#2921
Posted 23 March 2012 - 02:28 PM
John Carter is constantly being played this week. A really good score and very entertaining album.
Now it's time for David Arnold's Independence Day.
Karol
#2922
Posted 23 March 2012 - 03:03 PM
I am off to have an Indiana Jones score marathon, starting with Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Ars superior est vita hominum.
"We pop out and come into the world and music is there. We didn't invent it - it's all organised in the atmosphere by divinity or whatever. It's a miracle." - John Williams-
I think music is a stream of some kind. It could be blood. It could be water. It could be ether. Whatever it is it seems to be a living, organic force that’s in motion, that serves humanity and is part of humanity and part of what describes us as humans. We sing, play, dance, all the things that we do. And there is a vibrant and great literature we have been given. ... As musicians, we join the stream. We swim in the stream with all the other millions of music makers. It’s a life force, a strong one, surrounding us and we are part of it. -John Williams-
#2923
Posted 23 March 2012 - 05:16 PM
Sleepy Hollow by Danny Elfman: Without a doubt my favourite Elfman score. Everything seems to fall into place in this one. The gothic darkness, the sweeping drama and romance, the macabre comedy and furious and relentless action are all present. And while the score is mostly monothematic the composer winds the melody through a fantastic set of variations, the main theme commenting the action as need be, working as a curtain opening herald of doom or transforming into a love theme interlude or becoming ghostly, childlike and playful. There are two or three accompanying motifs Elfman weaves between the strains of the main theme with regularity, the Mystery and Foreboding theme that seems to be everywhere in this score, informing almost all events in Sleepy Hollow, the short exclamatory Headless Horse Man motif swooping down on the listener as relentlessly as the character and the Riding motif making a couple of appearances underscoring, you guessed it, scenes where the Horseman pursues his victims.
The whole mood of this score is darkly romantic and Elfman eschews from outright horror music for the most part, his thematic ideas always anchoring the music in firm melodicism. As said above the main theme runs through an impressive array of permutations, keeping the music fresh and interesting throughout. Deep and weighty orchestrations offer melodramatic musical exposition to the unfolding gruesome events, lower woodwinds and brass often performing renditions of the secondary themes underneath the action. The action music itself is relentless and vicious, blaring and hammering, the orchestra and chorus attacking the listener brutally but always dancing on the fine between listenable and draining but never straying on the latter side as Elfman cleverly interpolates his themes into the mix and keeps the musical carnage engaging.
The album is well compiled, containing all the major sequences from the film in near chronological order which makes for a strong musical narrative. There is always enough breathing space between the heaviest action setpieces so that the listening experience does not wear you out and steadily builds towards a big finale containing yet again Elfman's classic Final Confrontation track. The gothically rich and romantic musical ideas capture the imagination, clever orchestrations and use of chorus all enhance this overall atmosphere. Here Elfman shows how horror can be done in style and scope.
My favorite Elfman as well
The foreboding theme, as you called it, is terrific. When it is heard in The Story, with that Oboe backing, it sounds simply superb. Elfman has a gret knack for writing this sort of foreboding, driving, motifs. He also wrote a great one for Hulk
#2925
Posted 24 March 2012 - 01:17 PM
Did I say something about a chronological marathon Stefan? You should pay more attention. And where is the much more effective WRONG! I ask you? Incorrect is too polite. Good old cold WRONG! in your face was much more effective.
I am off to have an Indiana Jones score marathon, starting with Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Incorrect, you have to start with TOD.
Ars superior est vita hominum.
"We pop out and come into the world and music is there. We didn't invent it - it's all organised in the atmosphere by divinity or whatever. It's a miracle." - John Williams-
I think music is a stream of some kind. It could be blood. It could be water. It could be ether. Whatever it is it seems to be a living, organic force that’s in motion, that serves humanity and is part of humanity and part of what describes us as humans. We sing, play, dance, all the things that we do. And there is a vibrant and great literature we have been given. ... As musicians, we join the stream. We swim in the stream with all the other millions of music makers. It’s a life force, a strong one, surrounding us and we are part of it. -John Williams-
#2927
Posted 24 March 2012 - 02:19 PM
You dont start a marathon at the 12th kilometre.
If the track is a closed loop, it doesn't matter where you start.
#2928
Posted 24 March 2012 - 02:32 PM
I am off to have an Indiana Jones score marathon, starting with Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Incorrect, you have to start with TOD.
Don't you have to start with "Indy's First Adventure"?
I can read minds.
Can you read my mind? Can you picture the things I'm thinking of?
#2930
Posted 24 March 2012 - 04:21 PM
@Wojo: stop being facetious.
#2932
Posted 24 March 2012 - 04:27 PM
I'm listening to Barry's King Kong. This score is absolutely amazing. That unmistakable romantic sound at some of his very best. Pulse-pounding and hair-raising stuff for that gigantic turned-on ape's various run-ins with nutty religious natives dressing up like priests to get laid, gun-toting environmental rapists and asshole National Guardsmen mining New York's bridges. I definitely desire the complete score without sound effects. There are far too many phenomenal cues missing, like Jack's story of the island, the actual arrival at Skull Island and the big guy's escapade in the Big Apple. Want.
#2933
Posted 24 March 2012 - 04:37 PM
I have the albums tagged in the order of film release year, and that's it. Making TOD a prequel had no impact on the movie other than the date in the opening titles.
@Wojo: stop being facetious.
#2934
Posted 24 March 2012 - 10:12 PM
Ars superior est vita hominum.
"We pop out and come into the world and music is there. We didn't invent it - it's all organised in the atmosphere by divinity or whatever. It's a miracle." - John Williams-
I think music is a stream of some kind. It could be blood. It could be water. It could be ether. Whatever it is it seems to be a living, organic force that’s in motion, that serves humanity and is part of humanity and part of what describes us as humans. We sing, play, dance, all the things that we do. And there is a vibrant and great literature we have been given. ... As musicians, we join the stream. We swim in the stream with all the other millions of music makers. It’s a life force, a strong one, surrounding us and we are part of it. -John Williams-
#2935
Posted 24 March 2012 - 10:18 PM
Making TOD a prequel had no impact on the movie other than the date in the opening titles.
thats not entirely true....
John Williams sucks, he doesn't write with a quill pen, there is no emotion in pencil music ! Purcell is the man !Among all the things I have done in my short and pitiful life, becoming an inside joke on JWFAN is the one I'm the least proud of.
#2936
Posted 25 March 2012 - 06:42 AM
It had been a while since I heard it and thought I'd give it a go again. Man what an awesome release and it's pure adrenaline fun, with hints from Stargate and Independence Day woven in.
The film itself is a guilty pleasure of mine but the score is awesome as hell.
#2938
Posted 27 March 2012 - 08:33 PM
#2939
Posted 27 March 2012 - 08:38 PM
I'd say it eclipses his other film works. I've been listening to this constantly over the past few weeks.Been listening to my new copy of John Carter during all the Hook fun. Another home run for Giacchino, who's really been on a "peak career" roll the last 4-5 years.
Karol
#2940
Posted 27 March 2012 - 10:54 PM
Making TOD a prequel had no impact on the movie other than the date in the opening titles.
thats not entirely true....
It makes Indy's line from Raiders about not believing in magic and a lot of supersticious hocus pocus rather strange.
Please elaborate, Faleel. Don't be shy.
Additionally, I would argue that making TOD a prequel turns Indy's encounter with the Thuggee swordsmen near the bridge, when he reaches for his missing pistol, an inside joke that we don't get. The musical snippet also makes less sense because we haven't heard the full treatment in Raiders, when he just shoots the elaborate swordsman.
I think that Indiana Jones' introduction in Raiders is a much stronger character presentation than that in Temple. We see all the trademarks that we come to know. The hat. The whip. Him doing archaeology stuff. Action. Granted, in Temple, we get a lot of dialogue about Indy's archaeological exploits and see his womanizing, but until he spears the guy and starts shooting...even then, we may not understand what kind of man Indiana Jones is until he gets into the airplane IF Temple was our first introduction to him, and not Raiders. He's still Any Guy 80s Action Movie Star at that point.
Yes, both intros have the commonalities of Indy making mistakes, losing the treasure, running away, and barely escaping with his life.
That's about it.
@Wojo: stop being facetious.
#2941
Posted 27 March 2012 - 10:56 PM
John Williams sucks, he doesn't write with a quill pen, there is no emotion in pencil music ! Purcell is the man !Among all the things I have done in my short and pitiful life, becoming an inside joke on JWFAN is the one I'm the least proud of.
#2942
Posted 27 March 2012 - 10:57 PM
#2943
Posted 28 March 2012 - 08:59 PM
I still feel that the supersticious hocus pocus line in Raiders works given that TOD is a prequel. Indy experiences all these amazing things on his adventures, but he never recounts them to Marcus. In fact, Marcus blows off his story about what happened with the idol in Raiders. "Want to hear about it?" "Not at all." He never told him any of that shit that went down in Temple of Doom.
I still disagree. He doesn't ask Brody if he wants to hear about the superstitious hocus pocus. He says "I don't believe." First person. Indiana Jones. Not..."do you, Marcus Brody, believe?"
Marcus blows off a story that -- the audience knows -- is totally grounded in reality, i.e. the traps in the idol temple and escaping from Belloq's Hovitos.
He doesn't blow off a discussion about the supernatural and we cannot know that the TOD adventure happened before. When the gov't agents confront Brody and Jones, Brody is as taken in by the story as Indy, but later we see Brody nearly scared to death about Indiana going after the Ark. He knows it is probably imbued with the power of God, but it is Indiana who is skeptical.
That's why this order works:
Raiders:
Indiana: [laughing] Oh, Marcus. What are you trying to do, scare me? You sound like my mother. We've known each other for a long time. I don't believe in magic, a lot of superstitious hocus pocus. I'm going after a find of incredible historical significance, you're talking about the boogie man. Besides, you know what a cautious fellow I am. [throws his gun into his suitcase]
Temple of Doom:
Shaman of Maypore: Now you see the power of the rock you bring back.
Indiana Jones: Yes. I understand its power now.
-------
Now turn it around, and view them in the order George Lucas instructs.
Shaman of Maypore: Now you see the power of the rock you bring back.
Indiana Jones: Yes. I understand its power now.
Indiana: [laughing] Oh, Marcus. What are you trying to do, scare me? You sound like my mother. We've known each other for a long time. I don't believe in magic, a lot of superstitious hocus pocus. I'm going after a find of incredible historical significance, you're talking about the boogie man. Besides, you know what a cautious fellow I am. [throws his gun into his suitcase]
Now, is Indiana really a believer, and he's playing it cool for the benefit of his friend and mentor? That'd be the only way the TOD/Raiders order makes sense. Indiana starts out being skeptical about a bunch of rocks, then becomes a believer. Then when confronted by the power of God, he goes all macho to show Marcus that he's not actually scared out of his mind, since he already defeated a boogie man in charge of a mind control cult -- magic! superstition! -- who worshipped a god tantamount to the devil.
Maybe. I just don't like it.
-----
But then again, Indiana Jones learns nothing from his previous adventures, because he later actually asks Brody if he believes in the power of the Grail, after recognizing what danger his father's in. It's not like he hasn't already gone up against God once before. No...
@Wojo: stop being facetious.
#2944
Posted 28 March 2012 - 09:10 PM
John Williams sucks, he doesn't write with a quill pen, there is no emotion in pencil music ! Purcell is the man !Among all the things I have done in my short and pitiful life, becoming an inside joke on JWFAN is the one I'm the least proud of.
#2945
Posted 28 March 2012 - 09:16 PM
Karol
#2946
Posted 28 March 2012 - 09:19 PM
#2948
Posted 28 March 2012 - 09:21 PM
Music Muse Reviews: "Escape From Tomorrow by Abel Korzeniowski
#2949
Posted 28 March 2012 - 09:21 PM
@Wojo: stop being facetious.
#2950
Posted 28 March 2012 - 09:28 PM
Music Muse Reviews: "Escape From Tomorrow by Abel Korzeniowski
#2951
Posted 28 March 2012 - 09:29 PM
It's married to the film for eternity. And yes, most of us had at least one of the old albums (Milan version in my case). I will buy the complete version of that performance, of course. But when I was talking about it making impression was simply due to the modern booming recording. This kind of a score benefits greatly from that. To hear all that orchestrations and stuff in such clarity is a revelation.I enjoy the rerecording a lot, but I return to the original far more. It could be a nostaglia/familiarity thing, but it just sounds better to me.
Karol
#2952
Posted 28 March 2012 - 09:57 PM
#2953
Posted 28 March 2012 - 10:05 PM
Karol
#2954
Posted 28 March 2012 - 10:06 PM
I'm probably getting both recordings if I can and putting what's missing of one in the other and the other way around. Also indicate if something in one of the recordings wasn't recorded according to Poledouris' intentions, I overheard this happens slightly in the original. Heh, that would be the kind of care I can only have for my very favourites. Come with papa.
Izena duen guztia omen da.
#2955
Posted 28 March 2012 - 10:07 PM
#2956
Posted 28 March 2012 - 10:53 PM
#2957
Posted 28 March 2012 - 11:06 PM
I'd rather make Microsoft Sam speak "A long time ago in a galaxy far far away" between my fanfare and opening blare.
(not really, but still. It sounded neurotic in my head, so I had to say it)
@Wojo: stop being facetious.
#2958
Posted 28 March 2012 - 11:33 PM
Izena duen guztia omen da.
#2959
Posted 29 March 2012 - 02:06 AM
#2960
Posted 29 March 2012 - 02:09 AM
Everyone should own FSM's release of Dmitri Tiomkin's Land of the Pharaohs. Seriously this score is a real powerhouse, especially the first half. Anyone who enjoy's Tiomkin's crazy style would love this score if you haven't heard it before!
Noted. I think I've only heard a pair of themes from The Alamo. Stuff to discover, no doubt.
Izena duen guztia omen da.
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