Seeing Quentin Tarantinoโ€™s Once Upon A Time Inโ€ฆ Hollywood the other night reminded me to dust down this interview I did with the director many moons ago. It first ran in Melody Maker -Iโ€™m guessing it was done around the time of Pulp Fiction, so 1994 โ€“ and then again in the first issue of Uncut.

Anyway, here you go: Quentin Tarantino on his 10 favourite records.

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Bob Dylan
Blood On The Tracks

โ€œThis is my favourite album ever. I spent the end of my teenage years and my early twenties listening to old music โ€“ rockabilly music, stuff like that. Then I discovered folk music when I was 25, and that led me to Dylan. He totally blew me away with this. Itโ€™s like the great album from the second period, yโ€™know? He did that first run of albums in the Sixties, then he started doing his less troublesome albums โ€“ and out of that comes Blood On The Tracks. Itโ€™s his masterpiece.

Bob Dylan
โ€œTangled Up In Blueโ€

โ€œOK, maybe Iโ€™m cheating here. I know this is off Blood On The Tracks, but itโ€™s my all-time favourite song. Itโ€™s one of those songs where the lyrics are ambiguous you can actually write the song yourself. Thatโ€™s a lot of fun โ€“ itโ€™s like Dylan fooling around with the listener, playing on the way he or she interprets the lyrics. โ€œItโ€™s very hard to take individual songs off Blood On the Tracks, because itworks so well as an entire album. I used to think โ€˜If You See Her, Say Helloโ€™ was a more powerful song than โ€˜Tangled Up In Blueโ€™ but, over the years Iโ€™ve kinda realized โ€˜Tangledโ€ฆโ€™ has the edge, just for the fun you can have with it.โ€™

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Freda Payne
โ€œBand Of Goldโ€

โ€œIโ€™m a gigantic music fan. I love fifties rockโ€˜nโ€™roll, Chess, Sun, Motown. All the Merseybeat bands, Sixties girl groups, folk. This is just so cool: itโ€™s a combination of the way itโ€™s produced, the cool pop/R&B sound, and Fredaโ€™s voice. Its kinda kitschy in a way โ€“ yโ€™know, itโ€™s got a really up-tempo tune โ€“ and, the first few times I heard it, I was, like, totally into the coolness of the song. It was only on the third or fourth listen I realised the lyrics were so fucking heartbreaking.โ€

Elvis Presley
The Sun Sessions

โ€œThis has been a hugely important album to me. I was always a big rockability fan and a big Elvis fan, and to me this album is the purest expression of Elvis there was. Sure, there are better individual songs โ€“ but no one collection ever touched the album. When I was young, I used to think Elvis was the voice of truth. I donโ€™t know what that means, but his voiceโ€ฆ shit man, it sounded so fucking pure. If you grew up loving Elvis, this is it. Forget the Vegas period: if you really love Elvis, youโ€™re ashamed of that man in Vegas. You feel like he let you down. The hillbilly cat never let you down.โ€

Phil Ochs
โ€œI Ainโ€™t Marching Anymoreโ€

โ€œOK, from now on these arenโ€™t in any order. Itโ€™s the same with movies: I have my three favourite โ€“ Taxi Driver, Blow Out and Rio Bravo โ€“ and after that it depends on my mood. This is one of my favourite protest/folk albums. While Dylan was a poet Ochs was a musical journalist: He was a chronicler of his time, filled with humour and compassion. Heโ€™d write songs which would seem very black and white, and then , in the last verse, heโ€™d say something which, like, completely shattered you. A song I love very much on this album is โ€˜Hereโ€™s To The State of Mississippiโ€™ โ€“ Basically, itโ€™s everything the movie Mississippi Burning should have been.โ€

Phil Ochs
โ€œThe Highwaymanโ€

โ€œIโ€™m cheating again. This is an Alfred Noyes poem, which Ochs arranged for music. The vocal has made me burst into tears more times than I care to remember.โ€

Elmer Bernstein
The Great Escape

โ€œI used to have a huge collection of film soundtracks. I donโ€™t get enthusiastic about them any more, though, because now most soundtracks are just a collection of rock songs, half of which donโ€™t even appear in the movie. This is a real classic. It has a great min theme which brings the movie right into your head. All the tracks hold up โ€“ itโ€™s so damn effective. It took me ages to get hold of a copy, and, Jeez, I almost wept when I finally did.โ€

Bernard Herrmann
Sisters

โ€œThis is from a Brian De Palma movie. Itโ€™s a pretty scary film, and the soundtrackโ€ฆ ok if you want to freak yourself out, turn out all the lights and sit in the middle of the room and listen to this. You wonโ€™t last a minute. When Iโ€™m first thinking about a movie Iโ€™ll start looking for songs that reflect the personality of the movie, Iโ€™ll start looking for songs which can reflect the personality of the movie. The record I think most about is the one which plays during the opening credits, because thatโ€™s the one which sets the tone of the movie. Like in Reservoir Dogs, when you see the guys all walking out of the diner, and that bass line from โ€˜Little Green Bagโ€™ kicks in โ€“ you just know thereโ€™s gonna be trouble.โ€

Jerry Goldsmith
Under Fire

โ€œโ€˜The Main Themeโ€™ is one of the greatest pieces of music written for a movie. Itโ€™s so haunting, so beautiful, โ€“ full of pan flutes and stuff. Itโ€™s shattering yโ€™know โ€“ like a Morricone theme. Oddly enough, โ€˜The Main Themeโ€™ works really well, but they never play it over the opening credits. They play it over the middle and during the closing credits, which is very strange.โ€

Jack Nitzsche
Revenge

โ€œOut of all the soundtracks, this is the best. Itโ€™s from a Tony Scott movie โ€“ he directed True Romance โ€“ and itโ€™s a very lush, elegant score. You donโ€™t need to know the film to enjoy the soundtrack: It works in its own right.โ€

The October 2019 issue of Uncut is on sale from August 15, and available to order online now โ€“ with Patti Smith on the cover. Inside, youโ€™ll find Bon Iver, Robbie Robertson, Jeff Buckley, Miles Davis, Brittany Howard, The Hollies, Devendra Banhart, Neil Young and Bob Dylan and more. Our 15-track CD also showcases the best of the monthโ€™s new music, including Wilco, Oh Sees, Hiss Golden Messenger and Tinariwen.