Tag: Star Wars

  • Invincible Deadly Mantis Fist

    Invincible Deadly Mantis Fist

    I’ve been wasting a good amount of time today reliving my Saturday afternoons of the early 1980s. I think I missed my calling as a kung fu dubbing artist. Or a kung fu make-up artist. Or a kung fu script translator. Or a kung fu cinematographer. Or a kung fu editor. (There is a lot of art in kung fu.)

    Watch this clip, and then choose from the following words to create your own kung fu title:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z0YhUl0kdHo

    SHAOLIN
    JADE
    DRAGON
    MASTER
    FIST
    DEADLY
    INVINCIBLE
    MANTIS

    You never know what you’re going to find in these Shaw Brothers classics. I was unsuccessful locating a movie I remember that used music from Leo Delibes’ ballet “Sylvia.” I did, however, find this one that shamelessly violates John Williams’ copyright on “Star Wars.” (I believe the subtitles are in Danish!)

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

    More about the Shaw Brothers here:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaw_Brothers_Studio

    Everything you wanted to know about “Fist of the White Lotus” (but were afraid to ask):

    http://fightland.vice.com/blog/pai-mei-the-cruel-the-almost-invincible-fist-of-the-white-lotus-clan

    How I miss those halcyon Saturdays, watching “Kung Fu Theater” with my best pal.

  • Star Wars Music Return of the Jedi & Prequels

    Star Wars Music Return of the Jedi & Prequels

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we conclude our multi-part retrospective of music from the “Star Wars” movies, in anticipation of the theatrical release of “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” on December 18.

    We spent the past two weeks listening to highlights from the finest of the scores, those for “Star Wars” (later subtitled “Episode IV: A New Hope”) and “The Empire Strikes Back.” This week, we’ll hear selections from “Return of the Jedi,” which rounded off the original trilogy in 1983, and music composed for the prequels, issued between 1999 and 2005.

    Already in 1983, there was, in some respects, an air of fatigue that hung about the third installment, “Return of the Jedi,” the most episodic of the original films that also seemed to recycle quite a bit of material from the first. The landspeeder was replaced by speeder bikes, the Wookie was usurped by teddy bear-like Ewoks, and the threat of the Death Star was replaced by – well, an even bigger Death Star.

    For one of the scenes, which occurs fairly early in the film, the score even recycled battle music heard the first time around, perhaps in homage, but also, from a practical standpoint, to get it in on deadline.

    That said, “Jedi” sported plenty of imaginative touches, fleshing out the villainous Emperor and giving us the belated onscreen debut of Jabba the Hutt. All told, while not quite on the same exalted level as its predecessors, the film got the job done and rounded off the trilogy in satisfying fashion.

    Unfortunately, George Lucas couldn’t let well enough alone, and 16 years later, as if against our will (how could we help ourselves?), we were propelled back to a galaxy far, far away. The “Star Wars” prequels generated some pretty impressive box office, but also a fair amount of controversy. The films were criticized by some for their overreliance on computer generated imagery, inane dialogue peppered with impenetrable jargon, and wooden performances, with some particularly painful love scenes.

    Though “Star Wars” composer John Williams crafted some lovely thematic interludes, the emphasis this time around seemed to be on epic bombast and ponderous premonitions of a date with destiny that the story and visuals required. Because everything in the film could be manipulated digitally and reedited virtually right up until the moment of release, the scores suffered through excessive tinkering in post-production.

    I’ve selected just over a half an hour worth of cues from the prequel trilogy – “Episode I: The Phantom Menace,” “Episode 2: Attack of the Clones,” and “Episode 3: Revenge of the Sith” – which I’ve assembled into an extended suite. Williams indulges in nearly ten minutes of unabashed sentiment during the end credits of “Sith,” recalling some of the most beloved “Star Wars” themes and pushing things completely over the top by evoking the pomp of Sir William Walton to provide a euphoric coda to the series.

    At the time, it was thought this would be the last of the “Star Wars” films, so who could blame him? Of course, we now know that not to be the case…

    I hope you’ll join me this Friday evening at 6, with a repeat Saturday morning at 6, for a conclusion to our “Star Wars” retrospective; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at wwfm.org.

  • Empire Strikes Back Score A Retrospective

    Empire Strikes Back Score A Retrospective

    The Force was strong with this one.

    The second installment in our retrospective of the “Star Wars” scores will focus exclusively on music for the first of the sequels, “The Empire Strikes Back,” released in 1980. For many, this is the best in the series so far, the “Godfather Part II” of space fantasy movies.

    Both George Lucas and composer John Williams succeeded in developing and deepening material from the first film, yet managed to avoid becoming too heavy-handed by ramping up the creativity and maintaining a spirit of adventure.

    You could ignore the jargon, let the back story glide over you, and still have fantastic time. Beloved characters from the original film, fun and familiar, were joined by instant “Star Wars” pop cultural icons, Lando Calrissian, Boba Fett, Emperor Palpatine, and of course Yoda.

    How could you take an invasion by elephantine Imperial Walkers, or riding patrol atop stop motion tauntauns too seriously anyway? One of the leads was played by a Muppet with the voice of Miss Piggy, for crying out loud.

    Williams came up with themes or motives for all of these, alongside the first appearance of “The Imperial March” and a love theme for Han and the Princess, arguably managing to top the achievement of his seemingly untoppable original score. His work on “The Empire Strikes Back” earned him his 15th Academy Award nomination.

    Last week, I discussed the merits of the original soundtrack albums, with their re-edited material providing a satisfying home listening experience, versus the current trend of releasing the music note-complete and chronological, as it’s heard in the film.

    With “The Empire Strikes Back,” it’s a very tough call, since of all the scores, this one perhaps holds up the best when heard complete from beginning to end. That said, with less than an hour to touch on the highlights, it’s much easier to accomplish when sampling from the original two-LP set.

    This is a challenge, since only material from one of the two records has ever made it to compact disc, at least in this country (on Polydor 825 298-2, released in 1985). Selections from the other are reconstructed on this week’s show, using the film mix, as it appears on the 4-CD “Star Wars Anthology” (issued as a box set on 20th Century Fox Film Scores 07822-11012-2, released in 1993).

    How fanboy is that? I even tossed on the 20th Century Fox fanfare, for good measure.

    I hope you’ll JOIN ME* for this week’s “Picture Perfect,” tonight at 6 ET, with a repeat tomorrow morning at 6, or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at wwfm.org.

  • Star Wars Music Retrospective Original Soundtrack

    Star Wars Music Retrospective Original Soundtrack

    A disconcerting thought occurred to me the other night, as I was driving up to my folks’ late Wednesday, after having completed production work on this week’s “Picture Perfect.” We are now as far away from the original “Star Wars” (released in 1977), as “Star Wars” was from “Gone With the Wind” (released in 1939)! I am always thinking thoughts like that, and it’s like getting my brain pinched in a collapsed telescope. It would have been possible, then, in 1977, that Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh, had they lived, could have come back for a belated sequel to one of the most beloved classics in American cinema.

    I’m not saying I would have wanted that, but it is something to ponder, with the impending release of “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” on December 18. Can this film possibly live up to the hype? Of course, the bar has been set pretty low after the prequels. But come on, the Millennium Falcon is back, John Williams is doing the music, and George Lucas is in no way involved. Who doesn’t want to see a 70 year-old Han Solo brandish a sidearm at least one more time?

    Clearly, this could rapidly degenerate into obsessive geekdom, so allow me merely to point out the fact that this week on “Picture Perfect,” we will begin a multi-part musical retrospective of the “Star Wars” movies. Part one will focus on the film that started it all.

    “Star Wars,” as it was known when it was first released in theaters on May 25, 1977 (later to be retitled “Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope”) provided a fun and fantastic escape to a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away. Things became a lot more serious and jargon-heavy as the saga progressed. We’ll try to shrug off some of that ponderousness and remember what it was like to first encounter the wonder of John Dykstra’s Oscar-winning special effects (before they were replaced, retroactively, with CGI), and John Williams’ fresh and heroic music, 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.

    Now, there are two options when it comes to listening to a classic soundtrack originally released during this era. The first is to enjoy it in the form it was originally issued, in which composer and music editor took cues from different parts of the movie and arranged them into musically satisfying sequences on the album. The second is to listen, as many prefer today, when soundtracks are released note-complete, to everything presented chronologically, even if some of the cues are mere fragments, as it is heard in the film. Fortunately, because of the continued interest in “Star Wars,” the music has been reissued several times, so that it can be enjoyed either way.

    Since I personally first obtained this soundtrack on vinyl, I have a preference for the form in which I first encountered it (though I’m certainly happy to own the complete score, as well). The double-LP contents no longer seem to be commercially available. Therefore, I am happy to present this rare opportunity to enjoy the music as countless did when the album was released, back in 1977.

    Williams’ Academy Award-winning score, while adored by millions, has been criticized by some for its at times derivative nature, with suggestions of Holst, Prokofiev, Stravinsky, Korngold, Dukas and Walton, among others. I tend to think of it as being brilliantly post-modern, hand-in-glove with Lucas’ cinematic approach, which draws on any number of western, swashbuckler, war, and samurai motifs. Influences abound – intentionally, I think – but at no time can the composer be mistaken for anyone other than John Williams.

    I hope you’ll join me as we listen to the London Symphony Orchestra, having the time of its life, on the original soundtrack to “Star Wars,” tonight at 6 ET, with a repeat tomorrow morning at 6; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at wwfm.org.

  • Classical Music Ruined My Life

    Classical Music Ruined My Life

    I was going through some files on my computer yesterday and came across this post written in 2008 for the short-lived WWFM blog. A lot of it still applies, only storage has become much more of an issue!

    WWFM blog post, 8/08

    How Classical Music Ruined My Life

    We’re so used to everyone going on about the benefits of classical music, how Mozart can improve babies’ brains, or how Haydn can reduce crime at train stations. There is a whole sub-genre fostered by the record industry of compilations designed to make us relax. (Never mind the fact that classical music can be one of the least relaxing, indeed most unsettling art forms – witness the recent release on Naxos of John Antill’s Aborigine ballet Corroboree – but we’ll elaborate on that topic another time.) Most recently, the music press, and even 60 Minutes, has been lauding El Sistema, the highly successful program formulated to rescue Venezuelan young people from the hopelessness of living in impoverished neighborhoods, giving them a sense of purpose by handing them an instrument and absorbing them into orchestras. The meteoric rise of Gustavo Dudamel is its most eloquent testament. While personally, I find El Sistema praiseworthy, and certainly a more positive method of reaching out to the international community than the often snarky comments and small-minded policies of the world’s political leaders, and would even like to see something similar implemented in our own country, I’m afraid the mountain of evidence extolling the curative properties of classical music simply does not tell the entire story. Because, good readers, I confess it here for the first time, the shocking truth is that classical music has ruined my life.

    That’s right, if not for the heroin lure of Vaughan Williams, Sibelius, and the rest, I would probably be a wealthy, well-adjusted individual, with weekends free to do normal things, and a healthy savings account, swollen with the tens of thousands of dollars I’ve blown over the years on concerts and recordings. Never mind the fact that by nature, I am thrifty (read: cheap) and seek out bargains in cut-out bins and through remainder outlets whenever possible, or that a sizeable portion of my collection has been assembled from mid-price or budget CDs, second-hand acquisitions, or has been gifted. The truth is, I have dumped thousands. Tens of thousands, I’m sure. In the living room of my cramped apartment are five bookcases of ten shelves each, crammed with recordings, operas and colorful boxed sets arranged alphabetically across the top, with stacks rising like the cromlechs of Stonehenge on top of those. Oh yeah, there are also a few plastic bins secreted away under my bed, full of holiday music and bonus discs from magazines such as BBC. And the archive, on both tape and disc, of my Sunday night program, The Lost Chord. The latter technically didn’t cost me a thing, unless you count the untold man-hours I’ve invested which could have been more productively spent elsewhere.

    But no, I’ve squandered both finances and life’s blood on my obsession. Like an addict. Or a laboratory rat who keeps hitting the pleasure button at the expense of food. Or Erasmus, who spent whatever money he acquired on books, a mere pittance left over for life’s necessities. At 42, I stand at the peak of my glorious summer, and have little to show for it. If things continue at this rate, in another twenty years – I’ll be Bill Zagorski.

    How did this all start, you ask? Where did I go wrong? Mothers and fathers, gather ‘round, and listen to my cautionary tale. I lay the blame at the feet of, first, John Williams, and his extraordinary soundtrack for Star Wars, which dazzled my ten year-old brain with its romantic pageantry and vibrant colors. And then of my own mother, who provided positive reinforcement, when I acquired my first classical records, encouraging me, if I found something I liked by a specific composer, to collect his other works. She knew next to nothing about classical music. Nor obviously the dissolute path down which she was getting me started. My favorite Easter was the one where I came downstairs and next to a basket filled with chocolate and malt and peanut butter eggs and jelly beans were two Vivaldi records. Vivaldi isn’t even remotely my favorite composer, but I thought that was the best thing ever. Then I latched onto WFLN, Philadelphia’s classical music station for 50 years, and soaked up their programming, I’m tempted to say, like the Iraqi war soaks up the American tax dollar. I remember at first being confused by the multi-movement structure of symphonies and the like, wondering at the end why the announcer didn’t bother to mention what the beautiful piece of music was which had played second or third before last. I smirk condescendingly at my callow, earlier self.

    Whenever one discovers a new enthusiasm, the horizons seem boundless. It’s a wonderful thing to know next to nothing about something and to embark on that kind of adventure. I remember hearing A Night on Bald Mountain on record for the first time, which of course I recognized as the music for that segment which both fascinated and scared the hell out of me as a child, in Disney’s Fantasia. When I acquired the LP, with Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic, I thought Mussorgsky must have been the greatest composer who ever lived. The same with Tchaikovsky, whose Pathetique I listened to incessantly, and Brahms, a very different figure, who nonetheless captivated me with, in succession, his 2nd, 3rd, and 4th Symphonies. I used to listen to the first movement of the 4th every night before bed.

    None of this was helped by the fact that, purely by chance, I was surrounded by likeminded friends. Make no mistake, I was always the fanatic, but around me were girlfriends taking piano lessons and comrades who latched onto Beethoven or Gilbert and Sullivan. In high school, my room looked like a grotto lifted out of Tennyson’s “The Lotos-Eaters,” members of my circle strewn about the floor, sleeping or half-asleep, listening to Beethoven’s 7th. Not the most relaxing music, but teenagers can slumber through anything. I remember, vividly, listening to Respighi at a girlfriend’s house, and an old Nonesuch LP of Telemann recorder concertos. Another was studying Chopin’s Nocturne, Op. posth., and Khachaturian’s Toccata. Her father had the first CD collection I had ever seen, an entire closet devoted to this new, mysterious technology. I fell in love with Wynton Marsalis’ recording of the Haydn Trumpet Concerto. Needless to say, it outlasted the relationship.

    Even then – particularly then – classical music provided the soundtrack to my life. John Boorman’s Excalibur taught me the power of Wagner, and it stayed with me throughout the remainder of my tragic-heroic teens, only to blossom fully in my tragic-heroic twenties, when I collected my first Ring cycle. I had earlier taken Die Walkure out of the library, but at that stage (I was probably about 15) it was still beyond my ken. I latched onto the Classic Film Scores series on RCA, for my money still the most satisfying undertaking of its kind, and from that day forward, I’ve been nurturing my inner pirate. The Sea Hawk hit me square between the eyes and filled my larcenous soul to overflowing. I’ve been a fan of Erich Wolfgang Korngold ever since.

    When I went away to college, naturally I had to haul my record collection back and forth with me. And since Christmas break was a month long, there’s no way I could be without my records. I don’t have to tell you, LPs are heavy, and while I was living in a dormitory, I had to confine my belongings to a car. Three crates of records and a sizeable stereo system left very little room for anything else, aside from one suitcase and both my parents. Whenever I move, to this day, now with likely over 30 boxes of CDs, I reflect, like Jacob Marley, on the chain I’ve forged in life. And slow learner that I am, I’ve been accepting still more LPs from a client with an exceptional collection trying to pare down, things which have never been reissued (including, most recently, an extensive series of pirated – er, private – Havergal Brian recordings). It’s an illness, I tell you. I’m a Hogarthian nightmare.

    People who know not of what they speak envy my passion. Apparently, there are some who never find that one thing which creates for them that spark, and they claim to have difficulty determining their life’s direction. My blessing and my curse is that I’ve found several. But classical music reigns supreme as my evil genius. When passion spills over into obsession and obsession borders on mania, well, that’s really the final outpost. I feel myself teetering at the outskirts of society, I feel my tenuous grip on civilization weakening. Classical music has made me irresponsible, lazy, a dreamer, destitute, and nearly monomaniacal. And not sleeping enough on weekends in order to do my radio shift has been punishing to both interpersonal relationships (“Sorry, I can’t go; I have to be up at 4:00”) and my physical and emotional well-being (though thankfully short-term; by Tuesday I am in ship-shape).

    Mothers and fathers, do the right thing by your children. They may never know the exhilaration of finding Rudolf Kempe’s recording of Korngold’s Symphony in F-sharp in a cut-out bin for 99 cents. Their souls may never swagger in seven-league boots when they hear the march from Tchaikovsky’s Pathetique or the last of Hindemith’s Symphonic Metamorphoses. Nor wallow in the tragic grandeur of Tristan und Isolde orGotterdammerung. Music inspires powerful emotions. It speaks to the boundless aspirations inside each and every one of us, which can only abrade against the strictures of civilization. Do you really want to send your children out into a world where, in spirit, they will always be the proverbial nail sticking up? Especially in a world where seemingly so few possess even an appreciation of the source.

    No, deny them music, and they will grow up to be happy, well-adjusted individuals. And they will have their weekends free.


    PHOTO: Amateur!

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