More Mission: Impossible
Soundtrack album by
Released1969
RecordedOctober 23 and 26, 1968
StudioLos Angeles
GenreJazz
Length28:48
LabelParamount – PAS 5002
ProducerTom Mack
Lalo Schifrin chronology
There's a Whole Lalo Schifrin Goin' On
(1968)
More Mission: Impossible
(1969)
Mannix
(1968)

More Mission Impossible is an album featuring music composed and conducted by Lalo Schifrin recorded in 1968 and released on the Paramount label.[1] As with Music from Mission: Impossible (1967) the music on this album is rerecorded and extended scores that were originally commissioned for the TV series Mission: Impossible.

The liner notes were written by JazzTimes music critic Harvey Siders. He said that "each track could be lifted right out of context and stand alone as a compact treatise on rock-tinged, big-band jazz." He described "Mission Blues" as blues with a boogie woogie rhythm and funk elements, and noticed that "Self-Destruct" contained a "rarity: a jazz chimes solo" from the percussion department. He said that the "Danube Incident" was peacefully atmospheric, featuring the exotic Eastern European sound of the cymbalom.[2]

In 1994, Portishead sampled the track "Danube Incident" for their song "Sour Times", slowing the original tune down in tempo which also lowered its pitch.[3] "Sour Times" became Portishead's most successful single.

Track listing

All compositions by Lalo Schifrin except as indicated

  1. "Mission Blues" – 2:47
  2. "Self-Destruct" – 2:37
  3. "Affair in Madrid" – 2:31
  4. "Midnight Courier" – 3:25
  5. "The Chelsea Memorandum" (Shorty Rogers) – 2:59
  6. "More Mission" – 2:45
  7. "Intrigue" – 2:30
  8. "Danube Incident" – 1:52
  9. "Foul Play" (Richard Hazard) – 2:29
  10. "The Getaway" – 2:22
  11. "Mission: Impossible" – 2:31
  • Recorded in Los Angeles, California on October 23 and 26, 1968

Personnel

References

  1. Payne, D. Lalo Schifrin discography accessed March 10, 2012
  2. Siders, Harvey (1969). More Mission: Impossible (Liner notes). Paramount Records.
  3. Weingarten, Christopher R. (21 August 2019). "Portishead's 'Dummy' is 25. The Band Asks That You Play It Loud". The New York Times.
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