Tag: Star Wars

  • Korngold’s Kings Row Star Wars Influence

    Korngold’s Kings Row Star Wars Influence

    This week on “Picture Perfect, with a new “Star Wars” right around the corner, we’ll hear an extensive suite from one of John Williams’ acknowledged influences, Erich Wolfgang Korngold’s “Kings Row” (1942). The settings of the two films couldn’t be more different – “Kings Row’s” struggle of decency against sinister impulses takes place in a small Midwestern town – but Korngold’s opulently orchestrated score brims with romance and heroism. Check out that opening fanfare!

    Although he was one of the great musical prodigies – celebrated in Vienna in his teens and 20s, especially for his operas – Korngold’s name was kept alive for decades after his death largely because of his work on a number of classic Warner Brothers films of the 1930s and ’40s. His music for the Errol Flynn swashbucklers has been particularly well-loved.

    He had already written music for “Captain Blood,” “The Prince and the Pauper,” “The Adventures of Robin Hood,” “The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex” and “The Sea Hawk” by the time he was offered work on “Kings Row.” Without knowing anything more about the project than the title, he commenced writing music for the main theme, on the assumption that the film was going to be another costume picture. In reality, it was a turn-of-the-century soap opera based in America’s heartland.

    Korngold’s approach couldn’t have been more fortuitous, since it led him to compose one of his grandest themes. It punctuates the action of the film like a cinematic “Ein Heldenleben” – which should come as little surprise, since Korngold actually knew Richard Strauss.

    “Kings Row” was based on the bestseller by Henry Bellamann. The book reveals a kind of dark underbelly to the civility of small town American life. The subject matter was ahead of its time, laying the groundwork for the novel “Peyton Place,” the film “Blue Velvet,” and television series such as “Twin Peaks” and “Desperate Housewives.” Yet at its core is the fundamental decency of its protagonist, Parris Mitchell, and his circle of friends. It is Mitchell’s ambition to become a doctor, and he heads to Vienna to study a new branch of science known as psychology.

    Mitchell was played in the film by Robert Cummings, his best friend Drake by Ronald Reagan, and Randy, a former tomboy from a family of railroad workers, by Ann Sheridan, who received top billing. The studio filled out the cast with a superb ensemble, including Claude Rains, Judith Anderson, Charles Coburn, Harry Davenport and even Maria Ouspenskaya, best known as Maleva the gypsy woman from “The Wolf Man.”

    It’s a grand piece of entertainment, if you can get into the spirit of it, depending on your tolerance for incest, sadism, involuntary amputation, wrongful commitment to an insane asylum and suicide. This is the film in which Reagan exclaims the immortal line, “Where’s the rest of me?”

    Thanks to the Hays Code, the screen adaptation was considerably toned down from – and more upbeat than – the novel. The emphasis is on Mitchell’s idealism in the face of a cruel, and at times horrifying, world. Along the way, there are several amusing (from our perspective) explanations of that mysterious new discipline, the study of the mind.

    I hope you’ll join me for an hour of music from “Kings Row,” by the King of Film Composers, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, this Friday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Star Wars 40th Anniversary Music Magic

    Star Wars 40th Anniversary Music Magic

    Happy 40th anniversary, “Star Wars.” I do miss the giddy enjoyment of the original.

    What would the film be like without John Williams’ immortal music? Watch here:

    Then the way it should be:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iH6a1iYQ0GA

    Finally, Williams’ overblown concert version, which really makes sure we don’t miss the William Walton allusion:

  • Star Wars Soundtrack 40th Anniversary

    Star Wars Soundtrack 40th Anniversary

    “Star Wars” – the original, as opposed to “Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope,” as it has been known since its 1981 reissue – was released for the first time, in theaters, on May 25, 1977. Needless to say, the film became a pop cultural phenomenon that went on to assume mythological proportions.

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we revisit a long time ago (40 years, to be exact) in a galaxy far, far away, as we listen to selections from John Williams’ classic score. In an era when pop music was threatening to swamp the movies, Williams’ paradoxically fresh-yet-retro heroic take was credited with singlehandedly reviving the fortunes of the orchestral film score. “Star Wars” went on to become the best-selling orchestral soundtrack of all-time.

    The fashion these days is to present a score note-complete and sequentially, as it appeared in the film. But there was an art to how the composer and supervising music editor (in this case, Kenneth Wannberg) used to arrange these soundtrack albums to create a special kind of listening experience.

    Buck the trend of digital complexity and note-complete soundtrack recordings by kicking back and listening to the music as you first enjoyed it at home in 1977, with selections from the original 2-record set. The exact contents of the double-LP album have been unavailable for years, until a quite recent vinyl reissue of the complete “Star Wars” soundtracks.

    The Force is strong with this one. Join me for 40 years of “Star Wars” on “Picture Perfect,” this Friday evening at 6 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Muta1206 Saxophone Star Wars Medley

    Muta1206 Saxophone Star Wars Medley

    Meet Muta1206. Muta specializes in saxophone overlays of anything from classical music to jazz to pop/rock to video games to genres I’ve never even heard of. To be clear, he plays all the parts of the arrangements himself. And his dogs love it. Here, to get you in the mood for the Oscars, is his performance of a medley from the “Star Wars” films (including “The Force Awakens”). “Star Wars,” of course, was named Best Original Score of 1977.

    Yet again, many thanks must go out to John Williams. Has there been another composer of the last 40 years who has done more to get young people interested in music?

    More with Muta here:

    https://www.youtube.com/user/muta1206

  • Happy Birthday John Williams The Greatest Film Composer

    Happy Birthday John Williams The Greatest Film Composer

    In a career which has spanned 60 years, you’ve garnered 50 Academy Award nominations, 5 Academy Awards, 3 Emmys, 22 Grammys, and 7 BAFTA Awards.

    You’re the composer for eight of the top 20 highest-grossing films of all time. You’ve written Olympic fanfares, the theme to NBC News, the theme to PBS’ “Great Performances,” and both themes to “Lost in Space.”

    You’re the last in the line of the great Hollywood composers. You’ve also amassed an impressive body of concert music.

    Thanks for the extended childhood, John. You’ve made life so much more bearable.

    Happy birthday, John Williams, 84 years-old today.

    #johnwilliams


    The cast of “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” joins Jimmy Fallon and The Roots for this “a cappella” salute:

    John Williams records the “Great Performances” theme, in his signature black turtleneck:

    Theme to “Lost in Space” (season three):

    Olympic Fanfare and Theme (Los Angeles games, 1984):


    PHOTO: Williams, with John Boyega and Daisy Ridley of “The Force Awakens”

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