I'm home today nursing a h-o-r-r-i-b-l-e head cold. My sinuses are stuffed up (yet, oddly, d-r-a-i-n-i-n-g, as well), my throat is raw, I feel a bit queasy and I'm sneezing germs all over the place.
Question for BK: Does my current condition mean I am "germinating"?
I'm swaddled in my "South Carolina flag" blanket as I type. It's navy blue and has the palmetto tree and crescent moon of the SC state emblem on one side. It's one of those stadium blankets made of sweat shirt blend cotton (20% rayon, 80% cotton) and it's sized to keep two people warm at a football game. It's cozy.
Re: DVD issues: "Lady in a Cage" is one of the few films scored by composer Paul Glass. One of the best scores of the 1960s (and all-time, for that matter) was Glass' "Bunny Lake is Missing." Other scores were for such esoterica as "Interregnum," "The Abductors" and "Nightmare in the Sun." He also wrote a score for Hammer Films' "The Seed of Astoroth," a track of which is available on the CD "The Hammer Film Music Collection, Vol. 2."
I read ... in an interview with Randy Newman...that Randy was at the recording sessions for "Bunny Lake..." with his Uncle Lionel, who exclaimed: "That music is too damned good for this picture!"
Lionel Newman was brother of legendary film music titan Alfred Newman. Alfred left 20th Century-Fox in 1960, but Lionel remained behind to head up the television music division. He conducted many film scores during the 1960s, including quite af few of Jerry Goldsmith's finest. Lionel was an exceptional conductor.
Ah...the mind gets on a tangent and won't let go till it has run its course.