Tag: The Jungle Book

  • Wild Movie Soundtracks Picture Perfect

    Wild Movie Soundtracks Picture Perfect

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” as we put our faith in the groundhog and brace ourselves for six more weeks of winter, we defer to the natural wisdom of the wild kingdom.

    We’ll hear selections from John Barry’s music for “Born Free” (1966), based on Joy Adamson’s memoir about the raising of Elsa, an orphaned lion cub who grows to adulthood and is eventually released into the Kenyan wilderness. The music proved a double Academy Award winner for Barry, who was recognized for Best Original Score and Best Original Song.

    Jerome Moross, best known for his music to “The Big Country,” had such a strong personality that his immediately recognizable sound extended even to his work on the National Geographic special, “Grizzly!” (1967), a documentary about a pair of ecologists studying North American bears. “Grizzly!” sports an energetic Americana score that is cut very much from the same cloth.

    The Korda Brothers’ adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s “The Jungle Book” (1942) stars the charismatic Indian actor Sabu, as Mowgli, raised by wolves, who yearns to reconnect with his human roots. (For the record, Kipling pronounced “Mowgli” so that the first syllable rhymes with “cow.”) Miklós Rózsa wrote the enchanting score.

    And we can’t get through the hour without hearing Henry Mancini’s “Baby Elephant Walk,” from “Hatari!” (1962). So many exclamation points in these wilderness titles! The film was directed by Howard Hawks and starred John Wayne. In case you’re wondering, “Hatari!” is Swahili for “Danger!”

    No danger in treating yourself to this cinematic carnival of the animals. We’re going wild this week on “Picture Perfect,” this Friday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Koechlin’s 150th A Neglected Genius?

    Koechlin’s 150th A Neglected Genius?

    Today is the 150th anniversary of the birth of French composer Charles Koechlin. If anyone can find even a single mention, anywhere on the internet, of an official sesquicentennial observance, I would be very curious to know. Alas, it would seem he is the very definition of a neglected composer.

    You can refer to my Saturday post on this fascinating polymath to learn more about his eclectic interests and his close associations with Gabriel Fauré and Claude Debussy. Things will only get more Koechlin-intensive as the week progresses and I pull out all the stops. (You certainly won’t catch me pulling at that beard.)

    For today, I hope you will join me for a selection from Koechlin’s music inspired by Rudyard Kipling’s “The Jungle Book” and some of his very famous work as an orchestrator. The music will be recognizable, even if, apparently, the orchestrator is not.

    We’ll be crushing on Koechlin, among our featured composers, this Monday from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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