MORRICONE YOUTH

Eight Eyes
(Country Club Records)
Add date: 11.26.2024
Release date: 10.31.2024




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About Eight Eyes Original Motion Picture Soundtrack:
The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack to 2024 horror film Eight Eyes from director Austin Jennings (director/co-writer of Shudder’s The Last Drive-In With Joe Bob Briggs) which world premiered at the 2023 Fantasia Film Festival in Montreal, shot on 16mm and Super 8 on location in Serbia and Macedonia and starring Scream Queen Emily Sweet (V/H/S/99). The original score is composed by Devon Goldberg and performed by Morricone Youth. The film was co-produced by Vinegar Syndrome as the Blu-ray reissue/restoration label’s first entirely original production and is distributed by Shudder in North America and Donau Film in Europe.

About Morricone Youth:
Morricone Youth is a collective of musicians founded in New York City in 1999 reinterpreting over 100 film and television works all over the world, from CBGB's and the top of the World Trade Center to the Brooklyn Academy of Music, MassMoCA, Philadelphia Museum of Art and The Sydney Festival as well as supporting Italian prog soundtrack legends Goblin on their 2017 North American tour. The band has live re-scored fifteen silent films and midnight movies, including F.W. Murnau's Nosferatu (1922), Robert Clouse's Enter The Dragon (1973), Jack Hill's Foxy Brown (1974), David Lynch's Eraserhead (1977), Ron & Valerie Taylor's Inner Space (1974), Jean Rollin's Fascination (1979), Saul Bass's Phase IV (1976), and Rene Laloux's La Planete Savauge (1973), and in 2016 embarked on an ambitious 15-vinyl series for each film, the first five of which have been released for George Miller's Mad Max (1979), George Romero's Night of the Living Dead (1968), F.W. Murnau's Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans (1927), Lotte Reiniger's The Adventures of Prince Achmed (1926), and Mario Bava's Danger: Diabolik  (1968), with the sixth and seventh for Alfred Hitchcock's The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (1928) and Sergei Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin (1926).

Eight Eyes (Theatrical Trailer):