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Posted

When is the earliest use of boom-tzzz by JW? I hear some earlier prototypes of it in "Olympic Fanfare" (1984), but these are pretty different than the modern boom-tzzz. First modern variation that I'm aware of is in Far and Away (1994), in "The Land Race." Do any predate either of these works?

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  • 3 months later...
Posted

I recently heard this piece written in 2006, which uses boom-tzzz pretty prominently at 2:49 (the composer studied with Goldsmith, so I'm sure he's fairly familiar with Williams' work). It got me thinking, out of curiosity, does anybody know if any composers used boom-tzzz before Williams?

Posted

There is quite a bit in the Asteroid Field.

http://m.youtube.com...h?v=zKa7VzA16Vg

Listen at about 1:15.

Oh, good spy. These variations certainly aren't as prominent as Williams' modern ones, but they definitely qualify.

I would have to say Raiders (Flying Wing/Desert Chase), TOD (Short Round Helps), or Hook.

Posted

I'm not sure what 'boom-tzz' means. Are you talking about a timpani hit followed by a cymbal crash of some sort?

Posted

When is the earliest use of boom-tzzz by JW? I hear some earlier prototypes of it in "Olympic Fanfare" (1984), but these are pretty different than the modern boom-tzzz. First modern variation that I'm aware of is in Far and Away (1994), in "The Land Race." Do any predate either of these works?

Okay, what's the difference between a modern and an old boom-tzzzzz?

Jaws doesn't contain a boom-tzzz, does it?

Posted

I'm not sure what 'boom-tzz' means. Are you talking about a timpani hit followed by a cymbal crash of some sort?

Bass drum followed by piatti (crash cymbal) hit.

Posted

When is the earliest use of boom-tzzz by JW? I hear some earlier prototypes of it in "Olympic Fanfare" (1984), but these are pretty different than the modern boom-tzzz. First modern variation that I'm aware of is in Far and Away (1994), in "The Land Race." Do any predate either of these works?

Okay, what's the difference between a modern and an old boom-tzzzzz?

Jaws doesn't contain a boom-tzzz, does it?

I think that Man Against Beast contains a boom-tsss

Posted

When is the earliest use of boom-tzzz by JW? I hear some earlier prototypes of it in "Olympic Fanfare" (1984), but these are pretty different than the modern boom-tzzz. First modern variation that I'm aware of is in Far and Away (1994), in "The Land Race." Do any predate either of these works?

Okay, what's the difference between a modern and an old boom-tzzzzz?

Well, to me it seems that as Williams has gotten older, the boom-tzzz has gotten more prominent. In the 70s and 80s it was more of a background noise, but starting in the 90s (and also in some of his Olympic work) he's really brought it to the forefront. I mean, in Tintin we get the boom-tzzzz in the beginning of "Clash of the Cranes" without any other accompaniment.

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Didn't anyone notice the 9 boom-tzzz's in "More Kelso"?

Posted

asteroid field contains a lot os tzz-booms.

i love when williams goes wild with them, like in the TLW finale fues :)

Posted

At 0:26 in "Sail Barge Assault", when Luke jumps off the plank, is a great boom-tzzz.

Posted

Of course, it is all stolen from Beethovens 6th Symphony, 4th movement "Storm", where Beethoven disregards the fact that thunder comes after the flash.

Posted

ummm... Military marches have loads of boom-tzz, i doubt beethoven invented them...

maybe its a renmant of Williams army days, he like the power of that sound and used it for his works.

Many of his works have a military vibe to them even if they are not marches (Olympic works for example)

Posted

John Williams' very first boom-tzzz happened after the very moment he was born, when the doctor took a first glance at him and instantly saw the genius and saviour of film music history in him, and dropped a glass of water. Boom-tzzz!

Posted

Hanser's comment isn't that far from the truth though. Beethoven has the bass drum "booms", but the tzzz is played by the violins, not cymbals. Check out this video, especially from 0:45 to 0:55.

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