A Degree of Murder
6 /10 1 Votes
Music director Brian Jones Language German | Director Volker Schlondorff Duration Country West Germany | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Writer Arne Boyer , Niklas Frank , Volker Schlondorff , Gregor von Rezzori Release date 19 April 1967 Screenplay Volker Schlondorff, Gregor von Rezzori Cast Anita Pallenberg (Marie), Hans Peter Hallwachs , Werner Enke Similar movies Related Volker Schlondorff movies |
Brian jones a degree of murder
A Degree of Murder (German: Mord und Totschlag, French: Vivre à tout prix) is a 1967 West German film, starring Anita Pallenberg and directed by Volker Schlöndorff. The film is mainly known because of the soundtrack composed by Brian Jones (founder of the Rolling Stones), Pallenberg's boyfriend at the time.
Contents
- Brian jones a degree of murder
- Brian jones theme from the movie mord und totschlag a degree of murder
- Plot
- Cast
- Soundtrack
- References

The film won three German Film Awards. It was entered into the 1967 Cannes Film Festival.
It was filmed in colour in West Germany in 1967.
Brian jones theme from the movie mord und totschlag a degree of murder
Plot
Marie (Anita Pallenberg) shoots her ex-boyfriend with his own gun, after he attempts to beat her. Instead of reporting this to the police she hires two men to help her dump the body in a construction site near an autobahn. While doing this she becomes romantically involved with both men.
Cast
Soundtrack
The soundtrack by Brian Jones has never had an official release, possibly because of legal conflicts. Although Jones played on the soundtrack, Yardbirds guitarist Jimmy Page, session pianist Nicky Hopkins, musician Peter Gosling, and session drummer Kenney Jones contributed their respective instruments to the recording sessions. It was recorded between late 1966 and early 1967 at IBC Studios in London. Jones stated that "the boys in the band played on the record" but Rolling Stones bassist Bill Wyman has said that neither he or drummer Charlie Watts participated in the music making and Jones never elaborated exactly which members played on the soundtrack. Jones also stated that many session musicians play on the soundtrack but session logs reveal that most of the instrumentation was done by Jones himself.
In Rolling Stone issue #1171, Jimmy Page talks about working on the soundtrack."Brian knew what he was doing. It was quite beautiful. Some of it was made up at the time; some of it was stuff I was augmenting with him. I was definitely playing with the violin bow. Brian had this guitar that had a volume pedal-he could get gunshots with it. There was a Mellotron there. He was moving forward with ideas."
The musicians were: