Jump to content

Maestro

Members
  • Posts

    494
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    3

Reputation Activity

  1. Like
    Maestro reacted to Falstaft in NEW book by Frank Lehman - The Skywalker Symphonies: Musical Storytelling in Star Wars   
    Wow, thanks everyone!  Obviously, the most important question to address is how I got those italics. Simple! https://lingojam.com/FacebookFonts 

    As for the timeframe: I have over a year to hand in the finished manuscript, but my goal is to have it completed well before that. It's a big book, and publishing is a very slow process. But everything so far is proceeding as I have forseen...
     
    It's not a guide to the scores really, but something more holistic, with each chapter looking at cues from all three trilogies from some angle: musical referentiality, thematic transformation, concert arrangements, and so on. There will be a ton of music examples (all my own annotated transcriptions as usu.), hopefully presented in an accessible way that draws in people who can't read sheet music. I know notation and music-theory jargon can be intimidating, and I'm hyper-aware of the potential gatekeeping effect it could on an already niche readership. But at the same time, I think we can all agree this music warrants deep and serious analysis! It's a balancing act for sure... 
     
    Alas, I don't have special access to recordings, and can't speak to official expanded album releases, as amazing as they would be! 
     
    Incidentally: I don't see it trumpeted nearly enough on these boards but Chloé Huvet came out with a book on SW music (mainly the OT and PT) a couple years ago that is absolutely brilliant and similarly synthetic in approach. The book is in French, which limits the audience, but it's worth getting your hands on if only for the fantastic music examples and charts.  The amount of insight in her prose is incredible too, and it's been a major source of inspriation to me. 
  2. Like
    Maestro got a reaction from A. A. Ron in Fugues!   
    Now THIS is primo JWFan content!
  3. Haha
    Maestro got a reaction from Brando in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    JWfan has never come up. Maybe one day I'll be brave enough to ask him about it...
  4. Like
    Maestro got a reaction from greenturnedblue in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I'm not going to lie—I was excitedly curious how quickly this news would hit JWFan!
     
    For those who don't know me, I've been writing about film music and interviewing composers (and directors and actors) professionally for the past decade. Besides the many liner notes, I also write articles and create radio stories for mainstream news outlets like the L.A. Times and NPR. I teach a film music history course at USC. And I've been a card-carrying member of this site since 2003.
     
    I won't divulge too much just yet, because it's still a little early, but I was excited to finally make it public that this book is happening. I've been working on it for three years now, and I've interviewed approximately 150 people. The big kahuna, of course, is John Williams. I plan to share the story of how that happened one day, but not yet.

    Thanks for your excitement! I can promise you that there are many things (stories, facts, quotes) in this book you have never heard...
     
    Tim
  5. Like
    Maestro got a reaction from Arnaud2 in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I'm so grateful to you, Thor, and to several other members of this community for help with research, rare recordings and ephemera, and just general kibitzing and commiserating. I fully recognize that I'm living several people's lifelong dream—because it was certainly mine—and I don't take that for granted. Nor could I have done it without help.
     
    It's amazing what joining this forum did for my life and future work those twenty years ago...
  6. Love
    Maestro got a reaction from Arnaud2 in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I'm not going to lie—I was excitedly curious how quickly this news would hit JWFan!
     
    For those who don't know me, I've been writing about film music and interviewing composers (and directors and actors) professionally for the past decade. Besides the many liner notes, I also write articles and create radio stories for mainstream news outlets like the L.A. Times and NPR. I teach a film music history course at USC. And I've been a card-carrying member of this site since 2003.
     
    I won't divulge too much just yet, because it's still a little early, but I was excited to finally make it public that this book is happening. I've been working on it for three years now, and I've interviewed approximately 150 people. The big kahuna, of course, is John Williams. I plan to share the story of how that happened one day, but not yet.

    Thanks for your excitement! I can promise you that there are many things (stories, facts, quotes) in this book you have never heard...
     
    Tim
  7. Like
    Maestro reacted to Ricard in JWFan turns 25!   
    JWFan was born 25 years ago today! 
     
    Hard to imagine back then that the site would still be up and running two and a half decades later, let alone that the Maestro would still be active after having composed nearly thirty more film scores and a similar number of concert works, as well as conducting over 200 concerts including Vienna, Berlin, Milan and Japan!
     
    Dozens of his film scores have received perfect releases during all this time, providing fans with the confidence that many more will come in the future, while maintaining and further enhancing the collective appreciation and admiration for the music we all love and which will remain with us for the rest of our lives.
     
    The analysis and discussion of his work has reached such level of comprehensiveness and detail, that our forums have become an essential reference for fans and scholars, while fomenting the creation of fascinating projects that expand and deepen the study of the Maestro’s oeuvre and contribute to increasing its appreciation by future generations who, without doubt, will continue to ensure that his name is in the place it deserves in the history of music and cinema.
     
    Thank you, Mr. Williams, and thanks to all those who have contributed during this time to make the site such a wonderful place. Here’s to 25 more!
     
    PS. The following quoted post, written for this thread 10 years ago, provides a short summary of the origins of the site:
     
     
     
  8. Like
    Maestro got a reaction from Miguel Andrade in Fugues!   
    Now THIS is primo JWFan content!
  9. Haha
    Maestro got a reaction from igger6 in Fugues!   
    Now THIS is primo JWFan content!
  10. Like
    Maestro got a reaction from Bayesian in Fugues!   
    Now THIS is primo JWFan content!
  11. Like
    Maestro got a reaction from Tallguy in Fugues!   
    Now THIS is primo JWFan content!
  12. Like
    Maestro reacted to Falstaft in Fugues!   
    I've been summoned!
     
    Exact definitions differ between theorists of course, but there is a pretty stable consensus concerning what's genuinely fugal, what's canonical or imitative, and what's just polyphonically busy. For a fugue, it's all about that incremental feeling. One voice introduces the fugue's main idea ("subject") in full, then another comes in repeating it while the first offers a countermelody ("answer"), and so on. Traditionally, these need to be at quite specific tonal levels -- the second either in ("real") or on ("tonal") the key of the dominant.  And back and forth it goes until all seperate contrapuntal strands are introduced, usually 3-4 voices in total. I'm simplifying a lot, though it's worth pointing out that Williams almost never writes fugues by completely by the "book." The key thing is that feeling of accretion, of rising intricacy, of one melodic subject chasing another, 
     
     
    As breathtaking as it is, I'm afraid there's nothing fugal in the Asteroid Field. March of the Resistance's middle section includes definite but quite unconventional fugal exposition that modulates up by fifth three times, from F to D, and doesn't have a consistent countersubject. 
     
    A few years ago I gave a talk on all things neo-Baroque in Williams, which included transcribing all of his fugues, fugatos, and canonic passages. It's a marvelous thing to behold. In any case, my vote is for Black Sunday. 
     

  13. Haha
    Maestro got a reaction from SpotTheDog in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    JWfan has never come up. Maybe one day I'll be brave enough to ask him about it...
  14. Haha
    Maestro got a reaction from SpotTheDog in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    Ha! I have NO memory of posting that, but it's also no surprise. I've been pursuing this (off and on) for about that long...
  15. Love
    Maestro got a reaction from SpotTheDog in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I'm not going to lie—I was excitedly curious how quickly this news would hit JWFan!
     
    For those who don't know me, I've been writing about film music and interviewing composers (and directors and actors) professionally for the past decade. Besides the many liner notes, I also write articles and create radio stories for mainstream news outlets like the L.A. Times and NPR. I teach a film music history course at USC. And I've been a card-carrying member of this site since 2003.
     
    I won't divulge too much just yet, because it's still a little early, but I was excited to finally make it public that this book is happening. I've been working on it for three years now, and I've interviewed approximately 150 people. The big kahuna, of course, is John Williams. I plan to share the story of how that happened one day, but not yet.

    Thanks for your excitement! I can promise you that there are many things (stories, facts, quotes) in this book you have never heard...
     
    Tim
  16. Love
    Maestro got a reaction from Bayesian in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I'm not going to lie—I was excitedly curious how quickly this news would hit JWFan!
     
    For those who don't know me, I've been writing about film music and interviewing composers (and directors and actors) professionally for the past decade. Besides the many liner notes, I also write articles and create radio stories for mainstream news outlets like the L.A. Times and NPR. I teach a film music history course at USC. And I've been a card-carrying member of this site since 2003.
     
    I won't divulge too much just yet, because it's still a little early, but I was excited to finally make it public that this book is happening. I've been working on it for three years now, and I've interviewed approximately 150 people. The big kahuna, of course, is John Williams. I plan to share the story of how that happened one day, but not yet.

    Thanks for your excitement! I can promise you that there are many things (stories, facts, quotes) in this book you have never heard...
     
    Tim
  17. Like
    Maestro reacted to That_Bloke in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    @Maestro just want to add my thanks and appreciation for your work on this project. I'm looking forward to it, and hope the book will not only be hugely successful, but also be available worldwide. 
  18. Like
    Maestro reacted to Tydirium in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I think the title is great.
  19. Surprised
    Maestro got a reaction from Fabulin in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I'm not going to lie—I was excitedly curious how quickly this news would hit JWFan!
     
    For those who don't know me, I've been writing about film music and interviewing composers (and directors and actors) professionally for the past decade. Besides the many liner notes, I also write articles and create radio stories for mainstream news outlets like the L.A. Times and NPR. I teach a film music history course at USC. And I've been a card-carrying member of this site since 2003.
     
    I won't divulge too much just yet, because it's still a little early, but I was excited to finally make it public that this book is happening. I've been working on it for three years now, and I've interviewed approximately 150 people. The big kahuna, of course, is John Williams. I plan to share the story of how that happened one day, but not yet.

    Thanks for your excitement! I can promise you that there are many things (stories, facts, quotes) in this book you have never heard...
     
    Tim
  20. Like
    Maestro got a reaction from Gurkensalat in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I'm not going to lie—I was excitedly curious how quickly this news would hit JWFan!
     
    For those who don't know me, I've been writing about film music and interviewing composers (and directors and actors) professionally for the past decade. Besides the many liner notes, I also write articles and create radio stories for mainstream news outlets like the L.A. Times and NPR. I teach a film music history course at USC. And I've been a card-carrying member of this site since 2003.
     
    I won't divulge too much just yet, because it's still a little early, but I was excited to finally make it public that this book is happening. I've been working on it for three years now, and I've interviewed approximately 150 people. The big kahuna, of course, is John Williams. I plan to share the story of how that happened one day, but not yet.

    Thanks for your excitement! I can promise you that there are many things (stories, facts, quotes) in this book you have never heard...
     
    Tim
  21. Love
    Maestro got a reaction from herunen in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I'm not going to lie—I was excitedly curious how quickly this news would hit JWFan!
     
    For those who don't know me, I've been writing about film music and interviewing composers (and directors and actors) professionally for the past decade. Besides the many liner notes, I also write articles and create radio stories for mainstream news outlets like the L.A. Times and NPR. I teach a film music history course at USC. And I've been a card-carrying member of this site since 2003.
     
    I won't divulge too much just yet, because it's still a little early, but I was excited to finally make it public that this book is happening. I've been working on it for three years now, and I've interviewed approximately 150 people. The big kahuna, of course, is John Williams. I plan to share the story of how that happened one day, but not yet.

    Thanks for your excitement! I can promise you that there are many things (stories, facts, quotes) in this book you have never heard...
     
    Tim
  22. Like
    Maestro got a reaction from fommes in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I'm not going to lie—I was excitedly curious how quickly this news would hit JWFan!
     
    For those who don't know me, I've been writing about film music and interviewing composers (and directors and actors) professionally for the past decade. Besides the many liner notes, I also write articles and create radio stories for mainstream news outlets like the L.A. Times and NPR. I teach a film music history course at USC. And I've been a card-carrying member of this site since 2003.
     
    I won't divulge too much just yet, because it's still a little early, but I was excited to finally make it public that this book is happening. I've been working on it for three years now, and I've interviewed approximately 150 people. The big kahuna, of course, is John Williams. I plan to share the story of how that happened one day, but not yet.

    Thanks for your excitement! I can promise you that there are many things (stories, facts, quotes) in this book you have never heard...
     
    Tim
  23. Love
    Maestro got a reaction from artguy360 in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I'm not going to lie—I was excitedly curious how quickly this news would hit JWFan!
     
    For those who don't know me, I've been writing about film music and interviewing composers (and directors and actors) professionally for the past decade. Besides the many liner notes, I also write articles and create radio stories for mainstream news outlets like the L.A. Times and NPR. I teach a film music history course at USC. And I've been a card-carrying member of this site since 2003.
     
    I won't divulge too much just yet, because it's still a little early, but I was excited to finally make it public that this book is happening. I've been working on it for three years now, and I've interviewed approximately 150 people. The big kahuna, of course, is John Williams. I plan to share the story of how that happened one day, but not yet.

    Thanks for your excitement! I can promise you that there are many things (stories, facts, quotes) in this book you have never heard...
     
    Tim
  24. Like
    Maestro got a reaction from KittBash in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    Ha! I have NO memory of posting that, but it's also no surprise. I've been pursuing this (off and on) for about that long...
  25. Love
    Maestro got a reaction from KittBash in "John Williams in His Adventure on Earth" - Biography by Tim Greiving   
    I'm not going to lie—I was excitedly curious how quickly this news would hit JWFan!
     
    For those who don't know me, I've been writing about film music and interviewing composers (and directors and actors) professionally for the past decade. Besides the many liner notes, I also write articles and create radio stories for mainstream news outlets like the L.A. Times and NPR. I teach a film music history course at USC. And I've been a card-carrying member of this site since 2003.
     
    I won't divulge too much just yet, because it's still a little early, but I was excited to finally make it public that this book is happening. I've been working on it for three years now, and I've interviewed approximately 150 people. The big kahuna, of course, is John Williams. I plan to share the story of how that happened one day, but not yet.

    Thanks for your excitement! I can promise you that there are many things (stories, facts, quotes) in this book you have never heard...
     
    Tim
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Guidelines.