In the Mouth of Madness (1994) OST CD by John Carpenter and Jim Lang
Ships in late May
Terror Vison Records is honored to present the Original Motion Picture Score to In the Mouth of Madness written and performed by John Carpenter and Jim Lang.
In the Mouth of Madness has long been embraced by Carpenter fans for the depth and texture it brings to his sound, pushing his music into territory he hadn’t explored before. The film marks a sharp break from the minimalist scores that defined Halloween, The Fog, Christine, Halloween III, Escape from New York, Big Trouble in Little China, and They Live. Where those films relied on stripped-down synth lines and rigid repetition, In the Mouth of Madness leans into a heavier, hard-rock attack mixed with a murky layer of synth akin to Prince of Darkness. That shift didn’t just serve the film; it reoriented Carpenter’s musical identity, paving the way for the more aggressive scores of Vampires and Ghosts of Mars and ultimately laying the groundwork for his later solo work. The score is bold and intense, one that fans continue to discover and return to.
In the Mouth of Madness tells the story of John Trent, played by Sam Neill, an insurance investigator sent to locate a missing horror novelist named Sutter Cane. As the search unfolds, Trent begins to realize that Cane’s books are bleeding into reality, collapsing the line between fiction, belief, and the end of the world itself. The film was initially dismissed upon its release, but, like much of Carpenter’s work, gradually built a cult following as its ideas and ambitions caught up with audiences.
Terror Vision located the original master tapes and uncovered an additional, shorter cut of the film’s main theme, as heard during the film’s opening credits, resulting in the definitive release of this essential score fans have been wanting for years.
Ships in late May
Terror Vison Records is honored to present the Original Motion Picture Score to In the Mouth of Madness written and performed by John Carpenter and Jim Lang.
In the Mouth of Madness has long been embraced by Carpenter fans for the depth and texture it brings to his sound, pushing his music into territory he hadn’t explored before. The film marks a sharp break from the minimalist scores that defined Halloween, The Fog, Christine, Halloween III, Escape from New York, Big Trouble in Little China, and They Live. Where those films relied on stripped-down synth lines and rigid repetition, In the Mouth of Madness leans into a heavier, hard-rock attack mixed with a murky layer of synth akin to Prince of Darkness. That shift didn’t just serve the film; it reoriented Carpenter’s musical identity, paving the way for the more aggressive scores of Vampires and Ghosts of Mars and ultimately laying the groundwork for his later solo work. The score is bold and intense, one that fans continue to discover and return to.
In the Mouth of Madness tells the story of John Trent, played by Sam Neill, an insurance investigator sent to locate a missing horror novelist named Sutter Cane. As the search unfolds, Trent begins to realize that Cane’s books are bleeding into reality, collapsing the line between fiction, belief, and the end of the world itself. The film was initially dismissed upon its release, but, like much of Carpenter’s work, gradually built a cult following as its ideas and ambitions caught up with audiences.
Terror Vision located the original master tapes and uncovered an additional, shorter cut of the film’s main theme, as heard during the film’s opening credits, resulting in the definitive release of this essential score fans have been wanting for years.