Tag: Film Music

  • Sci-Fi Heroes Postponed Tune in to Film Music

    The heroes are on hold!

    Due to forces beyond our control (groundhogs munching on the power cables?), Roy and I regret to have to postpone our parallel countdown of favorite “Heroes of Sci-Fi.”

    However, that frees up your evening so that you can enjoy music from semi-documentaries on my film music show, “Picture Perfect,” courtesy of composers Aaron Copland (“The Cummington Story”), Virgil Thomson (the Pulitzer Prize winning “Louisiana Story”), Ulysses Kay (“The Quiet One”), and Morton Gould (“Windjammer”). I’ll be jamming on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon, tonight at 8:00 EST/5:00 PST.

    Stream it here:

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

    Then keep watching the skies for a make-up date for Roy’s Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner. We can’t wait to compare our lists of sci-fi and fantasy heroes and to read and share your comments. It’s guaranteed to be an “off” night, whenever it is! In the meantime, have a relaxing evening, and thank you for your understanding!

  • Carl Davis A Titan of Film Music Passes

    Carl Davis A Titan of Film Music Passes

    The sound of silents is dead.

    In addition to providing original music for countless silent classics, which he often conducted live with screenings of the films, and frequently recorded, Carl Davis wrote music for the television series “The World at War,” “Pride and Prejudice” (with Jennifer Ehle and Colin Firth), and countless others.

    Among his scores for contemporary film were those for “The French Lieutenant’s Woman” (with Meryl Streep and Jeremy Irons), which was honored with a BAFTA for Best Film Music, Ken Russell’s adaptation of D.H. Lawrence’s “The Rainbow,” and Roger Corman’s “Frankenstein Unbound.” Surely, his most ambitious undertaking on behalf of the silents was his work on a restoration of Abel Gance’s epic “Napoleon,” for which he composed and arranged nearly five hours of music.

    He assisted Paul McCartney in the composition of the “Liverpool Oratorio.” He also wrote orchestral concert works and music for the ballet.

    Though he made Britain his home since 1961, Davis was actually born in Brooklyn. He attended Bard College, where he studied composition with Paul Nordoff. He also studied with Hugo Kauder and later with Per Nørgard. Early on, he obtained valuable conducting experience with organizations such as the New York City Opera and the Robert Shaw Chorale. In 1959, his revue “Diversions” won an off-Broadway award.

    He traveled to the Edinburgh Festival in 1961. His success there led to an invitation to compose music for the BBC satirical series “That Was the Week That Was.” Other TV and radio commissions followed, and Davis made a healthy living for himself in the U.K. He enjoyed a close relationship with the London Philharmonic Orchestra, among others.

    At the time of his death, he was 86 years old.

    By coincidence, Carl Davis will conduct music by Charlie Chaplin for “Modern Times” on my syndicated film music show, “Picture Perfect,” tomorrow on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon. Stream it on the East Coast this Friday at 8:00 PM EDT (5:00 PDT).

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

    R.I.P. Carl Davis.


    “The World at War”

    “Pride and Prejudice” (with Melvyn Tan on the fortepiano)

    On composing the score to “The French Lieutenant’s Woman”

    “Napoleon”

    Collaborating with Paul McCartney on “Liverpool Oratorio”

    “Liverpool Oratorio” (complete)

    An interview with Carl Davis

  • John Williams’ Genius Beyond the Screen

    I’m a little late in sharing this – the article ran yesterday – but I couldn’t agree more with the premise. Anyone who sneers at John Williams’ indelible themes doesn’t understand the full extent of his artistry, and those who continue to approach film music as mere grist for pops concerts (especially in “pops” arrangements) is doing film music at its best a serious disservice. I wish someone would have the guts to present extended passages from these scores without the images, so that listeners can appreciate more fully what the composer has achieved. Yeah, they’re not symphonies, but it takes a special kind of talent to make this type of music work as often as John Williams has. If there’s anyone else alive that can maintain this balancing act between the dramatically appropriate and musically satisfying as well as he does, I don’t know of it.

    The article is written by Frank Lehman, Associate Professor of Music at Tufts University. It’s refreshing to see an appreciation piece written by someone who understands the inner workings of the music and can actually express himself in musical terms. Too often, these kinds of articles are written by well-meaning fans, who don’t really possess a larger perspective or the necessary tools to communicate musically. Not to trash the fans. Williams is who he is he is, in large part, because of them. But if his music is to be taken seriously, we need people like Lehman.

    The article is interactive, with plenty of film and sound clips to illustrate the writer’s points. I wouldn’t want all newspaper articles to be done like this, but for a music piece, especially one about how music works with the movies, this was very well done. Great job, and a fun read, @[100059174186752:2048:The New York Times]!

  • Mahler in Hollywood Ken Russell’s Biopic

    Mahler in Hollywood Ken Russell’s Biopic

    If you ever thought Mahler sounds an awful lot like film music, well, a lot of composers of Hollywood’s Golden Age – Max Steiner and Erich Wolfgang Korngold spring to mind – were forged in Mahler’s Vienna. They shared his sensibility, to some extent, and boiled it down into a pop cultural gulasch when they settled in Hollywood.

    Ken Russell’s “Mahler” (1974) goes one step further in marrying Mahler’s actual music to the director’s poetic fancies and metaphorical musings about the composer and his life. So don’t look at it as strict biography, though there are certainly truths to be divined from it.

    Next to some of Russell’s other composer biopics (“Lisztomania,” for example), this one is positively restrained by comparison. Still, Russell being Russell, he couldn’t help but interpolate a Nazi dominatrix – presented as a silent movie parody, no less.

    Happy birthday (?), Gustav Mahler!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PGq7TFoxB4E

    Watch for Oliver Reed in a brief cameo as a train conductor. Allegedly, his payment was three bottles of Dom Perignon.

  • Kurosawa’s Cinematic Music: A Samurai Soundscape

    Kurosawa’s Cinematic Music: A Samurai Soundscape

    Any classical music station that would drop “Picture Perfect” must be dull as a blunt katana. Fortunately, those of us who care about the preservation and dissemination of classic film music can stay sharp with a playlist drawn from the films of Akira Kurosawa this week on KWAX.

    “Seven Samurai” (1954) is a three-and-a-half-hour epic on a deceptively simple premise: a ragtag company of ronin is assembled to defend a farmers’ village against marauding brigands. Of course, that capsule synopsis doesn’t begin to hint at what a marvelous achievement it really is. “Seven Samurai” is regularly included on short lists of the greatest films of all time. It was remade in the United States as “The Magnificent Seven.” And though “The Magnificent Seven” enjoys great popularity, a terrific cast, and an unforgettable score, it stands only knee-high to the original, with music by Fumio Hayazaka.

    “Seven Samurai” may have been Kurosawa’s first, full-out samurai film, but it was not his first crack at jidaigeki (literally “period drama”). Already, a samurai features as one of the characters in his earlier, international break-out hit, “Rashomon” (1950). In this instance, the discovery of a murdered samurai leads to a series of courtroom-style examinations, during which everyone present at the killing gives his or her own account of what transpired – including (through a medium) the murdered man himself! The conflicting testimonies reveal the slippery subjectivity of what we ordinarily accept as “truth.” The film, the first from Japan to receive wide exposure abroad, had such an impact that the term “Rashomon effect” entered the English language.

    Kurosawa had great respect not only for American movies, but also Western classical music. This led him, on occasion, to request of his composers that they emulate certain well-known pieces. In the case of “Rashomon,” Hayazaka was encouraged, during one of the segments, to channel Ravel’s “Bolero.” “Rashomon” was remade as, among other things, “The Outrage,” a middling western starring Paul Newman.

    Masura Sato sought out Hayazaka as a teacher on the merits of his music for “Rashomon.” Following his master’s early death from tuberculosis at the age of 41, Sato stepped in to fill the void and became Kurosawa’s new composer of choice. Sato would score eight of Kurosawa’s films (his first, a completion of Hayazaka’s score for “Record of a Living Being”). He too could be called upon to conjure the spirit of Western composers, with the ghost of Verdi hovering over “Throne of Blood,” Haydn and Brahms coloring “Red Beard,” and in the case of “Yojimbo” (1961), Franz Liszt lending attitude to masterless samurai Mifune, who wanders into a remote town and sets about playing two rival families off one another to his own profit.

    “Yojimbo” provided the basis for the first of Sergio Leone’s spaghetti westerns, “A Fistful of Dollars.” What’s interesting about that is not only Leone’s scene-by-scene reliance on the original, but also Leone’s composer, Ennio Morricone, emulating Sato’s goofy juxtapositions and funky orchestrations. Kurosawa himself was inspired by the western tropes of John Ford movies and the pulp fiction of Dashiell Hammett.

    As a bonus, we’ll hear just a little music from one of my least favorite Kurosawa films (beside “Rhapsody in August”), “Dodes’kaden” (1970). “Dodes’kaden” marked a break with Kurosawa’s classic style. For one thing, it was his first film shot in color – truly lurid Technicolor – and the first made after his break with Mifune. The title can be translated, roughly, as “clickety-clack,” the sound of an imaginary trolley car in the fantasy world of a mentally-challenged boy who literally lives in a dump. Though it earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Foreign Film, its commercial failure drove Kurosawa into a deep depression, even to the point of attempted suicide.

    For as much as I personally dislike the film, the composer of its soundtrack, Toru Takemitsu is regarded as one of Japan’s most important classical concert composers. Interestingly, like Sato, Takemitsu was a protégé of Kurosawa’s friend and frequent colleague, Fumio Hayazaka.

    If your local classical music station is low on local programming, we’ll keep you runnin’ on ronin, in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon.

    See below for streaming information.


    Keep in mind, KWAX is on the West Coast, so there’s a three-hour difference for the Trenton-Princeton area. Here are the respective air-times of my recorded shows (with East Coast conversions in parentheses):

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday on KWAX at 5:00 PACIFIC TIME (8:00 PM EDT)

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday on KWAX at 4:00 PACIFIC TIME (7:00 PM EDT)

    Stream them here!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

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Aaron Copland (92) Beethoven (95) Composer (114) Film Music (123) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (187) KWAX (229) Leonard Bernstein (101) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (138) Opera (202) Philadelphia Orchestra (89) Picture Perfect (174) Princeton Symphony Orchestra (106) Radio (87) Ralph Vaughan Williams (85) Ross Amico (244) Roy's Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner (290) The Classical Network (101) The Lost Chord (268) Vaughan Williams (103) WPRB (396) WWFM (881)

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