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“Blade” And “Blade II” Scores Set To Receive Deluxe Edition Vinyl Releases

Los Angeles, CA — March 28, 2025 — Varèse Sarabande and Craft Recordings announce deluxe reissues for “Blade” and “Blade II,” from prolific composers Mark Isham and Marco Beltrami. Debuting on vinyl for the first time, both soundtracks—equally celebrated as unique contributions to the film canon—will be released in multiple unique color variants. Releasing on May 16th and available for pre-order today, these classic scores will be pressed on “Bloodbath” red vinyl exclusively via Barnes & Noble, and “Blood Splatter” clear and black translucent vinyl in a limited-edition run of 500 on the Varèse Sarabande store. Both scores will be available as 2-LP gatefold packages with brand-new artwork by acclaimed illustrator Micha Huigen.

Directed for the big screen by effects artist–turned filmmaker Stephen Norrington (“Death Machine”) and written by Dark City’s David S. Goyer (with uncredited assistance from David Fincher, who originally intended to direct), 1998’s “Blade” tapped into the Goth Avenger vein of the adaptations of “The Crow” and “Spawn.” Like those undead superheroes out to decimate their killers, Blade moved in the shadows of a big city built from eerily sleek visuals and Hong Kong–influenced action, as powered by the relentless beat of the era’s youth-appealing indie, grunge, and electronica bands.

At first offered to The Prodigy, “Blade”’s score eventually went to Mark Isham, whose origin as a jazz trumpeter didn’t suggest the most predictable fit. It was, though, Isham’s Southwestern gothic score for 1986’s “The Hitcher” that marked him as a musician worthy of this daunting task.

“‘Blade’ was a very interesting movie to be on,” Isham told author Randall D. Larson. “There were two factions that had a very strong musical voice. One was Wesley Snipes. He was involved in the hip-hop community, which was material that he felt reflected the urban part of the story. Then you had this young, sort of punk English director who was into English electronica, acid jazz, and things like that. He felt that Blade lived in more of that world. And then, of course, you have the score. So it was a challenge. I talked a lot with Stephen Norrington and the studio’s music department about how to get these musical elements to all wrap around the story and feel like they belonged together.”

“I tried to give Blade a sense of heroism, but also a darkness, a vibe to him that was somebody you’d be scared shitless to see on a dark street,” Isham explained. “Yet there’s a side to his theme that was much more emotional because there’s a part of him that is still somewhat tender about there being something more than just these sorts of overpowering relationships the vampires have with each other.”

When Director Norrington decided not to take part in the follow-up to his smash film, it was only natural that Hollywood came calling for Guillermo del Toro to direct Marvel Comics’ half-human vampire slayer, whose 1992 appearance truly marked the beginning of the Marvel Age of movie superheroes.

“Blade II” presented a different challenge entirely. Receiving his master’s at Yale and studying under Jerry Goldsmith at USC, Marco Beltrami seemed a natural fit for the del Toro vehicle, especially after bursting onto the scene with Wes Craven’s meta-slasher Scream.

“Our collaboration on ‘Blade II’ was a continuation of the one we had on Mimic,” Beltrami says, referring to their 1997 collaboration. “Sure, it was creative, but it was like you were trying to keep something from your parents. ‘Blade II’ gave me a lot more room to stretch musically, to use the whole orchestra and make a lot of sound and noise. It’s always fun to make noise.”

Beltrami’s collection of Asian instruments matched many of the themes that populated del Toro’s rendition. These included the flute-like shakuhachi, the Chinese opera gong, and African percussion joined with an array of taiko drums, or “fat drums,” originally used to cast away supernatural entities.

“Guillermo wanted those stylized Asian overtones for me to incorporate at a time before that sound was the rage in film scores,” Beltrami says. “I appropriated instruments and brought them into what I was doing, as I hadn’t studied traditional Japanese music. I used them in a very ‘western’ way for ‘Blade II.’ We also had the idea of Tibetan throat singing, so we got this guy who called himself ‘the lowest of the low.’ But he wasn’t quite able to do the overtone stuff we wanted. I don’t know if it sounded like someone who was singing or someone who had an upset stomach! But he became part of the sound, along with the sounds that Buck Sanders had been creating.”

Now, both of these historic, unique soundtracks will be available for film lovers and score aficionados alike. Rarely have two films achieved such sterling visions from the same source material, and each project boasts a score to accent this one-of-a-kind style.

Click HERE to pre-order the Deluxe Editions of “Blade” and “Blade II.”

Blade Tracklist

Side A

1. Born Of Blood (Then)
2. Headed For Trouble
3. Blood Club Voices
4. Party Crasher
5. Quinn Stapled And Torched
6. Quinn Chows Down
7. Daywalker *
8. The House Of Lords
9. Karen Awakens
10. The Injection
11. There’s A War Going On Out There

Side B

1. The Slap
2. Glyphs
3. Somebody’s Gonna Take You Out
4. You Gotta Learn To Pull The Trigger
5. Stakeout
6. High Tech Lair
7. The Translation Completed
8. Pearl Fries
9. The Book Of Erebus
10. Blade Captured
11. Whistler’s A Mother
12. The Subway
13. History
14. Sunblock
15. The Last Dawn
16. A Pain In The Neck
17. Man In The Street

Side C

1. Top Of The Food Chain
2. The Beating
3. Death Of Whistler
4. A Hurricane’s Coming
5. Intruder
6. One Big Happy Family
7. Temple Of Light
8. Curtis Isn’t Himself Today
9. Blood Relations

Side D

1. The Bleeding Stone
2. The Ritual Continues
3. The Thirst Always Wins
4. The Wraiths Emerge
5. Defrosted
6. Quinn Loses His Head
7. The Blood God
8. It’s Not Over

Blade II Tracklist

Side A

1. Blood Bank Creeps
2. Nomack The Knife
3. Blade II Main Titles
4. Moo Cow
5. Wheel And Deal
6. Wet Whistler
7. Waiting For The Sun
8. Suckheads Infiltrate
9. Caliban By Helicopter
10. Big D Hosts Big B

Side B

1. The Imp ’n’ Pimp
2. Meet The Bloodpack
3. Reapers In The Kitchen
4. I.H.O. Paincakes
5. Priest Splits
6. Little Boy Blue
7. Bath Time
8. Nyssa Needs A Napkin

Side C

1. Sewer Pickles
2. B Slice
3. Charge Of The Light Grenade
4. Blade’s Discharge
5. Crispy Reapers
6. Nyssa Swallows
7. Who’s The Man?

Side D

1. Big D Educates
2. Nomack Snacks
3. Blood Bath
4. Reinhardt Splits
5. Family Feud
6. Smackdown
7. Nyssa Over Easy
8. End Credits

“Blade” and “Blade II” will be available on Deluxe Edition Vinyl Releases May 16th

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