T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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15.1 | | 5235::J_TOMAO | PracticeRandomActsOfKindness&Beauty | Mon Feb 01 1993 15:56 | 5 |
| dc I believe the last Movies file was "lost" due to system problems -
lots and lots of excellent movies, reviews and information will surely
be missed.
Joyce
|
15.2 | My two favorites. | 18463::BERNARD | | Thu Feb 04 1993 15:54 | 13 |
| If I had to make a nomination for "Best Song at the Right Time" in
a movie it would be a toss-up for me between.... drum roll please.
The Wind Beneath My Wings, from " Beaches "
and
A Whole New World, from "Aladdin (never know if it is 2 d's or 2 l's)
Both of these songs were perfect for the moment in the movie.
Paul
|
15.3 | | 25415::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Feb 04 1993 16:45 | 17 |
| Got one better than that. In Robin Hood the theme started to play as Maid
Marian's boat went off into the mist with the light shinning through her hair.
It was very romantic.
Also Strouse's "Also Spoke Zerathurstra" at several points during 2001 was
very dramatic. And of course we all know sharks just can't eat if they don't
crank up the Jaw's theme ahead of time.
But my all time favorite for music timing was in the Graduate. Duston Hoffman
(I forget the character's name) and Mrs Robinson (Ann Bankcorft) were in the
hotel room alone for the 1st time. A very nervous Hoffman had just finished
brushing his teeth and as he and Mrs. Robinson turned of the light and sank
into the pillow they started to play Simon and Garfunkle's Sound of Silence
("Hello darkness my old friend, I've come to talk with you again..."). It was
perfect.
George
|
15.4 | | DECWET::METZGER | Doughnuts. Is there anything they can't do? | Thu Feb 04 1993 17:42 | 7 |
|
Definately the music from Enya in LA story when the storm comes up and the
compass and altimeter on the plane start going crazy..
I thought it fit the mood and the scene perfectly...
John
|
15.5 | | 28994::WSA038::SATTERFIELD | Close enough for jazz. | Fri Feb 05 1993 14:06 | 28 |
|
re .3
> Got one better than that. In Robin Hood the theme started to play as Maid
>Marian's boat went off into the mist with the light shinning through her hair.
>It was very romantic.
Which Robin Hood? There have been at least half a dozen Robin Hood films.
Film music is without a doubt a very important element. Many films have been
substantially improved by a good score. In quite a few films it's the best
thing about that film.
Just randomly a few films improved condsiderably by an excellent score:
The Red Pony (Aaron Copeland)
The Man From Snowy River (Bruce Rowland)
The Ghost and Mrs Muir (Benard Herrmann)
The Informer (Max Steiner)
Excaliber (Orf, Wagner)
And a couple of films that have been hurt by a poor or inappropiate score:
The Angel and the Badman (just plain bad, more like a tv western score)
Ladyhawke (wildly inappropiate for this film)
Randy
|
15.6 | | 25415::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Feb 05 1993 14:26 | 10 |
| RE <<< Note 15.5 by 28994::WSA038::SATTERFIELD "Close enough for jazz." >>>
>Which Robin Hood? There have been at least half a dozen Robin Hood films.
How many had Maid Marian going off in a boat with her hair back lit?
For those who are confused, I was refering to the latest Robin Hood with
Kevin Costner.
George
|
15.7 | 'gives me the cree | 51614::VAKTMASTERI | Older, budweiser! | Tue Feb 09 1993 08:55 | 17 |
| Favourite music right now:
Goblins score to Dario Argento's Suspiria.
Very scary!!
"The Valley" by Keith Richards(?) in Argentos
Phenomena (Creepers)
The main title music in J�rg Buttgereits
NekRomantik
RoboCop by Basil Poledouris(sp?)
Re-Animator by Charles Band I think. VERY similar
to Psycho
-H-
|
15.8 | | TRUCKS::BEATON_S | I Just Look Innocent | Thu Feb 11 1993 07:55 | 3 |
| Take away the soundtrack from "Mo' Money" and there is no movie !! ;-)
|
15.9 | | 29067::A_PARRACO | Starless and Bible Black | Fri Feb 12 1993 18:39 | 6 |
|
'Adagio for Strings' by Samuel Barber
From Platoon ...
- acp
|
15.10 | GOOD LISTENING | 42139::WELLERM | | Mon Feb 22 1993 06:44 | 6 |
|
The soundtrack to ANGEL HEART..a movie with Mickey Rourke..its
excellent...
MUSIC BY: COURTNEY PINE
PRODUCED BY: TREVOR HORNE
|
15.11 | Harry's Game | BRAT::PRIESTLEY | | Mon Feb 22 1993 15:03 | 8 |
| The Movie "Harry's Game" AKA in vhs release, "Belfast Assassin" was an
utterly forgettable film. poorly acted and poorly paced, though closely
following Gerald Seymour's book. The theme for this movie was by
Clannad and is quite possibly the most haunting thing i have ever
heard. It is available on several of their records.
Andrew
|
15.12 | | 37966::RIVERS | may this vale be my silver lining. | Mon Feb 22 1993 15:15 | 7 |
| If it hasn't been noted before, "Harry's Game" (the song by Clannad)
was also featured in Patriot Games (the movie and the soundtrack:).
A trivia bit we could all probably do without, but what the hey.
kim
|
15.13 | Clannad in a VW commercial? | COMET::BARRIANO | choke me in the shallow water... | Mon Feb 22 1993 15:32 | 20 |
| re <<< Note 15.12 by 37966::RIVERS "may this vale be my silver lining." >>>
> If it hasn't been noted before, "Harry's Game" (the song by Clannad)
> was also featured in Patriot Games (the movie and the soundtrack:).
> A trivia bit we could all probably do without, but what the hey.
kim
Where would a movie note be with out trivia. :-)
Clannad is also featured in Last of the Mohicans.
Does anyone know what group or singer is doing the background music in
the latest Volkswagen TV commercial, it sounds like Clannad or maybe Enya
or maybe Loreena McKinnet or..........
Thanks
BArry
|
15.14 | | 37966::RIVERS | may this vale be my silver lining. | Tue Feb 23 1993 09:12 | 5 |
| I think the VW commerical (if memory serves,it's a tempermental thing)
is Enya, although I *think* we're all supposed to be fooled into
thinking this is some kind of Germanic song. :)
kim
|
15.15 | Fred Astaire singing anything | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Nice imagery but a little gruesome | Tue Feb 23 1993 14:17 | 44 |
| "Reservoir Dogs" - Super Sounds of the '70s
"Performance" - "Memo From Turner"
"Duck Soup"- Fredonian anthem and call to arms
"Citizen Kane"'s tribute to Good Ol' Charlie Kane
"Swordsman II" - big pop number "Immortal Heroes" (might have the
adjective wrong)
"Stage Fright" and "Rancho Notorious" - my picks for crawliest Marlene
Dietrich numbers
"Eraserhead"'s journey into the nightmarish underbelly of Fats Waller
"To Have and Have Not" - "How Little We Know"
"Gentlemen Prefer Blondes" - "Anyone Here for Love" and "Diamonds Are a
Girl's Best Friend"; over the top and into your pants
Just about everything from "Ball of Fire" including the matchbox boogie
and the perfessors' barbershop quartet harmonies
To polish off the Howard Hawks section, how about the "Rio Bravo"
singalong and "Bringing Up Baby"'s many renditions of "Everything Is
Not All Right Susan"?
"Sunnyside"'s pre-Code iceberg-melting production number and "Keep Your
Sunny Side Up (Up)", the scariest lockjawed grin before Gene Kelly
Jean-Luc Godard always gives great soundtrack but favorite splashy
numbers are "Sad Movies Always Make Me Cry" from "The Married Woman",
and the "Band of Outsiders" dance
"The President's Analyst" - hilariously intentionally inappropriate
hippie folk song scene and hilariously unintentionally inappropriate
breathy joy-to-the-world I (Heart) New York scene
Hope & Crosby off on the Road to Morocco with several renditions of
"Moonlight Becomes You"
"The Long Goodbye"s from "The Long Goodbye"
|
15.16 | | 7405::MAXFIELD | Merry Mardi Gras! | Tue Feb 23 1993 14:35 | 9 |
| I see that one of the documentaries nominated for an Academy
Award this year is "Music for the Movies: Bernard Hermann".
If anyone sees that this is playing in the greater Boston
area (which means anywhere within two hours of Boston,
north, west or south), please note it here.
Thanks,
Richard
|
15.17 | Thank you Francis | 29067::A_PARRACO | Starless and Bible Black | Sun Feb 28 1993 15:48 | 10 |
|
Rumble Fish, by Stewart Copeland (Don't Box Me In vocal by Stan Ridgway)
1920's Harlem jazz, lots of good stuff from The Cotton Club ...
Carmine Coppola's excellent work on all 3 Godfather movies ...
And of course, the judicious use of The End by The Doors in Apocalypse Now.
- acp
|
15.18 | clannad and Enya | 3291::PRIESTLEY | | Mon Mar 01 1993 18:50 | 11 |
| Clannad did the VW commercial, it is Harry's Game. they have done
quite a lot of soundtrack work, mostly for television, including some
documentary work and the Robin of Sherwood TV series in England. Enya
is the little sister of three of the members of Clannad, thus the
similarities, she did a series in England called "The Celts" and did a
song for the movie "Far and Away", the song is called "Book of Days"
and covered the closing credits.
Andrew, a major Clannad fan
|
15.19 | | 6729::PATTON | | Tue Mar 02 1993 12:18 | 9 |
| I love Nino Rota. He has done music for Fellini's movies,
and there's a CD compilation out that's very good. He defies
categorization.
My husband thinks that the woman who did the music for "The
Crying Game", Anne Dudley, is also in the band Art of Noise.
Anyone know for sure?
Lucy
|
15.20 | | 58378::S_BURRIDGE | | Wed Mar 10 1993 10:19 | 8 |
| Playing in my mind this morning, as occasionally happens, is a truly cloying
song about "Marmalade, Molasses, and Honey," sung by Andy Williams, which was
featured in a western called "The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean" that I saw
in the mid-1970s. The movie starred Paul Newman.
An unfortunately memorable piece of "movie music."
-Stephen
|
15.21 | Here now, what's this all about then? | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Blarney Rubble | Wed Mar 10 1993 11:49 | 4 |
| Oh god, and that mid-'60s practice of putting pop song stakes through
the heart of perfectly fine British dramas ("Alfie", "Georgie Girl",
...)
|
15.22 | "...he's taken me from crayons to perfume" | 18463::BATES | Turn and face the strange changes | Wed Mar 10 1993 16:26 | 5 |
|
...Don't forget (I mean, how can you?) "To Sir, With Love"!
gloria
|
15.23 | Point of No Return/ Nina Simone | 8269::BARRIANO | choke me in the shallow water... | Sun Mar 21 1993 21:37 | 5 |
| I highly recommend the sound track from Point of No Return, featuring the
music of Nina Simone, a blues singer (deceased?)
Regards
Barry
|
15.24 | | 18463::BATES | Turn and face the strange changes | Mon Mar 22 1993 14:43 | 4 |
|
Last time I heard, Nina Simone is alive and well - thank goodness.
gloria
|
15.25 | | 28992::WSA038::SATTERFIELD | Close enough for jazz. | Tue Mar 23 1993 14:37 | 13 |
|
To clarify this topic some it might be good if we differentiate between the
film score and diegetic music. Diegetic music emananates naturally from the
plot, someone sings or plays an instrument or there is a band playing that
we can see or even someone turning on a radio. The film score is not a part
of the story itself even though it can add much to our enjoyment. In other
words the characters in the film can hear diegetic music but not the score.
Randy
|
15.26 | | DECWET::SHUSTER | Egad! An Adage! | Tue Mar 23 1993 17:27 | 3 |
| Diegetic? Sounds like the name of a pill for heartburn relief.
|
15.27 | bernard hermann | 42721::IVES_J | One i-node short of a file system | Fri Mar 26 1993 10:35 | 12 |
| I used to have an LP of movie music by Bernard Hermann . It contained
music from the films 'Journey to the centre of the earth', 'The
seventh voyage of sinbad', ' the day the earth stood still' and '
faranheit 451'. The music was excellent, unique and featured some very
early electronic instruments. Has anyone seen this out on CD.
whilst the Samuel barber Adagio for strings is most often remembered
from Platoon, I always think of David Lynch's 'The Elephant man'. this
music was included during the section at the end where John merryck
wants to sleep like a normal man, just for once. I think you hear Ann
bancrofts line about ' Nothing lasts forever', a very moving moment as
I recall.
|
15.28 | | 28994::WSA038::SATTERFIELD | Close enough for jazz. | Fri Mar 26 1993 12:49 | 13 |
|
re .27
I think a dog food commercial would be a moving moment if Barber's Adagio
for Strings were played over it. One of the most moving pieces of music
ever written.
There are at least two or three cd's of Herrmann's film music out, I'm not
sure which would include those pieces.
Randy
|
15.29 | by an amazing coincidence | 42721::IVES_J | One i-node short of a file system | Fri Apr 02 1993 08:29 | 12 |
| Well what a stroke of luck. the LP I refered to earlier containing
music from scores by Bernard herrman is on CD AND was in a sale at Our
price in basingstoke for #5.99 (UK price) I of course snapped it up.
for anyone interested its on the DECCA MOVIE MAGIC LABEL, which I guess
is under the LONDON name in the US.
from memory the scores are very rich , with quite a lot of pastiche.
the music from the seventh voyage of sinabd borrows from Scheherazade
and Journey to the centre of the earth reminds me of sinfonia
antarctica by ralpg Vaughan-Williams.
its worth 5.99 just for the music that accompanies GORT ( 'KLAATU
BERRADA NICTU' ) in the section from the day the Earth Stood Still.
|
15.30 | Bela Lugosi's Dead | 3131::PRIESTLEY | | Fri Apr 02 1993 17:31 | 8 |
| "Bela Lugosi's Dead", by Bauhaus and "performed" in the movie "The
Hunger", by Peter Murphy and Daniel Ash of the aforementioned band, was
possibly the most appropriate music possible for the opening scene in
which two vampires, played by David Bowie and Catherine Deneuve, pick
up a couple for their periodic feast. fatastic opening shot.
Andrew
|
15.31 | Last Walt disney film | 47203::ALAIMO | | Wed May 26 1993 11:04 | 14 |
|
Into trailer Walt Disney's film there is a music that was used into
Gatorade spot (their with some champions sports like JP Papin, Franco
Baresi, Sergei Bubka, and so on) some months ago. Can someone tell from
which opera it start from ??
I suppose that the soundtrack is from a classic opera (like Carmina
burana) and also I cannot help you because I don't know what is the
original film title.
Thanks in advance
Roberto
|
15.32 | Ennio Morricone | 47203::ALAIMO | | Wed May 26 1993 11:07 | 8 |
|
Another reply for remember a great musician for film :
ENNIO MORRICONE !!!
Don't forget him !!!
Roberto
|
15.33 | Oliver Company | 47203::ALAIMO | | Wed May 26 1993 11:13 | 8 |
|
Another think...Someone of you can give me the song list from the
picture "Oliver & Co." by Walt Disney production.
I know that the Dog Guest star use the B.Joel's voice, is right ??
Roberto
|
15.34 | | 12035::MDNITE::RIVERS | | Tue Oct 26 1993 11:27 | 33 |
| Some soundtrack musings. I've always loved soundtracks, used to by
them all the time as a kid. If I liked the movie, I'd go find the
soundtrack. (anyone remember the film "Swashbuckler" with Robert Shaw,
Genieve Bujold, Peter Boyle, Beau Bridges and Geoffrey "The UN-Cola!"
Holden? I have that soundtrack. Still. :) I've always liked
scores to films over soundtracks that are simply a collection of songs
capable of being played on the radio (Top40 material), but sometimes,
I'll get the latter.
"True Romance" has a very nice soundtrack, although I don't think most
of the songs were written for the film. I especially liked the main
title "You're So Cool", by Hans Zimmer, the big-bandesque
"(Love is) The Tender Trap" by Robert Palmer, and "Viens Mallika Sous
le Dome Edais from Lokme"/Delibes as arranged by Howard Blake (that's
what it sez on the insert sheet, really). I believe the latter either
came from or was featured in the movie, "The Hunger", as well.
"Basic Instinct", like the movie or not, has a nice score to it by
Jerry Goldsmith. The main theme is great, I think, which is basically
(hah hah) why I bought the soundtrack. I like the dance club music in
the movie, but it is not, alas, to be found on the soundtrack CD.
I'd have to recommend the soundtrack to "Edward Scissorhands" for sheer
fairy-tale musical fun (by Danny Elfman, who else?) Very pretty, very
sad in places. Just like the movie.
"The Nightmare Before Xmas" soundtrack has similarities -- of course
Elfman's stuff tends to *be* quite smiliar -- and the songs, while
rather unimpressive in the movie, can really grow on you after
repeated listenings, especially Oogie Boogie's Song.
|
15.35 | Some of my fav's.... | DECWET::HAYNES | | Tue Oct 26 1993 17:52 | 12 |
| I think some of my favorite music from movies were:
Superman The Movie
Somewhere In Time
The Rocketeer
Without A Clue (I would love to get this soundtrack, but can't find it
anywhere!)
Star Trek II: The Wrath Of Khan (unfortunatly, the Reliant attacking
music was very much the same music used in ALIENS, when the aliens
attacked, both tracks done by James Horner...)
Michael
|
15.36 | This is movie music | 44247::RBERNARD | | Fri Dec 03 1993 18:28 | 8 |
| I am very surprised that Mr Lucas has not been mentioned up till
now,after all he is the man responsible for THX standard,THE STAR WARS
trilogy has to be one of the best soundtracks of all time,other
excellent soundtracks are ALIENS -James Horner,Predator_Alan Silvestri,
Apocacalypse Now-Doors,Deliverance-Dual Banjo's,First Blood/Rambo,Star
Trek series.
Rich.
|
15.37 | | HUMOR::EPPES | I'm not making this up, you know | Mon Dec 06 1993 13:03 | 6 |
| RE .37 - I trust you know, however, that George Lucas didn't write the music
for "Star Wars". You can thank soon-to-be-former-Boston-Pops-conductor
John Williams for that (and for the Indiana Jones scores and for "Close
Encounters" and for "E.T." and for scores of other scores :-) ).
-- Nina
|
15.38 | | 26608::BRANDENBERG | | Mon Dec 06 1993 18:05 | 3 |
|
re .last: Which means that you can thank Richard Wagner (from whom
Williams borrows so many themes)....
|
15.39 | Also wrote.... | DECWET::HAYNES | | Tue Dec 07 1993 12:55 | 7 |
| Williams also wrote the soundtrack to Jaws, and Superman The Movie,
etc.
What themes did he borrow from Richard Wagner? (very curious!)
Michael
|
15.40 | | 26608::BRANDENBERG | | Tue Dec 07 1993 13:43 | 21 |
|
Call me out, eh? I'll have to go through the trilogy again to match
up the themes but Siegfried's theme has been reworked into the music
by Williams, the hunter's call into the opening bit of Star Wars.
The bit that follows Siegfried's death but before the funeral march
is used for those dark, dramatic moments. I have no complaints
with a composer developing on other's work; it produces some depth
and avoids the Schoenberg Syndrome. ("Look! There are white keys
*and* black keys. Aren't I clever?") It's just that Williams seems
to cross the line between 'developement from' over to 'derivative of'.
To use the SNL comparison, "Ah, Williams. I liked it the first time
I heard it. Bayreuth, 1875." All IMHO. :-)
Now Jerry Goldsmith is a movie score composer that I have few complaints
about. He can take a given style imposed by the movie (miltary march,
japanese folk songs, etc.) and produce a score that can stand on its
own. Puts more thought and effort into his work than many of the
directors and screenwriters do in their media. I'd like to see a
credit list for him. It must be rather impressive by now...
monty
|
15.41 | ALIEN/STTMP | DECWET::HAYNES | | Wed Dec 08 1993 11:29 | 5 |
| Jerry Goldsmith, is he the one who did ALIEN and STAR TREK THE MOTION
PICTURE?
Michael
|
15.42 | | 12035::MDNITE::RIVERS | The end of the innocence | Wed Dec 08 1993 11:40 | 10 |
| No, that's James Horner.
Jerry Goldsmith did, off the top of my head, the score for "Basic
Instinct", and (oh, geez, brain freeze). Well, at least I remembered
one. I want to say he did the score for the somewhat forgotten
"Swashbuckler" (a really fun movie and a really fun score), but I'm not
100% sure. I have the record somewhere.
kim
|
15.43 | | 26608::BRANDENBERG | | Wed Dec 08 1993 23:47 | 5 |
|
Actually, I believe he did do one or more of the Star Trek movie scores.
Also Patton, Shogun (I believe). Planet of the Apes, Total Recall,
Logan's Run and many others...
|
15.44 | 2001 without the blue danube | 42721::IVES_J | One i-node short of a file system | Thu Dec 09 1993 06:08 | 12 |
| on a related subject I recently saw in a UK film magazine that James
Horner has recorded his long discarded *original* score for 2001: A
Space Odyssey. Apparently it was turned down in favour of the Straus
(R), Strauss(J), Ligetti & Katchaturian combination.
Be very interesting to hear his ideas, though I imagine it would be
hard to surpass "Derrrrrrr Derrrrrrrr Derrrrrrrr, Dahhhh dahhhh dundun
dundundundundudndundudn ............................"
John Williams also borrows quite a lot of motifs/style from Ralph
vaugh-Williams (IMHO) being a lover of the 9 symphonies of RVW I hear
quite a lot of them used by J.W.
|
15.45 | One of the good ones | RNDHSE::WALL | Show me, don't tell me | Thu Dec 09 1993 09:35 | 8 |
|
Jerry Goldsmith wrote the score for Star Trek: The Motion Picture, and
his theme is currently used in the titles for Star Trek: The Next
Generation, and I believe he scored parts of Alien. One of my favorite
works by him is the score he did for Supergirl, music that rose above
the movie to which it was attached.
DFW
|
15.46 | | 12658::bence | Life itself is the proper binge. | Thu Dec 09 1993 13:25 | 7 |
|
Jerry Goldsmith also composed the score for "The Wind and the Lion" and
the theme and first years score for "The Man from U.N.C.L.E."
The background music in the opening sequence in ST:TMP (the scene
where the Klingon ships are destroyed) is based on a theme he first
used in The Wind and the Lion.
|
15.47 | And what do Klingons and Ruffles have in common? | DECWET::HAYNES | | Thu Dec 09 1993 16:39 | 8 |
| I know James Horner did music for Star Trek II:The Wrath Of Khan,
Aliens, but I do believe Goldsmith did the first (if only parts of)
Alien, and Star Trek The Motion Picture. Interesting regarding the
Klingon theme, I didn't know that.....
Michael
|
15.48 | | 26608::BRANDENBERG | | Thu Dec 09 1993 18:00 | 9 |
|
Re: Horner's 2001. This was recently played on the local station WCRB but
I missed it. Has anyone heard it and come away with any impressions?
Hmmm, Vaughn-Williams as an influence on John Williams. Hadn't made
a connection and I too like Vaughn-Williams. Can you provide a before/after
pair so I can find the influence myself?
monty
|
15.49 | North not Horner | 51219::GARLICK_N | | Fri Dec 10 1993 01:38 | 4 |
| I believe it was Alex North who had his score for 2001 discarded by
Kubrick. James Horner didn't turn up until the 80s.
Nick
|
15.50 | | 42721::IVES_J | One i-node short of a file system | Fri Dec 10 1993 05:11 | 15 |
| re -.1
yes of course you are right! now which one wrote the score for 'The
Right Stuff' ?
re -.2 Well certainly I've noticed similarities with some of the later
symphonies such as 6 ,7 & 8 but I have to admit it's not very
scientific. Try listeneing to the 3rd symphony ('Pastoral'),
also I also hear a lot of RVW in the *EXCELLENT* film music of
Bernard Hermann . maybe I just hear too much RVW ;-)
has anyone heard any of BH's classical compositions, I think he wrote a
symphony as well as some chamber works. I love his music for 'Day the
Earth stood still' and 'Journey To the Centre Of the Earth' which in
tunr borrows a lot from Holst's the planets
|
15.51 | | 12035::MDNITE::RIVERS | The end of the innocence | Fri Dec 10 1993 13:49 | 5 |
| Well, gosh, I stand corrected many times. Of the Star Trek films, I
only have the soundtrack to II, which is a James Horner effort. I
guess I thought he'd have done the first one, too.
kim
|
15.52 | V-W, North, and Termen | 26608::BRANDENBERG | | Fri Dec 10 1993 15:26 | 11 |
|
re .50: Unscientific is alright here. :-) I don't think I've ever
heard the Pastoral. I'm partial to the Sea Symphony, Sinfonia Antarctica,
and Fantasia on a theme.... I'll give it a try.
re other: yes, it was North.
On on obituary note, Leo Termen died last month, without whom we'd
never have had the soundtrack to 'Forbidden Planet.'
monty
|
15.53 | | 42721::IVES_J | One i-node short of a file system | Mon Dec 13 1993 12:06 | 9 |
| was he the Russian who invented the strange electronic instrument in
the 1930's ? I recently saw a TV documentary about him, it was so
strange I thought it was an april fool untill they had Mr Moog and
Brian Wilson acclaiming the guy ( it was used on 'Good Vibrations').
The instrument was a box with a metal hoop poking out of one side and a
metal rod climbing from the top. One controlled pitch the other volume.
The thing was that since the instrument worked on the interaction of
the soloist with magnetic fields it was played without being touched.
|
15.54 | Also Theremin | 26608::BRANDENBERG | | Mon Dec 13 1993 17:10 | 9 |
|
That's it. I was reading an obituary in German and his Russian name was
transcribed as 'Termen.' In English, the name and the instrument are
written 'Theremin.' Some bits from memory from the obit: 'Cosmic'
said Albert Einstein of his music in 1927(?); seemed to get into some
political trouble during the Stalin years; recovered later. Included
a photo with an early instrument.
monty
|
15.55 | | 42721::IVES_J | One i-node short of a file system | Tue Dec 14 1993 06:44 | 20 |
| The TV programme I mentioned siad that he was kidnapped from the U.S
and taken back to Russia where he worked on various 'special electronic
projects'. only in the 1970's was it found out in the West that he was
still alive, and in the programme they re-united him with his original
'theremin soloist ' in New York.
The programme was fascintaing and frustrating at the same time, what
had he been doing in Russia, why had'nt his group of friends try to
find him ? There were also throw away lines that left you dumb struck.
A dancer who worked for him (He had an larger version of the theremin
which you played by dancing on it !) said that Theremin had a working
colour TV system in about 1930 ! Nothing more was made of this.
The thing was made even more weird when they interviewed theremin
today (programme was a few years old). he spoke english but had been
speaking Russian so long, and was so old that most of what he said was
very jumbled and reversed. he looked like Peter Cushing.
Fascinating stuff
|
15.56 | From Holst, too | 37811::BUCHMAN | UNIX refugee in a VMS world | Thu Dec 30 1993 15:00 | 12 |
| > John Williams also borrows quite a lot of motifs/style from Ralph
> vaugh-Williams (IMHO) being a lover of the 9 symphonies of RVW I hear
> quite a lot of them used by J.W.
IMHO, he has also borrowed heavily from Holst. Compare the opening
theme from Star Wars as the star destroyer passes overhead to the Mars
movement of the Planets symphony, for starters. Nonetheless, I like his
music, though it gets repetitious after a few dozen movies. Things
like this make me think, are there really *any* musical themes that
have not already been used?
Jim
|
15.57 | live | DECWET::JWHITE | this sucks! change it or kill me | Mon Jan 03 1994 14:31 | 16 |
|
(a little promotion here)
the rainier symphony (yours truly conducting) will be doing a
program of film music on our next concert (february 5):
north by northwest - bernard herrmann
the magnificent seven - elmer bernstein
murder on the orient express - richard rodney bennett
the godfather - nino rota
superman - john williams
don juan - max steiner
lieutenant kije - sergei prokofiev
the umbrellas of cherbourg - michel legrand
|
15.58 | Spot the connection | 42443::IMMSA | adrift on the sea of heartbreak | Thu Feb 17 1994 07:39 | 12 |
| Paris Texas - Ry Cooder
Southern Comfort - Ry Cooder
The Long Riders - Ry Cooder
The Border - Ry Cooder
Johnny Handsome - Ry Cooder
Crossroads - Ry Cooder
Street of fire - Ry Cooder
Performance - Ry Cooder
Alamo Bay - Ry Cooder
andy
|
15.59 | What do I win? | 7892::SLABOUNTY | Do you wanna bang heads with me? | Thu Feb 17 1994 10:54 | 5 |
|
Ummm, movies set in the south?
GTI
|
15.60 | | 42443::IMMSA | adrift on the sea of heartbreak | Tue Feb 22 1994 07:38 | 13 |
| Good try :-)
I Really only put the note there to draw people's attention, who may
not have already known about Cooder's prolific soundtrack work.
In fact, there is a new one just out but I can't remember the title.
You could also add Blue Collar.
For the trivia buffs, Southern Comfort never came out on disc that I am
aware of (shame because there was some great Cajun music in it).
andy
|
15.61 | The European connection | 41188::HELSOM | | Sun Mar 06 1994 12:15 | 26 |
| re: .16
The remake of Ball of Fire, A Song is Born, is nowhere near as good musically
even though it's supposed to be about music. But Benny Goodman as the professor
who is writing the encyclopedia volume on jazz makes it just about worth
watching for the moment he starts to play. (When I saw the film, I didn't know
what Benny Goodman looked like...)
I'd also like to put in a word for two European composers...
Ernst (?) Korngold was a successful mainstream German composer who took to film
music like a fish to water and never seemed to suffer from the temperamental and
practical problems of other composers in Hollywood. I think of him as
post-Wagnerian in the same sort of way as John Williams in Star Wars. Korngold
did a lot of swashbucklers and historical romps, for example The Sea Hawk and
The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex. I think he was under contract to
Warners in the 1930s, or maybe Sam Goldwyn loaned him out a lot.
Miklos Rosza was a young Hungarian emigre who worked for Korda at London films
in the 1930s. He produced some brilliant through-composed scores for Korda, and
went on to do the same for Powell and Pressburger. His score is one of the
unambiguously good things about Black Narcissus. (I assume it's his -- our www
server is down and I can't check...) He also did the score of Billy Wilder's The
Private Life of Sherlock Holmes, which I think is a seriously underrated
romantic movie. Rosza was closer to Dvorak or Vaughn Williams (who also had a go
at a through composed score in Scott of the Antarctic) than to Wagner.
|
15.62 | Korngold and others | 51614::LOOW | | Fri Mar 18 1994 05:22 | 20 |
| reply to note 15.61 by 41188::HELSOM
- The European connection -
*A Song is Born* Well, although a pretty nice movie, it's sad when
the producers didn't let all those orchestras and combo's play a
complete number. I hate that. The music clips are just teasers.
*Erich Wolfgang Korngold* PLEASE do not forget his wonderful music
for THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD (1939), starring Errol Flynn! There
you have two masterpieces in one movie, you'll enjoy it as much while
just listening to the soundtrack as watching, believe me.
There are MANY great composers in the field of film music, but it's
hard to beat the above, Max Steiner, Miklos Rosza and Bernard Herrmann
for example.
Happily, there has been reissues on CD of scores by the above mentioned
gentlemen.
Keep watching ... and listening!
Hans
|
15.63 | Music fit for kings | HOTLNE::SHIELDS | | Mon Dec 02 1996 03:17 | 6 |
15.64 | IMHO | CHEFS::BEATON_S | I just loooooooook innocent ! | Tue Dec 03 1996 07:28 | 6 |
15.65 | | SUBPAC::GOLDIE | Resident Alien | Thu Dec 05 1996 09:22 | 6
|