todd robbins spurs vinyl lp cadabra records
01 todd robbins spurs vinyl lp cadabra records
todd robbins spurs vinyl lp cadabra records
01 todd robbins spurs vinyl lp cadabra records

Spurs

New Condition

$54.30

TOD ROBBINS, SPURS LP – READ BY LAURENCE R. HARVEY, SCORE BY CHRIS BOZZONE

Less than 20x copies available on transparent red vinyl In stock and shipping now!

* Limited pressing on 150 gram vinyl
* Printed on a deluxe heavy weight gatefold tip-on jacket
* Includes insert liner notes by Johnny Mains
* Newly commissioned art by Zakuro Aoyama

LAST ONE AVAILABLE

For a story set in the world of the circus and its denizens, Chris Bozzone’s score for Lawrence R. Harvey’s reading of Tod Robbins’ 1923 macabre tale, Spurs, eschews all the trappings one would expect from those environs. The calliope does not peal out, nor does the swinging jazz of the era kick ups its heels.

Instead, composer Bozzone opts for sounds which echo the tonal shifts in Robbins’ tale. At the outset, the music is that of a pipe organ, reflecting the opening line, “Jacques Courbé was a romanticist.” Its reverential tones are precisely those of the vest-pocket protagonist in his admiration of bareback rider Jeanne Marie from the moment he first lays eyes upon her.

The music shifts to that of a dreamy, exotic marimba off and throughout Harvey’s reading of Spurs, and becomes the dominant musical form. Accented with electric organ, it’s as if the sacred and the profane are intertwined. Courbé and Jeanne Marie’s interactions are defined by this motif, with the hopelessly enamored dwarf nearly blind to the barely-contained derision of the robust mademoiselle, who views him as but a “splinter of a fellow.”

When Courbé’s anger flares, the music becomes a sinister synthesizer line, with chords musically reproducing the baleful thoughts percolating within the Lilliputian’s mind. The use of violins in a minor chord similarly evokes the scheming of Simon Lafleur, “the Romeo of the circus tent,” as he plots with Jeanne Marie to take Courbé for everything he has.

Impressively, however, these disparate tones slide from one to another, and suggest a sort of degenerate fairytale, wherein lust is readily acknowledged and even the supposed hero, “ill-tempered and egotistical.” The sole use of calliope comes during the wedding dinner, and even then, it’s inverted, and rather than the boisterous “Entry of the Gladiators,” it’s a maddeningly woozy variation of a nuptial march.

Track List

Number Title
A Spurs, Part 1
B Spurs, Part 2