![]() With the ability to confuse an audience, fill a scene with warmth or, in the case of “Part 8”, completely head-fuck an entire fandom, Lynch’s longtime Musical Director Dean Hurley has done a spectacular job.įans will notice the trend that has been struck up throughout Twin Peaks: The Return, being the end of most episodes taking place at the Bang Bang Bar, with a guest band or artist performing on stage. When we were first greeted with the opening credits of this year’s Twin Peaks: The Return, the vision of the waterfall set to Badalamenti’s “Falling” score sent a rushing sense of nostalgia right through the viewer.Īs this series has proven, music has remained a large player in furthering or stunting the direction of any scene. Of course, the soundtrack of Twin Peaks has remained one of the most iconic elements of the show Angelo Badalamenti‘s original score has engrained the show in the minds of fans and anyone with a passing interest in the show back in the early 1990’s. Twin peaks movie song bar scene serial#“Part 9” screened yesterday – Australian time – and as we tip the halfway point of the American supernatural serial drama, more questions are being posed as different plotlines from the original 90’s series are starting to converge with those of 2017. ![]() ![]() If, like me, you have been glued to Stan every Monday since late May waiting for a tasty and albeit creepy and fucked up new episode of Twin Peaks: The Return to appear, then you’re likely to have fallen deep, deep down the rabbit hole that David Lynch and Mark Frost have freshly dug out. ![]()
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