John Williams Action Music
#1
Posted 18 January 2012 - 01:41 AM
I love the musical complexity.
So I'm trying to expand my John Williams library, so does anyone have any awesome selections of Williams Action cues?
#2
Posted 18 January 2012 - 01:51 AM
#3
Posted 18 January 2012 - 01:54 AM
1. Nightwatch/Killer By Night - Johnny Williams and Quincy Jones 2. Diamond Head/Gone with the Wave - Johnny Williams/Lalo Schifrin 3. Mass - Leonard Bernstein 4. Bernstein with the New York Philharmonic - Leonard Bernstein
#4
Posted 18 January 2012 - 02:01 AM
T-rex Rescue and Finale from Jurassic Park
The Football Match from Sleepers
The Hunt from The Lost World
Rescuing Sarah from The Lost World
The Raptors Appear from the Lost World
Escape from Naboo from the Phantom Menace
Everybody Runs! from Minority Report
The Whomping Willow from Prisoner of Azkaban
General Grievous from Revenge of the Sith
Whirl Through the Academe from Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
Flight to Bagghar from Adventures of Tintin
#5
Posted 18 January 2012 - 03:20 AM
#6
Posted 18 January 2012 - 03:22 AM
1. Nightwatch/Killer By Night - Johnny Williams and Quincy Jones 2. Diamond Head/Gone with the Wave - Johnny Williams/Lalo Schifrin 3. Mass - Leonard Bernstein 4. Bernstein with the New York Philharmonic - Leonard Bernstein
#7
Posted 18 January 2012 - 03:30 AM
Oh man, Rescuing Sarah is a beast of a song.
I'm afraid that I don't give The Lost World as much attention as it probably deserves.
I'm no fan of Williams' action stuff past, and including, The Phantom Menace.
"You think they wear those tight-fitting clothes just so some other bride can say 'Gee your hips look succulent'? The good-looking ones know we're looking, they love us to be looking, and god bless 'em, they're carrying the rest of their sex!" - Al Bundy
#8
Posted 18 January 2012 - 03:31 AM
Oh man, Rescuing Sarah is a beast of a song.
I'm afraid that I don't give The Lost World as much attention as it probably deserves.
I'm no fan of Williams' action stuff past, and including, The Phantom Menace.
Why aren't you a fan of it? Just wondering.
#9
Posted 18 January 2012 - 03:38 AM
"You think they wear those tight-fitting clothes just so some other bride can say 'Gee your hips look succulent'? The good-looking ones know we're looking, they love us to be looking, and god bless 'em, they're carrying the rest of their sex!" - Al Bundy
#10
Posted 18 January 2012 - 03:40 AM
It's all over the place.
Agreed. John Williams makes some memorable music. Action music is not one of them.
If you put John Williams in a dryer, you get Jerry Goldsmith! You get the downside version!
#11
Posted 18 January 2012 - 03:48 AM
It's all over the place.
Agreed. John Williams makes some memorable music. Action music is not one of them.
I think that's why I like it. Haha, I just like super complex stuff where I can sit back and think "Wtf."
#12
Posted 18 January 2012 - 03:54 AM
From an emotional point of view, not so much.
"You think they wear those tight-fitting clothes just so some other bride can say 'Gee your hips look succulent'? The good-looking ones know we're looking, they love us to be looking, and god bless 'em, they're carrying the rest of their sex!" - Al Bundy
#13
Posted 18 January 2012 - 03:56 AM
If you put John Williams in a dryer, you get Jerry Goldsmith! You get the downside version!
#14
Posted 18 January 2012 - 04:01 AM
1. Nightwatch/Killer By Night - Johnny Williams and Quincy Jones 2. Diamond Head/Gone with the Wave - Johnny Williams/Lalo Schifrin 3. Mass - Leonard Bernstein 4. Bernstein with the New York Philharmonic - Leonard Bernstein
#15
Posted 18 January 2012 - 04:04 AM
#16
Posted 18 January 2012 - 04:07 AM
1. Nightwatch/Killer By Night - Johnny Williams and Quincy Jones 2. Diamond Head/Gone with the Wave - Johnny Williams/Lalo Schifrin 3. Mass - Leonard Bernstein 4. Bernstein with the New York Philharmonic - Leonard Bernstein
#17
Posted 18 January 2012 - 04:07 AM
John Williams makes some memorable music. Action music is not one of them.
From a technical point of view, it can only be called sheer brilliance.
From an emotional point of view, not so much.
Williams' action cues doesn't have that oomph that gets your adrenaline pumping wildly.
Are you guys talking about modern Williams or in general?
#18
Posted 18 January 2012 - 04:11 AM
Agreed. The only modern Williams action cues that I would label as being "all over the place" are a few from Tintin, and maybe "Grave Robbers" from KotCS.
Even in Tintin, something like Flight to Bagghar could be played in a concert hall
#19
Posted 18 January 2012 - 04:17 AM
1. Nightwatch/Killer By Night - Johnny Williams and Quincy Jones 2. Diamond Head/Gone with the Wave - Johnny Williams/Lalo Schifrin 3. Mass - Leonard Bernstein 4. Bernstein with the New York Philharmonic - Leonard Bernstein
#20
Posted 18 January 2012 - 04:19 AM
Music Muse Reviews: "Escape From Tomorrow by Abel Korzeniowski
#21
Posted 18 January 2012 - 04:47 AM
I think those "all over the place" action cues is what I love most about Williams.
#22
Posted 18 January 2012 - 04:58 AM
Izena duen guztia omen da.
#23
Posted 18 January 2012 - 05:27 AM
Williams' action cues doesn't have that oomph that gets your adrenaline pumping wildly.
It certainly does for me! To me, he is one of the only film composers that creates really unique, complex and interesting underscore and action music. I can sit and listen to some of my favorite action setpieces (Kingdom of the Crystal Skull - Jungle Chase, Phantom Menace - rescuing the queen/ hanger battle etc for example) and it's just really engaging. Some of the stuff makes you wonder what the heck will come next...
I get tired of hearing action music by some other composers that just consists of an ostinato for a really long time with some big brass punches.....or maybe just a cool rhtyhmic layer of percussion.
I like the fact that William's action music is so complex. It dances at times, gets up in your face, moment of silence, mickey-mouses with what's on the screen, always changing and always fun (or at least almost always).
#24
Posted 18 January 2012 - 06:18 AM
Williams' action cues doesn't have that oomph that gets your adrenaline pumping wildly.
It certainly does for me! To me, he is one of the only film composers that creates really unique, complex and interesting underscore and action music. I can sit and listen to some of my favorite action setpieces (Kingdom of the Crystal Skull - Jungle Chase, Phantom Menace - rescuing the queen/ hanger battle etc for example) and it's just really engaging. Some of the stuff makes you wonder what the heck will come next...
I get tired of hearing action music by some other composers that just consists of an ostinato for a really long time with some big brass punches.....or maybe just a cool rhtyhmic layer of percussion.
I like the fact that William's action music is so complex. It dances at times, gets up in your face, moment of silence, mickey-mouses with what's on the screen, always changing and always fun (or at least almost always).
YES!
I love mickey-mousing in action sequences. It shows the composer is really in sync with the film.
With those "ostinato, brass, percussion" pieces, it just seems boring to me (but still sounds "cool").
#25
Posted 18 January 2012 - 06:24 AM
The "all over the place" is great things about it. It's action. Unexpected movement. Excitement. JW tends to nail it, quite frankly, because instead of sounding like a retelling of past action, much of his action music sounds with the surprise of something that is happening right now. It's like... why aren't you running? I have to admit a lot of his music makes me jump around in my room. it's that good.
Ok enough dick sucking for today.
Izena duen guztia omen da.
#26
Posted 18 January 2012 - 08:35 AM
#27
Posted 18 January 2012 - 09:35 AM
Listen to the final 10 minutes of Star Wars, or the final reel of The Empire Strikes Back.....or any of the action cues from Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom....or The Desert Chase, or innumerable other pieces.....if it doesn't have "Oomph" for you, doesn't get your blood pumping, doesn't get your feet shifting....well, there's medication for it but I'd say you're too far gone....
Agreed. "The Asteroid Field" is probably JW's ultimate "action" cue.
Others of note would be: "Adventures On Earth" (a beautifully choreographed piece!), "The Heilcopter Sequence", "Chasing Rockets", "Hyperspace", "To Scarborough", "Slalom On Mount Humol", and "The Mine Car Chase".
#28
Posted 18 January 2012 - 10:26 AM
War of the Worlds:Escape from the City
The Ferry Scene
Intersection Scene
Heaps of action in Star Wars Attack of the Clones & Revenge of the Sith, some cues in Harry Potter POA, Munich (Letter Bombs). Then there is the more "recent" stuff Indiana Jones "Ants" Whirlwind through acadame. Tintin Escape from Karaboudjian, Pursuit of Falcon, and War Horse, no mans land.
#29
Posted 18 January 2012 - 12:44 PM
I get tired of hearing action music by some other composers that just consists of an ostinato for a really long time with some big brass punches.....or maybe just a cool rhtyhmic layer of percussion.
I like the fact that William's action music is so complex. It dances at times, gets up in your face, moment of silence, mickey-mouses with what's on the screen, always changing and always fun (or at least almost always).
The "all over the place" is great things about it. It's action. Unexpected movement. Excitement. JW tends to nail it, quite frankly, because instead of sounding like a retelling of past action, much of his action music sounds with the surprise of something that is happening right now. It's like... why aren't you running? I have to admit a lot of his music makes me jump around in my room. it's that good.
Listen to the final 10 minutes of Star Wars, or the final reel of The Empire Strikes Back.....or any of the action cues from Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom....or The Desert Chase, or innumerable other pieces.....if it doesn't have "Oomph" for you, doesn't get your blood pumping, doesn't get your feet shifting....well, there's medication for it but I'd say you're too far gone....
Agreed. "The Asteroid Field" is probably JW's ultimate "action" cue.
Others of note would be: "Adventures On Earth" (a beautifully choreographed piece!), "The Heilcopter Sequence", "Chasing Rockets", "Hyperspace", "To Scarborough", "Slalom On Mount Humol", and "The Mine Car Chase".
#31
Posted 19 January 2012 - 12:27 AM
Music Muse Reviews: "Escape From Tomorrow by Abel Korzeniowski
#32
Posted 19 January 2012 - 12:46 AM
#33
Posted 19 January 2012 - 12:47 AM
#36
Posted 19 January 2012 - 01:18 AM
That was written by William Ross.
In my opinion, much of Williams' strongest action music comes from his work in the late 70s and early 80s. Scores like Star Wars, Raiders, ESB, and E.T. feature some of the very finest action music ever written. They truly deliver on emotional AND intellectual levels. It's true that his approach to action scoring changed in later years, though I contend that much of his later action cues are still fantastic (especially after you've gotten more familiar with them). The problem with his later action music is that it tends to be a lot denser and more harmonically complex/ambiguous, and less melodic. To put it in less quasi-technical terms, it tends to emphasize the chaos that's happening onscreen, rather than the emotions that the chaos causes. Earlier Williams action cues are still profoundly complex at times, but in a leaner way that accentuates the subjective progression of the characters' and audience's feelings, rather than the objective progression of chaotic events unfolding in the film. (And of course, on a more superficial level, there are some rather stereotyped tools and techniques that Williams has tended to overuse in more recent action music.)
#37
Posted 19 January 2012 - 02:00 AM
That was written by William Ross.
In my opinion, much of Williams' strongest action music comes from his work in the late 70s and early 80s. Scores like Star Wars, Raiders, ESB, and E.T. feature some of the very finest action music ever written. They truly deliver on emotional AND intellectual levels. It's true that his approach to action scoring changed in later years, though I contend that much of his later action cues are still fantastic (especially after you've gotten more familiar with them). The problem with his later action music is that it tends to be a lot denser and more harmonically complex/ambiguous, and less melodic. To put it in less quasi-technical terms, it tends to emphasize the chaos that's happening onscreen, rather than the emotions that the chaos causes. Earlier Williams action cues are still profoundly complex at times, but in a leaner way that accentuates the subjective progression of the characters' and audience's feelings, rather than the objective progression of chaotic events unfolding in the film. (And of course, on a more superficial level, there are some rather stereotyped tools and techniques that Williams has tended to overuse in more recent action music.)
What stereotyped tools and techniques are you referring to?
#38
Posted 19 January 2012 - 02:22 AM
The Phantom Menace
-Droid Fight
-Escape From Naboo
-Darth and Qui-Gon
-The Armies Face Off
-The Battle Begins
-Battleship Destroyed
Attack Of The Clones
-The Jango Fett Fight
-The Spare Canister Caper
-Dooku Vs. Obi-Wan
-Yoda Strikes Back
Revenge Of The Sith
-Boys Into Battle
-Get 'Em, R2!
-The Death Of Dooku
-I Am The Senate
-The Boys Continue
Star Wars (ANH)
-The War
-Here They Come
-The Last Battle
-Use The Force
The Empire Strikes Back
-The Snow Battle
-Luke's First Crash
-The Rebels Escape Again
-The Asteroid Field
-Attack Position
Return Of The Jedi
-Fight In The Dungeon
-Into The Trap
-Fight With The Fighters
-More Duel
Hook
-The Ultimate War
Jurassic Park
-Into The Kitchen
-March Past The Kitchen Utensils
-T-Rex To The Rescue
E.T. The Extra Terrestrial
-The Rescue and Bike Chase
#39
Posted 19 January 2012 - 02:39 AM
I like that they sound so much like they are from the same score, similar ideas on both. The insane timpani in Whomping Willow also goes back to the timpani in Buckbeack's Flight. It all sounds tied together, I mean. Like a story.
Many of JW's works develop this identy for their own in subtle ways. Jurassic Park is one my favourite examples.
Also, something I've been thinking about JW's action music, specially later JW, is that I can't think on music that sounds like it that isn't other JW music. Back then when Star Wars, you could hear the influences, you could hear where the sound came from, in the sense that you could think of similar music. I hear the music above and I feel like Sherlock Holmes trying to analyze Irene Adler: I just see John Williams. I hope I'm not beheaded for saying this, as I still have a lot of music to listen to
I think my favourite action music of his would be the JP scores and Indiana Jones.
Izena duen guztia omen da.
#40
Posted 22 January 2012 - 07:32 PM
Any more awesome action or chase (like his normal playful music) music from Williams?
Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: action, cue, song, score, john, williams, complex, battle of hoth
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