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way to the source, and Bill Lustig contracted none other than Alan Howarth, long time collaborator and co-composer of director John Carpenter. But not even Howarth could help back then. The main problem was that only a composite mono track was available, which gave him very limited room for spatial separation. “As a matter of fact, with such a composite soundtrack you shouldn’t even try to create a multi-channel mix at all,” Lustig comments. Before they went any further, Lustig remembered that Warner Brothers had the foreign rights to “Halloween” and through his longtime work with the British Hammer Studios, he had been able to establish a contact and a good relationship with Warner Brothers over the years. He called them up and was able to obtain from them a full 16-track master of the film’s soundtrack. With this, Alan Howarth started creating a new stereo mix for the film. “Using Sonic Solutions software Alan and I cleaned up and restored the entire audio track”, Bill remembers. “Another guy, Jim Allen, spend some 50 hours or so, just to get rid of all the pops and imperfections.” After finishing the stereo mix, they then went to work to remix the film for a full 5.1 channel Dolby Digital mix, starting with the memorable thunderstorm sequence that opens the film. “It took 8 - 10 hours to just mix the first 8 minutes of the film, and to sweeten it out to create a balanced mix,” but over time the entire film would make the transition from its previous monaural existence to a dynamic multi-channel mix. |
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