This is a release that will be eagerly embraced by Twin Peaks fans, & a great addition to our much beloved Twin Peaks catalog.
Plus finally a vinyl issue, pressed on 180g vinyl & with stills from the film included in the gatefold jacket.
And so there is nothing more ready for plugging into the set of Twin Peaks releases from Rhino, especially following on from the acclaimed pair of Season 3 soundtrack albums from 2017! Once again we have David Lynch himself overseeing the reissue, which will duplicate (on CD) the original 24 page collector's picture book (with full page stills from the series).
And so we have an artefact that has never been available on digital services, and more importantly, never on vinyl, and long gone (& expensive on the secondary market) on CD.
We are thrilled to be returning to the town of Twin Peaks with our very own version of Season 3s Limited Event Series Score featuring tracks by Angelo Badalamenti, Johnny Jewel, David Lynch & Dean Hurley, split across 2. Housed in a red die-cut spot gloss sleeve. The missing piece in the incredibly successful new release and reissue campaign for the Twin Peaks series has been the mysterious soundtrack to Season Two! The TV program aired in 1990-1991, without the traditional accompanying record release, and it was not until 2007 that the soundtrack album was issued, and only as a very limited CD via David Lynch’s own label. Double 180gm cherry pie splatter and machine room grey colored vinyl LP pressing. But, he also didn’t provide an interesting enough follow up to retain interest.This is an exclusive release for Record Store Day 2019. The identity of Laura’s killer was supposed to be a mystery never solved, but understandably creator Mark Frost figured that he couldn’t keep the audience guessing forever. Twin Peaks just isn’t the same afterwards. After the killer is revealed in the series, I highly suggest you stop watching, unless you’re really into the show. There was something about knowing the killer, even without truly knowing his intentions, that allows you to feel as though the case had been solved. The second season was as good as the first until this was revealed. While there were still plenty of mysteries to solve in regards to her death, the reveal of the murderer definitely proved to be negative.
The nail in the coffin for Twin Peaks was the reveal of Laura’s killer. This next part is a spoiler, so if you don’t like spoilers, please skip to the next paragraph. This wasn’t entirely true of the beginning. Wrapped in plastic.' Date: Friday, February 24, 1989: Homecoming Queen Laura Palmer is found dead, washed up on a riverbank, and wrapped in plas. Sure, a few characters came and went, but other than that there was very little change.
Twin Peaks was the first series to have a serial narrative, yet it almost seemed not to, given how little changed throughout the length of the series. He works best when his own arrogance is being laughed at, not when it’s being developed.ĭespite the fact that the season was twenty two episodes long, very little happened. I liked Ben Horne as an unlikable, stingy man, not as a complex character. They tried to develop some of the smaller characters in the show, but some of them didn’t really need development, and suffered with it. I think they tried their best, but you could tell by the end they really didn’t know what to do. Sometimes, a series will rise to the occasion. This is a familiar tale, where a TV series will have an excellent short first season only to be flustered by the demands of the network. The first season was eight episodes in length. While maintaining a certain degree of similarity to the first season, there were certainly good reasons as to why ABC gave it the chopping block. This is the season of Twin Peaks that got the show cancelled. Maybe my brain was just trying to repress the memory. In my first review of Twin Peaks, I, for whatever reason, entirely forgot it’s second season.