Tag: Film Music

  • Classic Film Scores for Academy Awards Weekend

    Classic Film Scores for Academy Awards Weekend

    We’re heading into Academy Awards weekend. This week on “Picture Perfect” we’ll do our best to get you in the mood, with a baker’s dozen of classic film themes. We’ll hear music from “Gone With the Wind,” “Ben-Hur,” “The Lord of the Rings,” “Out of Africa,” “Exodus,” “Schindler’s List,” “The Adventures of Robin Hood,” “Around the World in 80 Days,” “The Godfather Part II,” “Tom Jones,” “Lawrence of Arabia,” “Titanic” and “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial.”

    The 88th Academy Awards, need I say, will take place on Sunday night.

    Join me this evening at 6:00 ET, with a repeat tomorrow morning at 6; or listen to it later as webcast at wwfm.org. I’ll try to exert my influence to get the sound file posted by Sunday, if you’d like to call up the stream for a little pre-Oscar fun. Last week’s show, devoted to this year’s nominees, has already been posted.

    #AcademyAwards #Oscars #FilmMusic #FilmScores

  • Remembering Jerry Goldsmith Film Music Legend

    Remembering Jerry Goldsmith Film Music Legend

    Poor Jerry Goldsmith. He wrote some of the great film scores of his time, including those for “The Sand Pebbles” (1966), “The Blue Max” (1966), “The Flim-Flam Man” (1967), “Planet of the Apes” (1968), “Patton” (1970), “Papillon” (1973), “Chinatown” (1974), “The Wind and the Lion” (1975), “MacArthur” (1977), “The Boys from Brazil” (1978), “The Great Train Robbery” (1979), “Alien” (1979, butchered in the sound editing), and “Star Trek: The Motion Picture” (1979).

    For television, he wrote for “Dr. Kildare,” “The Twilight Zone,” “Gunsmoke,” “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.” and “The Waltons.”

    By the 1980s, the films began to get weaker. It seemed like Goldsmith was always getting tossed the projects John Williams passed on, or cheap knockoffs of Williams’ successes. By his final decade, he was stuck writing for such garbage as “The Mummy” (1999), “The Haunting” (1999), and “Looney Tunes: Back in Action” (2003). A notable exception was “L.A. Confidential” (1997), but rarely were his later projects up to his talent.

    Goldsmith had a reputation for being able to compose at white heat, so he was frequently called upon to write replacement scores for films like “The River Wild” (1994), “Air Force One” (1997) and “The 13th Warrior” (1999). He composed and recorded the score to “Chinatown,” one of the best of the 1970s, in only ten days.

    Incredibly, he was honored with only a single Academy Award, 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 Zimmer clones of the world.

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

    #JerryGoldsmith


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

    Planet of the Apes:

    Patton:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vdEy4GneZfw

    Chinatown:

    The Wind and the Lion:

    The Omen (perfect for Lent):

    Star Trek: The Motion Picture:

  • Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s Silver Screen Pops

    Princeton Symphony Orchestra’s Silver Screen Pops

    The shrieking violins of “Psycho.” The menacing double-basses of “Jaws.” Both exemplify the lingering power of exceptionally well-suited music and visuals.

    Both will be represented on a concert of the Princeton Symphony Orchestra, which will take place at Princeton University’s Richardson Audition tomorrow night at 8:00. The orchestra’s annual “Saturday Evening POPS!” is a sequel of sorts to last year’s “Silver Screen Salute.”

    The program will include music from classic films like “Ben-Hur” and “Star Wars,” with songs from more recent favorites like “Titanic” and “Frozen.”

    Lucas Richman will conduct. Richman has worked in films for nearly a quarter century. He’ll be joined by Broadway vocalist Jessica Hendy for some classic love songs by George Gershwin and Marvin Hamlisch.

    You can read more about it in my article in today’s Trenton Times:

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2016/02/classical_music_pso_cnso_perfo.html


    PHOTO: The hand of Hendy

  • Korngold Rediscovered Vienna to Hollywood

    Korngold Rediscovered Vienna to Hollywood

    For the first edition of “The Lost Chord” for 2016, we revisit the music of Erich Wolfgang Korngold. Korngold, of course, was one of the great film composers. A two-time Academy Award winner, he provided music for such classics as “Captain Blood,” “The Prince and the Pauper,” “The Adventures of Robin Hood,” “The Sea Hawk” and “Kings Row.”

    But before he settled in Hollywood, Korngold was the toast of Vienna, one of the most lauded of contemporary composers, and the city’s brightest hope for maintaining its fin de siècle supremacy in music.

    Korngold was a child prodigy who had amazed audiences with such works as the ballet-pantomime “Der Schneemann” (or “The Snowman”), composed at the tender age of 11 (first performed at the Vienna Court Opera in the presence of Emperor Franz Josef); his Piano Trio, composed at the age of 13 (given its premiere by Arthur Schnabel and members of the Vienna Philharmonic); and the “Sinfonietta,” a symphony-in-all-but-name, composed at the age of 15 (first conducted by Felix Weingartner, Korngold sharing a box at that performance with an admiring Richard Strauss).

    With the premiere of his opera “Die tote Stadt,” in 1920, at age 23, Korngold’s reputation seemed assured. He wrote a piano concerto for Paul Wittgenstein, undertook a revival of the operettas of Johann Strauss II, and was publicly honored by the president of Austria.

    However, the trajectory of his career took an unexpected turn with the rise of Hitler. To escape the creep of fascism, Korngold embarked on a second career, settling in Hollywood to write film scores for Warner Brothers.

    The first of these was composed at the invitation of famed impresario Max Reinhardt, with whom Korngold had collaborated on the Strauss revivals. Reinhardt was in the process of adapting Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” for the big screen, and he enlisted Korngold to rework Felix Mendelssohn’s famous incidental music.

    In true Korngoldian fashion, the composer went well beyond what was expected, weaving in passages from Mendelssohn’s symphonies and “Songs Without Words,” writing his own connective material, and sprinkling the whole with fairy dust.

    Korngold’s work on “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” led to an exclusive contract at Warner’s, where the composer revolutionized the language of film music, applying the kind of opulence, pageantry and romance characteristic of his operas to silver screen historical dramas and swashbucklers.

    The result was kind of a pop cultural immortality, but to the detriment of his reputation as a serious composer. The center of European musical culture was off-limits, indeed severely limited by Nazi strictures, and the language of musical modernism, as exemplified by the output of his contemporary and compatriot Arnold Schoenberg, made Korngold seem positively old-fashioned. It would be decades before his reputation would recover, and unfortunately by then he was long dead.

    From the same year as his greatest triumph, “Die tote Stadt,” 1920, comes an earlier foray into Shakespeare, written for a stage production of “Much Ado About Nothing.” “Much Ado” contains some of Korngold’s most charming music. A concert suite of some 20 minutes has been in circulation for decades.

    However, what we have for you this evening is the first COMPLETE recording of the score, with spoken dialogue. A 2013 release, on the Toccata Classics label, it features actors and musicians of the University of North Carolina School of the Arts, conducted by John Mauceri.

    I hope you’ll join me for “Much Ado About Korngold,” tonight at 10 ET, with a repeat Wednesday evening at 6; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at wwfm.org.

  • Elmer Bernstein’s Western Film Score Legacy

    Elmer Bernstein’s Western Film Score Legacy

    Elmer Bernstein scored films in just about every genre – from “The Man with the Golden Arm” (1955) to “The Ten Commandments” (1956) to “To Kill a Mockingbird” (1962) to “The Great Escape” (1963) to “Animal House” (1978) to “The Age of Innocence” (1993) to his final project, the Oscar-nominated “Far from Heaven” (2002) – but he had a particular knack for the western.

    His swaggering theme for “The Magnificent Seven” (1960) is just about synonymous with most people’s idea of western adventure. (It also sold a heck of a lot of cigarettes when it was licensed by Marlboro.)

    Not surprisingly, “The Magnificent Seven” put Bernstein much in demand as a western composer, and he wrote scores for many, including most of the films of John Wayne’s final decade. What’s striking is just how much he was able to vary them. His work for “The Comancheros” (1961) is very different from that for “True Grit” (1969), for instance, and “The Shootist” (1976), Wayne’s final film, is different still.

    You’ll be able to sample some of them, when we saddle up for western scores of Elmer Bernstein, on “Picture Perfect” – music for the movies – this Friday evening at 6 ET, with a repeat Saturday morning at 6; or listen to them later on the webcast at wwfm.org.

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