Tag: Altered States

  • Corigliano’s “Altered States” Dream

    Corigliano’s “Altered States” Dream

    “Altered States,” you may recall, stars William Hurt as a psychopathologist whose experiments with sensory deprivation tanks and hallucinatory drugs result in strobe-lit episodes of biological devolution. Mr. Hyde has nothing on these regressions that have him turning into an ape man on the prowl for goat meat at the city zoo, or at their most extreme, transforming into a kind of whirlpooling proto-consciousness.

    Nudity and religious symbolism? Well, it is a Ken Russell film, and one of his best, actually, because it’s actually rooted in character and plot. (The screenplay is by Paddy Chayefsky.)

    Russell later recalled, “After a tiring day at the Burbank Studios working on ‘Altered States’ I was out for an evening of relaxation with a much loved and familiar masterpiece the memory of which was blown into oblivion by the music of a name totally unfamiliar to me – John Corigliano. Reading from my program that he was a contemporary composer I braced myself for thirty minutes of plinks and plunks that pass for music these days. I was in for a shock, a surprise, a revelation.

    “Not since Bartok’s ‘Miraculous Mandarin’ have I been so excited in the concert hall. Here were sounds of magic and grandeur I had long since despaired of hearing from a modern musician. . . . if only he would compose the music for ‘Altered States’ instead of some commercial hack we directors are usually saddled with, I thought wistfully. But that’s just a dream.

    “I should have known better – Hollywood is the place where dreams come true.”

    The music he encountered on that Los Angeles Philharmonic concert? Corigliano’s Clarinet Concerto.

    Corigliano composed his concerto for legendary New York Philharmonic principal clarinetist Stanley Drucker. The first movement, “Cadenzas,” is virtuosic right out of the box. When Drucker first looked at the score, he remarked, “How am I gonna play this?” The second movement, the soul of the piece, serves as an elegy to the memory of Corigliano’s father, longtime concertmaster of the Philharmonic, who died in 1975. The third movement evocates the antiphonal style of Renaissance composer Giovanni Gabrieli.

    The work was given its first performance by Drucker and the New York Philharmonic, conducted by Leonard Bernstein, on December 6, 1977. It became the first concerto for the instrument by an American composer since Aaron Copland’s Clarinet Concerto to enter the repertoire.

    Russell was so impressed with the piece when he heard it in Los Angeles that he offered Corigliano his first assignment scoring a feature film. (Earlier, he had written music for a documentary, “A Williamsburg Sampler.”) His music for “Altered States” would earn him an Academy Award nomination.

    In the film, Corigliano’s score brilliantly complements Russell’s psychedelic flights of fancy. It’s not hard to understand why the composer caught the Academy’s attention. Ultimately, the Oscar that year went to “Fame,” of all things, but Corigliano revisited his score for a concert suite which he titled “Three Hallucinations.”

    Later, he would win an Academy Award for his work on “The Red Violin.” He would also be honored with a Pulitzer Prize, for his Symphony No. 2, five Grammys, and a Grawemeyer Award for Contemporary Composition. His first opera, “The Ghosts of Versailles,” would be commissioned by the Metropolitan Opera for its 100th anniversary.

    Even so, Hollywood can be a fickle town. He may have won an Oscar, but that didn’t shield him from the indignity of having his score for the Mel Gibson film “Edge of Darkness” chucked out. The studio decided it wanted to take a more bankable approach, and because of his obligations in the concert world, Corigliano was not available for rewrites. So the assignment was given to Howard Shore. Rejection stings, yet Corigliano has stated he remains open to the prospect of scoring another film, if the right project should present itself.

    But the movies need John Corigliano more than he needs them.

    The composer is 85 today. Happy birthday!


    World premiere broadcast of the Clarinet Concerto

    Selections from “Altered States”

    “Three Hallucinations”

  • Altered States, William Hurt, and Existential Dread

    Altered States, William Hurt, and Existential Dread

    As one of our viewers wryly observed last night: “Showed up for a discussion about ‘Altered States’ and ended up hearing how Ross and Roy spent their youth getting into R-rated movies.”

    Fair enough. The digressions were front-loaded and thick on the ground.

    But we also talked a bit about the nature of existence, too. If there is a God, I’m pretty sure He’s not some bearded Michelangelo sitting on a cloud. From the evidence of Paddy Chayefsky’s screenplay, the Universe is a pretty cold place and whatever comfort exists is in the here and now. So be thankful for the love you’ve got. And don’t do too many ‘shrooms.

    The chill of the Universe is nothing next to the tension that existed onset between Chayefsky and director Ken Russell. There’s plenty of hard fact amidst the dime store philosophizing on last night’s show, a tribute to the late William Hurt, now archived at the link.

    I can’t say it will expand your consciousness, but there’s every possibility you could regress.

    Next week, we’ll observe the 91st birthday of William Shatner, with a discussion of one of his immortal screen classics, “Kingdom of the Spiders” (1977). The Shat demonstrates his incredible versatility, going from starship captain to Southwestern veterinarian, in a town besieged by crazed tarantulas. The comments section will be devoid of arachnophobes, on the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. Roy and I will have the best legs in the room, when we livestream on Facebook, Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner


    PHOTO: Hurts, don’t it? Maybe Edvard Munch was right.

  • Altered States William Hurt Float Tank Friday

    Altered States William Hurt Float Tank Friday

    It’s time to fortify the flotation tank with Espom salt and boil up the magic mushrooms, as tomorrow night we’ll salute the late William Hurt, with a discussion about his breakout role as Dr. Edward Jessup, the navel-gazing, commitment-phobic scientist at the center of the psychic maelstrom in Ken Russell’s “Altered States” (1980).

    Paddy Chayefsky’s jargon-heavy screenplay is lent verisimilitude by Howard Hawks-style overlapping dialogue, and punched up by mind-bending hallucinations steeped in religious symbolism, apocalyptic sexuality, and Kubrick-worthy Rorschach revelation. Future Pulitzer Prize winner John Corigliano provides the eerie underscore, with tender interludes for the scenes between Hurt and Blair Brown.

    Is it a horror movie or a relationship parable? The evolution of man or the evolution of self? Paradise lost or paradise found? In the quest for meaning, even to the origins of life, perhaps the most transformative answers are closer than we think.

    The role of Jekyllesque Dr. Jessup fits Hurt like a surgical glove. It’s easy to see why he became one of the most interesting leading men of the 1980s.

    Back in those days, whenever they couldn’t get Jeff Goldblum for the quirky scientific sidekick, they usually turned to Bob Balaban. Charles Haid brings just the right mix of skepticism and comic relief as Jessup’s skeptical colleague.

    Complete sensory deprivation is guaranteed, when you join us for the next Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. The regression will be evident in the comments section, when everyone goes ape, as we livestream on Facebook, this Friday evening at 7:00 EDT!

    https://www.facebook.com/roystiedyescificorner

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