a listen to this rare, unusual-for-Goblin track from Amo Non Amo, released in the USA as Together? Turntabling has this Goblin soundtrack on vinyl for sale while supplies last…


Here’s some of the more what-you’d-expect from Goblin from the very same soundtrack:


Goblin Buio Omega Soundtrack

The soundtrack to Joe D’Amato’s Buio Omega is a pretty awesome proggy bass-n-synth fest that really doesn’t let you in on what you’re going to see when this Italian slash-splat masterpiece gets going.

It’s got everything a transgressive Italian horror movie should have–a bit of wanton slicing, some embalming, some necrophilia…and then there’s the score by Goblin, which really shows off another side of the band that you don’t really get to fully appreciate with Suspiria or Dawn of the Dead.

Buio Omega can be a rough watch–it’s a grossout contest once the embalming sequences start, and the corpse disposal scene is pretty stomach-churning. But the soundtrack for this must not be missed.

Check out a full ten minutes of the Goblin soundtrack for Buio Omega courtesy of Youtube (while it lasts, you never know when they’re going to take it down, those YouTube folks) and don’t miss the trailer below, either.

By the way, the Goblin soundtrack for Buio Omega is one of the titles for sale in the Turntabling shop.



Cannibal Soundtracks

Umberto Lenzi Cannibal Ferox soundtrack colored vinyl for sale
What is it about Italian cannibal gut-munching movies and their soundtracks? These movies are infamous in their nasty ways–pure gross-out from start to finish that has you either becoming an instant fan, car-crash fascinated, or so revolted that you can’t stand the idea of watching another second.

The Italian jungle cannibal movies are, for some of us, a bizarre artifact of the history of cinema that deserves further study. One reason why? The soundtracks.

What kind of music do you expect from a film titled Make Them Die Slowly? Or Cannibal Holocaust? In today’s filmmaking environment, metal is probably the very first thing that springs to mind–or some kind of abrasive industrial music or crossover industrial metal…you get the idea.

So when you click on the YouTube clips below to hear what Make Them Die Slowly, AKA Cannibal Ferox, has to offer, the inunitiated will not only be shocked and confused, but probably then want to see the movie to experience the full cognitive dissonance that goes with hearing THOSE soundtrack sounds combined with the images reproduced on album covers like the reissue of Cannibal Ferox on One Way Static Records, which is for sale at Turntabling while supplies last. (It should be pointed out that the version linked to here is the very limited edition Uncensored Version with all the squishy brain eating imagery some know and love.)