Tag: Miklos Rozsa

  • Miklós Rózsa A Golden Age Film Score Genius

    Miklós Rózsa A Golden Age Film Score Genius

    Happy birthday, Miklós Rózsa (1907-1995)!

    Can you spare ten minutes to soak up some Golden Age greatness? Check out this wonderful medley of some of his classic film scores.

    I had a blast picking out the films without looking at the images. I own recordings of all of them, of course. (What? No “Lust for Life???”)

    Rózsa conducts the Pittsburgh Symphony in a suite from “Ben-Hur”:

    Jascha Heifetz plays the Violin Concerto (subsequently adapted for use in “The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes”):

    They don’t make ‘em like Miklós anymore.

  • Sherlock Holmes Movie Music Scores

    Sherlock Holmes Movie Music Scores

    The game is afoot! This week on “Picture Perfect,” it’s an hour of music from movies inspired by the world’s greatest detective.

    “Sherlock Holmes” (2009) features Robert Downey Jr. and Jude Law, in Michael Ritchie’s post-“Matrix” take on the master detective. While some of the film adaptations over the years may have glossed over the character’s physicality, Ritchie’s revisionist Holmes perhaps errs a mite too far in the other direction. Hans Zimmer wrote the music, he too going against received wisdom, and in the process coming up with one of his more interesting scores, if only for the quirky instrumentation, which includes a Hungarian cimbalom, accordion, fiddles and a broken pub piano.

    Perhaps it’s unfair to put Zimmer up against an old pro like Miklós Rózsa. Rózsa wrote the music for Billy Wilder’s melancholy portrait of the great detective, “The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes” (1970). Wilder requested that the composer adapt his lovely Violin Concerto for the project, a recording of which the director had listened to repeatedly during the writing of the screenplay. Rózsa and Wilder had previously collaborated on “Double Indemnity” and “The Lost Weekend.”

    The Sherlock Holmes comedy, “Without a Clue” (1988), represents a missed opportunity of sorts. The hope had been for Sean Connery to play Watson opposite Michael Caine’s Holmes, a longed-for reunion between the two who had worked so well together in “The Man Who Would Be King.” In the end, it was Ben Kingsley who assumed the role.

    The fun conceit that sets “Without a Clue” apart is that Holmes is the fictional creation of mastermind Watson, who in reality is the gifted crime-solver. Through necessity, Watson hires a second-rate actor to play the role of Holmes. Of course, the actor turns out to be a bumbling idiot. Henry Mancini provides the British Light Music style score, with a nod to Edmund White’s “Puffin’ Billy” (familiar stateside as the theme to “Captain Kangaroo”).

    Finally, the Steven Spielberg-produced “Young Sherlock Holmes” (1985) offers a conjectural origins story, including Holmes and Watson’s first meeting as teenagers (ignoring the particulars laid out by Arthur Conan Doyle in his stories, with Watson already a war veteran who had served in Afghanistan). It’s all for fun, though it’s unfortunate the filmmakers felt the need to interject ‘80s-style special effects, rather than simply trust in the inherent magic of the subject matter. “Young Sherlock Holmes” features the first photorealistic, fully computer-generated character (a stained glass knight). Also, some Indiana Jones B-movie antics involving an Egyptian cult seem especially out of place.

    Interestingly, the film’s screenwriter, Chris Columbus, went on to direct the first two Harry Potter films. By my recollection, “Young Sherlock Holmes,” with its boarding school setting, has some of that same feel.

    The music, by Bruce Broughton, is certainly buoyant and beautiful, in the best John Williams tradition. Broughton scored a handful of big screen hits, notably “Silverado” and “Tombstone,” though arguably it is in the medium of television that he’s made his greatest impact. Thus far, his work has been recognized with a record 10 Grammy Awards.

    It’s elementary, my dear Watson. Join me for “Picture Perfect,” this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • NJSO Violinist Demos Theremin Freely

    New Jersey Symphony Orchestra violinist Darryl Kubian demonstrates the theremin. At the very opening, you’ll hear a quotation from Miklós Rózsa’s score for Alfred Hitchcock’s “Spellbound.” Kubian plays a more extended selection as he talks about the role of the theremin in movie music, beginning just before the 12-minute mark.

    I wrote about Kubian twice, as thereminist and composer, during my days at the Trenton Times.

    https://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/2013/04/theremin_adds_otherworldly_tou.html

    https://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/2015/03/classical_music_shakespeare_in.html

  • Hemingway’s Hollywood: Scores for Classic Film Adaptations

    Hemingway’s Hollywood: Scores for Classic Film Adaptations

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” as I continue to cultivate my Corona beard, we’ll get in touch with our masculine side, with music from movies inspired by the writings of Ernest Hemingway.

    Seemingly at odds with Hemingway’s minimalist, “iceberg” style, big screen adaptations of the writer’s work show what the stories don’t tell. In the case of “The Killers” (1946), the screenwriters, unapologetically, just made stuff up, an entire back story explaining the motivations for the hit of boxer “Swede” Anderson. Fortunately, those screenwriters happened to include an uncredited John Huston, who virtually codified noir with “The Maltese Falcon.”

    “The Killers” provided Burt Lancaster with his break-out role. It also features a knock-out score by Miklós Rózsa, in which he uses the dum-dee-dum-dum motto later made famous by the television series “Dragnet.”

    George C. Scott reunited with his “Patton” director, Franklin J. Schaffner, for an adaptation of Hemingway’s posthumously published novel, “Islands in the Stream” (1977). Scott gives one of his best performances as a Hemingway-like figure living on a Caribbean island. “Patton” composer Jerry Goldsmith wrote the music. Goldsmith spoke of it often as his favorite score.

    Hemingway himself handpicked the leads for “For Whom the Bell Tolls” (1943), with Gary Cooper and Ingrid Bergman falling in love against the backdrop of the Spanish Civil War. The music was written by the prolific and versatile Victor Young.

    Finally, Spencer Tracy is the whole show, as he faces off against a large marlin, in the “The Old Man and the Sea” (1958). Dimitri Tiomkin’s music earned him his fourth Academy Award.

    I hope you’ll join me for an hour of laconic grace and stoic manliness on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies. Everyone, come to Papa, this Friday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTO: Burt Lancaster and Ava Gardner – infinitely more attractive than my Corona beard

  • Black Friday Escape Classical Music for the Wild

    Black Friday Escape Classical Music for the Wild

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” for Black Friday, we flee “civilization” for the relative safety of the wilderness.

    We’ll hear music from “Born Free” by John Barry, “Hatari!” by Henry Mancini, National Geographic’s “Grizzly!” by Jerome Moross, and “The Jungle Book,” by Miklós Rózsa.

    I’d rather face Shere Khan than mall traffic. Join me for “The Call of the Wild,” this Friday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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