One of my favourite tracks from Badalamenti. That first section from 0:00 - 1:00 sounds like the complete loss of hope, and the triumph of evil. The rest mourns over an untimely fate.
@@DanieleBrunengo For the complete quote, the first line should be repeated three times. T S Eliot wrote it that way in "The Hollow Men". I believe it was quoted in Stephen King's The Stand, among other works of fiction. This is the way the world ends This is the way the world ends This is the way the world ends Not with a bang but a whimper.
I think that was the concept. Everything we knew about Twin Peaks was totally displayed differently, because let's face it... everyone got old. Cooper, whose struggle from getting out of the Black Lodge and the outcome of "reincarnation" every iconic music was just slightly used till he came back to Twin Peaks as a 100% Dale Cooper... in ... the 17th episode. Because that was the moment the old team finally came back together... but... the idea/expectation turned out to be totally wrong, as it was also just a "checkpoint" for Cooper for the next mission, not to mention, most of the scenes were outside Twin Peaks, hence... the old times are staying in the past, as the iconic musics just slightly being heard, as reminders. (for example Bobby looking at Laura Palmer's picture in the Sheriff Office, and the Palmer theme is played)
@@Botrytis18 I think that was one of the themes of the show to be honest. Revisiting places years later is never the same, and Lynch pretty much highlights the fact that you can't go back to the past the way it was in the new series. All I wish though is that Cooper would have had more than a flying visit to the Sheriff's Office and the staff after all those years considering how close he had gotten to the mall on his original visit.
@@MysteryManfrom79 I understand that was the theme of the new show, and I can respect that intellectually, but the way it was approached in practice simply wasn't very enjoyable to watch, for me, except now and again. And Lynch at his best (and even sometimes not as his best) has always been entertaining as well as disturbing and challenging.
Exquisitly beautiful, sinister, scarring, bewitching...seems something calls you, to other dimension and you can't run and come back.. addicting. 🖤🖤🖤🖤 I love Angelo Badalamenti and David Lynch...🖤⭐⭐⭐
Annie Blackburn walking the path to the Black Lodge... [*praying*] Our bones are scattered at the grave's mouth / As when one cutteth wood upon the earth / But mine eyes are unto thee, O God the Lord: / In thee is my trust: leave not me / Keep me from the snares they have laid for me / And the gins of the workers of iniquity / Let the wicked fall into their own nets / Whilst that I withal escape.
My gosh, just reading the psalm and recalling that scene in my head gives me chills. Just another day of fellow Twin Peaks fans restoring my faith in humanity!
I like the theory that Annie is a being sent from the black lodge to the world to make Cooper "vulnerable", or something like that, by making him fall in love, and, therefore, lose his 'mental strength' that made him somewhat resistant to the Black Lodge influence. The theory makes more sense if you analyse her name "Annie Blackburn", like Annie from Angela, angel,: and blackburn from, well, "black burned", like a dark angel of some kind. If thats the case, it would make sense as to why she's not acknowledged in the book, since apparently the spirits of the Black Lodge can manipulate time, or something related to the 'Is It Future Or Is It Past?" idea. So, she was sent and later erased from history, and if reality can be altered (like the last scene in the diner from S3E7 seems to indicate), at some point her existence was "deleted".
Definitely something to this. Another interesting thing is she's supposedly Norma's sister, but in the last episode Norma doesn't seem the least bit concerned that her sister was kidnapped and is now missing, and she never mentioned having a sister before Annie was introduced. Like she just wasn't aware of her existence before and after she was there.
okay, so I've got a few issues with this re: how it takes the mythology of TP season 2 a bit too seriously, because stuff was getting wild all around there. but taking it at face value-- why, then, did Annie reach out to Laura in FWWM? why did she try to help her if she was a servant of the Black Lodge?
But, she's in the book though. There's a whole bit about her being in a mental ward for the rest of her life without saying anything more than "I'm fine" every 5 years or something.
It takes big talent to make cinematic music that's this captivating, extraordinary and haunting ... with synthesizers, and not an orchestra. I expect this would not feel the same at all if played with genuine strings or flute or anything else.
it sounds like a faster and more subtle version of the Fire walk with me and Laura Palmer's themes mixed together, which fits since Bob is in Cooper's doppleganger now.
This hits me as Slow Speed Orchestra, both are atemporal music because both sounds very contemporary but we are talking about music that was composed 30 years ago and both represents the misteryous aura from Twin Peaks. RIP Angelo Badalamenti
A shot in the dark but do you happen to have the piano only version of Trueman & Josie?. I know they played it once on the Episode where Pete offers to buy Katherine (In Disguise) a warm saki.