eMusic Review
According to legend (and a book about the Gallic Wars, written by Julius Ceasar), ancient Druids once routinely erected giant wicker figures, strapped in human sacrifices, and burned them down in effigy, as a homicidal homage to Pagan gods. Neo-pagans have since ditched the murderous bits, but still build big wicker men and set them on fire — see the annual Burning Man festival.
In 1973, British director Robin Hardy released the cult horror classic The Wicker Man, which follows a devout Christian detective to the remote Hebridian island of Summerisle to investigate an anonymous missing-girl report. Alas, there is no missing girl, and the detective is eventually tucked in the belly of a wicker man and sacrificed by the neo-Pagans now occupying the island, who believe he will save their harvest. (Neil La Bute directed a considerably less successful American version in 2006.)
The soundtrack to Hardy's film was unavailable until 1998, when Trunk Records dubbed a mono version from an abridged cut (like the original negatives, the master tapes had been mysteriously misplaced), complete with dialogue and audio clips from the movie. Composed and arranged by Paul Giovanni and Magnet (a band birthed solely to perform Giovanni's work for the… read more »