Jerry Goldsmith: Alchemist Extraordinaire

Jerry Goldsmith:  Alchemist Extraordinaire

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20 responses

He was a smith who forged gold from the basest of materials – film music’s alchemist extraordinaire. Once John Williams kickstarted his blockbuster hog, Jerry Goldsmith may have been destined for the side car, but he possessed a refined genius all his own.

Goldsmith was a consummate professional with a rare talent for speed. When Randy Newman was dropped from “Air Force One,” it was Goldsmith who stepped up, writing and recording the music in less than two weeks. He wrote the replacement score for “Chinatown” in ten days.

Unfortunately, not all the films were “Chinatown.” For every “Planet of the Apes,” “Patton,” and “Papillon,” there was “The Mummy” (with Brendan Fraser), “The Haunting” (remake), and “Looney Tunes: Back in Action.”

Williams got “Superman.” Goldsmith got “Supergirl.” Williams got “Raiders of the Lost Ark.” Goldsmith got “King Solomon’s Mines” (with Richard Chamberlain). Williams got “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial.” Goldsmith got “Baby: The Secret of the Lost Legend.”

But even when the movies were terrible, Goldsmith’s music served as a consolation prize. And nothing can take away the classics. He was one of the last of the greats, and he lived through a great era, so we certainly have enough to cherish. He just had the bad fortune to have had more stamina than the movies themselves, which got weaker and weaker and weaker.

The composer himself expressed frustration at his music being drowned out by ever more-elaborate sound effects, which is why his scores tended to become more streamlined – and less memorable – in the ‘90s. He would have lost his mind in these days of laptop editing, when movies can be trimmed and shuffled within an inch of their lives, virtually right up until the day of distribution.

For television, he wrote music for “Dr. Kildare,” “The Twilight Zone,” “Gunsmoke,” “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.,” “The Waltons,” “Room 222,” and “Barnaby Jones.” He was the recipient of five Emmy Awards.

Incredibly, despite EIGHTEEN nominations, he was honored with but a single Oscar, for his influential score to “The Omen” (1976). Goldsmith died in 2004, at the age of 75. If he were to come back today, he would mop the joint with all the Hans Zimmers of this world.

Happy birthday, Jerry Goldsmith. I sure does miss you.

——–

The Man from U.N.C.L.E.:

The Blue Max

Planet of the Apes:

Patton:

Chinatown:

The Wind and the Lion:

The Omen:

The Great Train Robbery

Star Trek: The Motion Picture:

Goldsmith discusses film music, circa 1986

Documentary from 1993

Introducing and conducting his music with the National Philharmonic in 1989

Introducing and conducting his music, and others’, with the BBC Concert Orchestra in 1994

Part 1

Part 2


Comments

20 responses to “Jerry Goldsmith: Alchemist Extraordinaire”

  1. Classic Ross Amico

    From 2023, with added links

  2. Anonymous

    What’s wrong with “The Mummy”?

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Lesley Siedt Roger Ebert: “Look, art this isn’t. Great trash, it isn’t. Good trash, it is.” He liked it better than I did.

      1. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico still, the music is great

    2. Anonymous

      Lesley SiedtBrendan Fraser

      1. Anonymous

        Brennan Morsette hey now…

      2. Anonymous

        Lesley SiedtI kid. I actually liked the Mummy and Looney Tunes for what they were. Blast from the Past too.

  3. Anonymous

    OG. He is in the pantheon of composer titans.

  4. Anonymous

    Ross just saw the Boston Red Sox will be having a John Williams Bobblehead Night

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Patrick Blanco What, no Goldsmith??? 😄

    2. Anonymous

      Patrick Blanco The head bounces to the music from Jaws.

  5. Anonymous

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BIdqq8VQL-E I second your encomium with a huzzah sent up for his minimalist, evocative Lilies of the Field score. A harmonica or two, a bouncing, glissandoing, pizzicato bass, a banjo, some strings, a lone trumpet, and what is that percussion, a fly swatter on a hunk of 2 by 4? One hand clapping? Brilliant, beautiful, crystalline. Amen. His score was one cog in the wheel that turned my feet toward a life of composing. Thank you, Jerry Goldsmith.

  6. Anonymous

    I always found it incredible and baffling that throughout his long and successful career as one of Hollywood’s greatest ever film composers, Jerry Goldsmith received only one single Oscar win. In reality, he should have won just as many as the likes of contemporaries – John Williams, John Barry & Maurice Jarre. For my money, he should have also won for “Patton”, “Papillon”, “Chinatown”, “The Boys From Brazil” & “Star Trek- The Motion Picture”. However, his legacy and status as perhaps the most innovative and creatively versatile American film composer of the past 60 odd years, is assured.

  7. Anonymous

    Loved his score to The Boys From Brazil. The ersatz R. Strauss main theme is absolutely brilliant.

  8. Anonymous

    One of the last of the great masters. Downhill ever since.

  9. Anonymous

    Logan’s Run, Capricorn One, Hoosiers, Under Fire, Explorers, First Blood, Breakheart Pass…

  10. Anonymous

    The greatest.

  11. Anonymous

    His influence on the music of Star Trek went far beyond just The Motion Picture.

  12. Anonymous

    I love Jerry Goldsmith
    I also can’t believe that he only got one Oscar
    The most amazing thing about him was that he come up with the most beautiful scores for even the most obscure films. I am totally in love with his score for “Bad Girls” 1994. It’s a melody that I can’t get out of my head and yet the movie is long as forgotten. 

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