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Larry O

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Posts posted by Larry O

  1. On 28/08/2023 at 10:29 AM, GerateWohl said:

    By the war, anybody else struggling with Mary Winstead as Hera? Somehow for me she doesn't really match the cartoon character. Sabine works quite fine. 

    This is a problem with the show in general: Filoni is neither writing, nor directing, any of these people to act like people. It's bizarre. It's as if in the jump to live-action he decided these vibrant, emotional characters needed to be almost completely desaturated not just in their aesthetic, but in their characterization. This is almost as true-to-the-prequels awkward and amateurish as Kenobi was. 


    That said: Kiner is shining pretty well here, which is not what I was expecting based on most of his previous work, especially on Rebels and that last season of The Clone Wars where his original composing was pure wallpaper and his "inspired by" pieces were remarkable if only for how anemic and clumsy they were as impersonations (Zimmer, Vangelis, Williams, Trapanese, etc). 


    But the score for these first two episodes, while still obviously very ersatz-Johnny, has a lot of really enjoyable moments and melodies in it. 

  2. 2 hours ago, Falstaft (hiatus til TROS) said:

     

    Still, he was a brilliant music critic and hugely influential social theorist; his book on Wagner is especially a tour de force. It's just that no one especially wants to read him any more, most musicologists included...

     

    So what you're saying is he's the Pauline Kael of music criticism

  3. I think we're both on the same wavelength, but I'm actually probably a little more cynical about it - I don't think they were "trying to bring the franchise into a post-modern" whatever because they already did that when they rebooted everything, and then again with Skyfall. I think it's essentially just... for lack of a better term... starfucking. I'm imagining a scenario where they made Fukunaga ditch his composer after he turned in something thoughtful but untidy, and then basically went after the first giant name that popped into their head, and there was no more thought put into it than that. "Bringing the franchise into the modern era" probably didn't even occur to them, or if it did, they're not thinking about how the score would do that for them. The only thing that likely occurred to them is "What's a name we can stick on the credit block that sounds important." 


    Thus: Zimmer. I really do think there's nothing more to it than that. First name conjured, first name accepted. 

  4. 19 hours ago, Edmilson said:

     

    I don't think they were even asked. Of course, Newman probably wouldn't do it anyway (he only did the other two because of his friendship with Sam Mendes), but if they had asked Arnold, I'm sure he would have accepted. Why he wouldn't make a comeback to his favorite franchise, to work on British TV?

     

    I guess that the Broccolis saw the success of Fallout in 2018, and decided they wanted that their new Bond would be similar, so they wanted the kind of score Balfe did for Fallout.

     

    Also, they probably have thought that Arnold's Bond music was too orchestral, too traditional, too old fashioned, and for NTTD they want a new Bond - more modern, edgier, connected, adapted to the world we live in, etc. They want an update. And who better to provide a more recognizable Bond for young people than Zimmer himself?

     

    Arnold definitely wasn't asked, I believe he's said as much since this announcement. And it'd be weird for them to think Arnold is too old fashioned, wasn't he the reason the Propellerheads ended up contributing to a Bond score in the late 90s? Arnold is fairly adventurous for a composer, and I'd imagine he's certainly better at incorporating new influences into the score while still anchoring it to classic sounds than Zimmer/Wallfisch. Their score for Blade Runner 2049 isn't bad really, but it's also not doing much? It's just a lot of swelling chords and droning, buzzing crescendoes, with the one overt melodic reference to the old score. It works as like a La Croix'd reminder of what Vangelis had done, a hint of the flavor but none of the real taste. I'm afraid that's basically what we're going to get with this, too. Something that splits the difference between Newman's scores, Zimmer's sound, with probably one or two big statements of the Bond Theme and that's it. 


    Powell would have done this right. Giacchino probably would have done a pretty good job as well, considering he's knocked out two Barry homages already on The Incredibles. But I get the feeling the producers didn't put any more thought into it than "Can we get Zimmer, let's get Zimmer." Arnold probably wasn't asked because it likely never occurred to anyone to ask anyone BUT Zimmer. 

     

    re: TRON Legacy - IIRC that score was mostly Joseph Trapanese taking a couple Daft Punk ideas and doing all the orchestration and arranging. Zimmer had nothing to do with it. But Daft Punk didn't have as much to do with it as it's commonly believed, either. I might have that wrong, though.

  5. If it had been Powell, I'd have gotten a little excited. I knew it'd be someone from Remote Control, but I was hoping it wouldn't be Zimmer/Wallfisch, who it'll probably end up being - which will make it the second time they've come in late to knock out the score to a big-budget sequel by a unique director - who unfortunately capitulated to the producer's requests to reject their preferred composer. Filmmaking is all about compromise, scoring isn't immune to that, but it's disappointing to see it happen like this.


    So now Romer's work on this movie goes on the shelf next to Johansson's work on Blade Runner 2049 - works I'm immensely curious to hear and possibly discover for my own self what about them was so "off" that the only course of action was to get Zimmer/Wallfisch to do familiar riffs on canonized pieces. 

  6. I understand why someone might think it's botched if you're looking at it from a POV where soundtrack albums are meant to have as close to all the newly composed music for the movie as possible, or alternately, that it's supposed to have a collection of all the film's "big moments" represented. But if you're not looking at it from that POV, I also understand looking at it as a good album. I also consider it a good album on its own, I think the music placed on it is good, the listening of going front to back on it is a very fulfilling, entertaining experience. Not that you'd need support from other people's opinions to validate your own, but if you wanted to, you could probably go through the OST thread when the album first leaked and watch people here come to that same conclusion upon their first or second listen, in real time. 

    Despite the fact there's a lot of missing music from what's in the film (as well as a lot of tracked music and a very weirdly "remixed" version of Darth Vader's Death I'm not looking forward to re-encountering when this hits home video) I think not only is the album still the best presentation of the Sequel Trilogy, but some of his strongest work in a very long time. 

     

    I'm not AS down on the prospects for an expanded release as others are, but my current hopes are that the response to The Last Jedi's isolated score (the fact there was a response at all was honestly surprising in and of itself) means Disney recognizes what an important feature this might be in selling their big boxset coming in a couple months. 

  7. 4 hours ago, Jay said:

    As for the Darth Vader's Death music when Rey was poking around the Death Star 2, I thought it worked really well, and from one viewing I couldn't tell if it was tracked or a new recording

    For my first viewing, I found it was very weirdly edited together. Jarringly so. And not just because of how it got rearranged (or remixed, I guess) but thematically it doesn't even work for the scene it was scoring. Heck, Darth Vader didn't even die in that room. The sense of displacement was pretty strong thanks solely to that music editing. I can't imagine there wasn't something Williams had already written that wouldn't have worked better. Or no music at all. 

  8. ...I'm not trying to blame him for anything. I'm explaining why people are asking for it. It's not just "trailer music idiots" - people who enjoy the scores and were following score news had reason (however misguided/misunderstood it might have been) to wonder if it was present based on the interviews. That's not Don's fault. It's not anybody's fault, really. 

  9. Whether that's what he meant or not, it was taken to mean Duel of the Fates as well. It's not just a matter of "trailer music on my soundtrack where is it" but people honestly hoping that when Don said something about major themes all getting their opportunity to appear in this score, that it meant Duel of the Fates too. 

  10. 5 hours ago, Arpy said:

    Already comments asking where Duel of the Fates is. 

     

    I can't stand this current craze of idiots expecting trailer music to be on these albums! No, just because something's used in a trailer does not mean it's going to be in the film...

     

     

    I don't think it's so much because people are expecting "trailer music" - Don Williams made mention of that theme appearing in the score during an interview a few months ago. Or seemed to make mention of it.

  11. I don't believe Duel of the Fates is on the score anywhere. I haven't seen it mentioned by anyone who has seen the movie, so far. 

     

    Still very curious about whether Farewell and Reunion are flip-flopped on the soundtrack compared to how they play in the movie, or whether reunion is in the movie proper at all.

     

    I've also heard that the Main Title as we heard it in the Finale is actually IN the movie proper at a key moment? Anyone who has seen the movie - is that correct? 

  12. 1 hour ago, Jay said:

    Huh, I would have guessed The Speeder Chase was AFTER In The Desert, not before it

     

    Destiny of a Jedi sounds like it could be multiple cues in one track, not sure

     

    That seems likely for They Will Come

    I initially thought Speeder Chase would come after "In the Desert" and before "A Prisoner" but chronologically, knowing what the Chase scores, I'm PRETTY sure that (plot leak spoilers follow) 

    Spoiler

    "In the Desert" is either scoring Rey confronting Kylo in the desert or all of them confronting the worm, and "A Prisoner" is probably scoring Chewie's capture and Rey's failed attempt to stop it. So the Chase has to go before that. 

     

    Which is also why I'm putting They Will Come before Destiny of a Jedi, because (plot leak spoilers again) 

    Spoiler

    The decision to take THAT Yoda cue from Empire Strikes Back probably isn't random. 

     

    But again, just a guess right now. But that'd probaly put my tracklisting at:

     

    01 - Fanfare and Prologue
    02 - Journey to Exegol
    03 - Falcon Flight
    04 - We Go Together
    05 - The Speeder Chase
    06 - In the Desert
    07 - A Prisoner
    08 - To Kijimi
    09 - Fleeing from Kijimi
    10 - Hallway Shooting
    11 - Hard to Get Rid Of
    12 - Join Me
    13 - The Old Death Star
    14 - The Final Saber Duel
    15 - They Will Come
    16 - The Destiny of a Jedi
    17 - Battle of the Resistance
    18 - Approaching the Throne
    19 - Parents
    20 - The Force is With You
    21 - Farewell

    22 - Reunion
    23 - A New Home
    24 - Finale
    25 - Anthem of Evil (Concert Suite)
    26 - The Rise of Skywalker (Concert Suite) 

  13. I think "Destiny of a Jedi" is just before "Battle of the Resistance" 

    "The Speeder Chase" is probably just before "In the Desert" 

    Just guessing but I think "They Will Come" is just before Battle of the Resistance? 


    They Will Come

    Destiny of a Jedi

    Battle of the Resistance


    Might be the order. I'm going based off the plot leak and the marketing, plus the musical content itself hinting at what characters are where. 

  14. This might be useful as well, from Pawel P's post from the Complete Score as Heard in the Film thread:

     

    Quote

     

    End Credits, if I remember correctly, consist of::

    - traditional fanfare

    - one of the new epic themes,

    - Imperial March,

    - second of the new epic themes,

    - Rey,

    - something slower and climatic, also new

    - new action theme 

    - Rebel Fanfare

    - traditional ending from New Hope.

     

     

    The film's end credits are 9:25 long. The OST end credits more or less follow Pawel's guidelines there, but are 10:20 (once you subtract the Force Theme lead-in). 

     

    0:00-0:32 - Force Theme (I believe this is either the same performance, or same orchestration, as the Last Jedi's end credits transition)

    0:32-1:19 - Fanfare & transition

    1:19-2:08 - We Go Together

    2:08-3:25 - Anthem of Evil

    3:25-4:52 - Imperial March

    4:52-6:09 - Rey's Theme

    6:09-7:32 - Rise of Skywalker

    7:32-10:51 - Main Title (edit of '77 OST arrangement)

     

    At first I thought just pulling out the Anthem of Evil section would essentially replicate Pawel's memory of what he heard, but that's too short. Also, I don't think Reunion could go in here anywhere, because Reunion contains too many very recognizable themes for them to have gone unlisted. But now I'm wondering if maybe Anthem of Evil is pulled out (the transition from that New Theme to Imperial March works with a really simple crossfade) and Speeder Chase is tracked in between Rey's Theme and Rise of Skywalker? 


    (This is all sort of academic, we'll know exactly what it is in two days :)

  15. 7 minutes ago, aviazn said:

    Aha! I think the reason the Finale is a mess is because it has alternate concert endings, like the TFA Signature Edition suite. At 7:33 in Finale, at the end of the Rise of Skywalker theme, just before it it breaks into the Main Title and Throne Room, you can make a clean edit into 3:27 of The Rise of Skywalker OST track. That gives you the lovely ending of that track as the end of the entire album, which is just perfect. It matches the soft statements of Rey's theme in the TFA Finale OST ending (and the TLJ Finale ending) in instrumentation and thematically—Rey's theme is transformed into the Rise of Skywalker theme.

     

    I'm guessing the Main Title and Throne Room section is there is so that he can play that ending in concerts and not have to repeat the Star Wars Main Title suite as a separate piece, which gives audiences a double dose of the beginning of the end credits. That was a weird programming issue when he debuted the TFA suite with the Boston Pops—you got the rolling thunder section of the end credits in both the Star Wars Main Title piece and the Jedi Steps and Finale.

     

    I'm also wondering if you can replace the Anthem of Evil piece by starting Reunion at 2:06, and just transitioning naturally into Imperial March at the end of Yoda's bit there as it did on the ESB soundtrack. 

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