The Entity OST - Horror Film Soundtrack Limited Colored Vinyl

Sold Date: November 9, 2020
Start Date: September 27, 2020
Final Price: $34.99 (USD)
Seller Feedback: 1982
Buyer Feedback: 0


New. Great shape. Comes unsealed. Colored vinyl (it looks black at first, but it's actually turquoise w/black smoke when held up to light. See photos).
This lush vinyl presentation highlights the original Japanese one sheet artwork with belly-wrap obi strip Spot varnish embellishments and massive liner notes insert by Dennis Dread Limited to 666 copies worldwide. Each record is stamp-numbered and shipped in a protective poly sleeve
Wyrd War presents Charles Bernstein’s haunting score for Sidney Furie’s 1982 supernatural thriller THE ENTITY for the first time ever on vinyl! Based on the true story of Doris Bither, a woman believed to be the victim of a hostile spectral invasion, THE ENTITY is a provocative descent into trauma and the demoralization that emerges in the wake of sexual assault. Barbara Hershey’s brilliant performance as a single mother seeking assistance from both a skeptical psychiatrist and a bumbling team of paranormal researchers is amplified by Bernstein’s iconic musical cues (also heard in Quentin Tarantino’s INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS). At turns hypnotic and ephemeral, aggressive and genuinely unsettling, the complete collected orchestral/synth soundtrack includes muscular diegetic rock anthem The Power, switched-on Mozart Source and three demo outtakes that provide a glimpse into Bernstein’s compositional process. Recorded at Village Recorders studios in West Los Angeles and Bernstein’s Santa Monica studio in 1981, sourced from Bernstein’s archives and mastered for vinyl by Timothy Stollenwerk.
For domestic buyers, shipping insurance can be added for $3, and signature confirmation can be added for an additional $2 (total of $5 for insurance and signature confirmation together). If you would like these options to be added, please let me know prior to payment.
I'm happy to open the shrink wrap and ship any record outside of the sleeve to prevent sleeve splits. If you don't state a preference, I'll assume you prefer the record remain sealed.