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#1361 Maglorfin

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Posted 30 December 2010 - 12:32 AM

How interesting! I also thought that SAE was "merely" the official distributor of FSM releases.


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#1362 indy4

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Posted 31 December 2010 - 01:57 AM

Ah, thanks Mark!

Does anyone else notice an interesting similarity between "The Planet Kripton" and Respighi's "Pines of Rome", specially with the ending part of this one? Both are amazingly powerful in their own way.

Definitely - when I first heard Pines of Rome I thought the exact same thing.
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#1363 indy4

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Posted 01 January 2011 - 12:04 AM

Here's one: who arranged the "En'tract" for Fiddler on the Roof? I thought it was Williams, but there's a very similar arrangement on the Over the Rainbow Boston Pops album that credits "S. Harnick" for the medley.
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#1364 Koray Savas

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Posted 01 January 2011 - 06:14 PM

Are you talking about the cue on the 30th Anniversary release? It's credited to Williams for adapting and conducting.

In 50 years Herrmann will be forgotten.


#1365 E.T. & Elliott

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Posted 01 January 2011 - 06:22 PM

Jerry Bock (music) and Sheldon Harnick (lyrics) composed Fiddler on the Roof.

That medley is the one from That's Entertainment. Williams is given the adaptation credit, but nothing more. I'm not sure if he composed anything original in there. I think some people believe he did.
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#1366 indy4

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Posted 01 January 2011 - 09:54 PM

Okay thanks.
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#1367 Datameister

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Posted 01 January 2011 - 10:51 PM


Does anyone else notice an interesting similarity between "The Planet Kripton" and Respighi's "Pines of Rome", specially with the ending part of this one? Both are amazingly powerful in their own way.

Definitely - when I first heard Pines of Rome I thought the exact same thing.


Yep. It's a pretty strong similarity, and I don't really get the sense that it was an intentional homage. Naturally, it feels more...Williams-ish, and it's a fantastic bit of music in and of itself, but originality is not its strong suit.

#1368 Henry Buck

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Posted 02 January 2011 - 04:23 AM

Here's one: who arranged the "En'tract" for Fiddler on the Roof? I thought it was Williams, but there's a very similar arrangement on the Over the Rainbow Boston Pops album that credits "S. Harnick" for the medley.

The original show has an Entr'acte; it's quite possibly just adapted from that.

#1369 Faleel

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Posted 02 January 2011 - 10:44 PM

how do i get "clean" reverb endings in audacity?

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#1370 Datameister

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Posted 02 January 2011 - 11:23 PM

It's an art, not a science, and sometimes the results sound better than others. You'll want a reverb plugin that sounds decent - I use Freeverb. What you do is duplicate the ending to a new track (select it and then ctrl-D) and then use the envelope tool to make a very quick fadeout at the end of the material you have. Then Quick Mix (or Mix and Render, depending on whether you're using the beta) just that duplicated track so that the envelope tool changes get applied. Then select that duplicated track and apply the reverb to it, with all wet signal and no dry. (You'll have to play with the other settings a little.) Now you can cross-fade between the original track and the duplicated track to get a natural-sounding transition into the artificial reverb, and you'll want to adjust the gain of the duplicated track as well. (Watch out for clipping, especially on loud endings.)

Hope this helps; let me know if any of this needs clarifying. :) (Also, keep in mind that if the ending is just a long, sustained note or pattern, you may be better off looping it.)

#1371 Hedji

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 01:15 AM

Just started getting into the Batman Animated Series with my 7 year old daughter (thanks, Netflix). Is anyone familiar enough with the show to recommend some episodes for a 7 year old girl? I'm thinking some Batgirl focus and more lighthearted stories would appeal.

#1372 E.T. & Elliott

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 01:17 AM

Harley and Ivy

My favorite episode is Almost Got 'Im.
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#1373 crocodile

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 01:22 AM

When I was 7 years old I loved Batman Returns... But that's not a good recommendation, I guess.

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#1374 Hedji

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 01:26 AM

No, we're not quite there yet. Thanks for the recommend, Elliot. *shuffles off to Netflix*

#1375 Datameister

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 01:29 AM

All I know is that Burton's first Batman film was a really bad fit for me when I was about 11. I left after the Joker fried that dude.

Yes, I was a sensitive kid. Yes, I can handle fake charred corpses now.

#1376 E.T. & Elliott

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 01:34 AM

They're still in my top 15 favorite movies.
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#1377 Wojo

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 01:26 PM

All I know is that Burton's first Batman film was a really bad fit for me when I was about 11. I left after the Joker fried that dude.

Yes, I was a sensitive kid. Yes, I can handle fake charred corpses now.


Don't fret. I used to leave the room after the Ark was opened, Donovan drank from the wrong cup, and Kevin Bacon lifted the hat off the guy stuck in the ground (in Tremors).

@Wojo: stop being facetious.


#1378 Delorean90

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 02:58 PM

Just started getting into the Batman Animated Series with my 7 year old daughter (thanks, Netflix). Is anyone familiar enough with the show to recommend some episodes for a 7 year old girl? I'm thinking some Batgirl focus and more lighthearted stories would appeal.


If she can handle the animated incarnation of Two-Face, then "Shadow of the Bat Parts 1 & 2" would be good, as it is Batgirl's origin episode. "Batgirl Returns" is another one--the last of the early '90s cartoons. For lighter episodes: "Christmas With the Joker," "I've Got Batman in My Basement," "The Joker's Favor," "Joker's Wild," "The Strange Secret of Bruce Wayne," "Zatanna," "The Mechanic," "Harlequinade," "Harley's Holiday," and "Make 'Em Laugh." There are some more middling in their darkness/intensity, but I'm not sure what to recommend, since I don't know what kind of thresholds your daughter has for these things, but this could be a good start, if a bit Joker-centric. The Riddler episodes--"If You're So Smart, Why Aren't You Rich?", possibly "What Is Reality?", and almost certainly "Riddler's Reform"--should be okay, and "Birds of a Feather" is another one that should be okay, off the top of my head.

#1379 Hedji

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 03:00 PM

Great recommendations! Thanks so much. Exactly what I was hoping for.

#1380 Datameister

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 05:03 PM

Don't fret. I used to leave the room after the Ark was opened, Donovan drank from the wrong cup...


Those too. :P Oh, and the glimpse of Lars and Beru's charred corpses in Star Wars was a cover-your-eyes moment, too, simply because my parents told me to. I had a very sheltered childhood. ;)

#1381 John Crichton

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 05:55 PM

I couldn't watch the heart-ripping scene in ToD until I was nearly in my teen years.
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#1382 Wojo

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 06:36 PM

I never knew what the fuss was about that sequence because I grew up with a VHS that had been taped from network TV (ABC, early 90s). So beside missing the very beginning of the movie, I had little blips where recorded paused during commercial breaks...and the really gory stuff was edited out of the broadcast. So I've seen the unedited DVD version only either once or maybe twice.

@Wojo: stop being facetious.


#1383 Hedji

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 07:50 PM

Speaking of Batman TAS, check out 4:30 in this clip... It's a TRON Legacy Light Cycle!!


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#1384 Marian Schedenig

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 09:05 PM

I couldn't watch the heart-ripping scene in ToD until I was nearly in my teen years.


I couldn't watch it the first time I saw the film because the 8pm TV showings cut those scenes. Which of course made the bridge fight a bit confusing.

#1385 Jeff

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 09:32 PM


Don't fret. I used to leave the room after the Ark was opened, Donovan drank from the wrong cup...


Those too. :P Oh, and the glimpse of Lars and Beru's charred corpses in Star Wars was a cover-your-eyes moment, too, simply because my parents told me to. I had a very sheltered childhood. ;)

I didn't even notice the charred corpses at the homestead until about ten years ago (after having watched the movies dozens of times on VHS for at least five years previously and watching it in theaters in 1997). They kind of blend in with the desert without a higher resolution.

#1386 Jason LeBlanc

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 09:35 PM

ditto!
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#1387 Wojo

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 09:37 PM

Same here. My eyes are drawn to the smoke coming out of the igloo. Even when it zooms in, I still couldn't discern what it showed.

@Wojo: stop being facetious.


#1388 Hedji

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 11:19 PM

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#1389 Datameister

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 11:22 PM

:lol: Those are amazing.

#1390 crocodile

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Posted 06 January 2011 - 11:23 PM

You're sick!

Karol
From a storytelling point of view, from a directing point of view, there is one thing I associate with what he does, which is calm. There is such an inherent calm and inherent trust of the one powerful image, that he makes me embarrassed with my own work, in terms of how many different shots, how many different sound effects, how many different things we’ll throw at an audience to make an impression. But with Kubrick, there is such a great trust of the one correct image to calmly explain something to audience. There can be some slowness to the editing. There’s nothing frenetic about it. It’s very simple. There’s a trust in simple storytelling and simple image making that actually takes massive confidence to try and emulate. - Christopher Nolan

#1391 Demondm810

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Posted 07 January 2011 - 12:16 AM

LOL

#1392 Koray Savas

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Posted 07 January 2011 - 01:02 AM

The only thing I remember my parents telling me to cover my eyes for was the "sex" scene in The Rock. They eventually stopped caring. I saw The Shining for the first time when I was like 10.

In 50 years Herrmann will be forgotten.


#1393 Kendal_Ozzel

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Posted 07 January 2011 - 02:48 AM

Got Casino Royale today—my first Kritzerland CD—and the track info doesn't seem to be in the CDDB. Think they'll submit it soon? Or should I go ahead and enter all the track info myself?
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#1394 Wojo

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Posted 07 January 2011 - 02:57 AM

I believe you can upload to the CDDB just as easily as you can download from it.

@Wojo: stop being facetious.


#1395 Kendal_Ozzel

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Posted 07 January 2011 - 03:08 AM

I know, but I was just wondering how quickly Kritzerland gets around to doing it, if ever. But oh, I suppose I could just do it myself, especially since I can just copy and paste most of them from the old CD. I'm just quite lazy. :P
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#1396 Wojo

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Posted 07 January 2011 - 03:22 AM

I've never known any of the labels to do things like that. Individuals might if they feel generous.

I have about 40-50 albums ripped on my computer right now waiting for me to tag them. I use MP3Tag which accesses FreeDB, a similar database to CDDB. None of the specialty label soundtracks were listed. Only the rock, classical, jazz, and non-specialty soundtracks showed up.

That tells me that if you want something done...

@Wojo: stop being facetious.


#1397 Miles Prower

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Posted 07 January 2011 - 06:09 AM

Does anyone with the Alien CD/blu-ray know how to edit 'Out The Door' and 'End Title' correctly? I understand they're supposed to overlap (glad they don't though, wouldn't have anything to edit then, haha), but I want to figure out how it's intended to be done.
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#1398 Mark Olivarez

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Posted 07 January 2011 - 03:23 PM

Some of you guys are wusses when it comes to movie violence. ;)

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:lol2:

I saw those several years ago, hilarious. Then Hasbro actually makes Han Solo with a torture rack. :blink:

Got Casino Royale today—my first Kritzerland CD—and the track info doesn't seem to be in the CDDB. Think they'll submit it soon? Or should I go ahead and enter all the track info myself?




It's weird how some new albums are on there and some aren't. Bruce has said in the past that the titles should be on there by the time customers receive their discs.

I'd go ahead and do it yourself and get it over with.

#1399 Koray Savas

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Posted 08 January 2011 - 01:03 AM

I enjoy typing in all the info myself. That way I know it's done right. Far too many mistakes people don't realize. I always double check before I import.

In 50 years Herrmann will be forgotten.


#1400 Datameister

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Posted 08 January 2011 - 01:10 AM

Same here. And of course, even if all the titles have the right words and spellings, they never follow standard rules for punctuation in titles. NEVER. Why in the world would you want to capitalize every single word in every single title? That's not how titles work.




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