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David Coscina

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Posts posted by David Coscina

  1. I haven't counted much from 2000 on just because....I would have nominated Yared's TROY but I wanted to stay with official soundtrack releases.

    Most of the above, I love. Agnes of God has got some beautiful, moving pieces on it and I think is Delerue's finest achievement. Same with poledouris' Conan. But Prokofiev beats 'em all in the end.

    I'm sorry for exclusing Rosza, Newman (Alfred), and Tiomken along with North but I haven't heard enough of their output to nominated a specific score. Maybe I should have included Ben Hur....

  2. thardevenport, I'm in the same boat this week. The only difference is that I'm doing an analysis on a specific score so I do have particular questions pertaining to said score that I can ask the composer. But it's my first time speaking with a fairly well known composer so I'm a little shall we say nervous.

  3. Okay, here are some more choices for the '90's. I probably missed a couple but these ones come to the forefront of my mind. Magnolia qualifies as an urban epic. I chose Mulan by Goldsmith. Even though it isn't overly long, the scoring of the picture sounded big and epic and there is a big battle scene...and I just felt like putting Jerry in there.

  4. You do need a soundcard that has the WMF drivers or else you run into hideous latency (meaning if you hit a key on your MIDI keyboard, the sound plays a second later which is completely useless if you're doing realtime recording). M-Audio has decent yet inexpensive PCI sound cards. They are your best bet since USB external cards can be dicey with audio streaming. Firewire ones seem to be pretty solid mind you.

  5. I personally do not think williams would have been able to really clinch it the way Shore did, his music is a 100% match to the films.

    No disrespect to Shore, but I think Williams would have written fewer whole notes. After a while, it just turns me off. Mind you, Shore did get more contrapuntal for Return of the King.

    I like Shore's music, especially parts of the first score, but I don't think it's the brilliant masterpiece in film score history that it's been made out to be.

  6. Here are Lucas' liner notes from the Japanese CD release:

    John and I have been through a lot of terrain over the course of 6 films and the better part of 3 decades. The music he's created is some of the finest this planet has heard. I've been blessed with the good fortune of having John bail me out of tough spots in the first three films in particular. I confess that there's a little rust on my directorial skills and Johnny is the man whose music touch has buffed that rust to dust. I shudder when I think of the scenes with Jake Loydd without his wonderful and stoic music, or Jar Jar Binks' complete innane dialogue before John got to it and somewhat drowned it out with his score. I thank John not only for his friendship but his utter professionlism and, thankfully, his never ending patience that prevented him from being bludgeoning me to death by one of those large brass instruments in the orchestra.

    George Lucas, 2004

    Here are Williams' sentiments

    Thank the heavens that I am no longer obligated to score this ridiculous franchise any longer. What started out as an honourable, fun spectacle, turned into a massive marketing ploy that duped so many people into believing it was a bonified cinematic gem. What was I thinking? Now it's over and I can finally spend time writing more concert works, taking quiet walks, see my grandchildren, and get back on track scoring films that will have some moral resonance years from now

    John Williams, 2004

    Funny enough, Williams mixed up his liner notes with a letter to a close friend (maybe SPielberg) and thus the CD company printed said comments indescriminantly. I guess we now all know how he really feels about Star Wars.

  7. Is it signed by Williams? Man you could get millions on ebay for it!

    Did you know that Meco has been asked to do a disco version of the entire 6 installments in a single 240 minute cut? Engineers are wondering how the heck they can transfer such a piece onto CD format. There are no breaks in the music because of the disco backbeat. What's really cool is that Meco is doing a bossa nova version of Boba Fett's theme. And he's hired ex-Tangerine Dreamer Christophe Franke to supervise the orchestral parts. Originally he wanted Don Davis but Davis wanted a co-composing credit on the album.

  8. Use the force Luke

    Force yourself.

    Neil

    Hey that's not nice Neil. My comment to Luke was merely to continue using his imagination on this post, nothing disparaging at all.

    On a separate note, I wish I got the European CD to Episode 3. Sounds like some interesting banter in the commentary track. Maybe I'll order it from Amazon.UK. :mrgreen:

    Or perhaps Williams will get Ian McKellan to provide a throaty narration amidst the tracks in the same fashion as Angela's Ashes a few years back. I could picture hearing McKellan soundbytes in between these amazing tracks.

  9. True. I personaly am liking Yared more and more by the minute. I met Anthony Mighella last Friday and had a little chat, and just his words about Yared made me gain so much admiration for him.

    I'm not at all surprised. Yared is a very generous, humble person. He speaks of his abilities as a gift and has no ego at all. It makes sense that he'd be such good friends Mighella.

    And yes Stefan, I agree that most on the FSM board are complimentry of Yared's music. And justly so- he's a very talented composer.

  10. Did anyone catch the Wookie Chorus that Williams had flown in to punctuate Chewie's theme? Talk about quarter tones from hell! I do know that Snoop Dog has sampled a section of that for his new CD entitled Gangsta Wookie Style. I think Snoop is filing to change his name to Wook Dog. Man, you gotta love the artistry of these guys...at least with their names.

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