Tag: The Mission

  • Ennio Morricone at 87 A Film Music Legend

    Ennio Morricone at 87 A Film Music Legend

    He’s written music for over 500 movies and television shows, making him the most prolific film composer of all time. He’s composed for movies of all quality, from schlock to Oscar fare. His music is constantly sampled and recycled in other films, especially those of Quentin Tarantino. The upcoming western, “The Hateful Eight,” scheduled for release in January, marks the first genuine collaboration between the two, with Morricone providing his first western score in forty years.

    Of course, he virtually invented the spaghetti western sound, with its whistles, harmonicas, jew’s harps, whip cracks and indecipherable chanting choruses. His score for “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” is among the most famous of all time. But he’s shown himself to be equally adept at a winning lyricism, as evidenced by his music for “The Mission” (another favorite of figure skaters) and “Cinema Paradiso.”

    Morricone is one of those rare composers in the industry who does all of his own orchestrations. Somewhere along the way, he manages to write concert music, too.

    Happy birthday, Ennio Morricone, 87 years old today.


    “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly”

    “The Mission”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L41oGXgVmZg

    Morricone conducts “Cinema Paradiso”

  • Moross The Cardinal & Holy Movie Missions

    Moross The Cardinal & Holy Movie Missions

    Tomorrow is the birthday of Jerome Moross, whose music for “The Big Country” secures his place in the pantheon of the great film composers. It was my intention to at least acknowledge him on this week’s “Picture Perfect.” However, since I just did a program devoted to Moross’ western scores only a few months ago, it was necessary to come up with something else. The more I thought about it, the more I saw red – cardinal red.

    Otto Preminger’s “The Cardinal” was released in 1963. Based on the novel by Henry Morton Robinson, the story follows a fictional Boston Irish Catholic priest from his ordination in 1917 to his appointment as cardinal on the eve of World War II. Tom Tryon played the lead. Tryon would later become a best-selling author himself (as Thomas Tryon), with books like “The Other” and “Harvest Home.”

    An interesting factoid: The Vatican’s liaison officer for the production was Joseph Ratzinger, the future Pope Benedict XVI.

    As always, Moross’ score is irrepressibly lyrical, even buoyant. The man never seemed to run out of good tunes.

    We’ll also have music from “The Shoes of the Fisherman,” from 1968, another film based on a best-selling novel, this time by Morris L. West.

    Anthony Quinn played Kiril Pavlovich Lakota, an archbishop who serves 20 years in a Siberian labor camp. He is released and sent to Rome where is promoted to the cardinalate. When the Pope dies, suddenly, Lakota, a dark horse candidate, is elected as a replacement. The story balances Lakota’s internal struggles and personal torments with mounting global turmoil.

    The music was by Alex North, who sets the melancholy lyricism of Russian folksong against the steely grandeur of his music for the Vatican.

    The remainder of the program will be devoted to movies about missionaries. Georges Delerue provided a noble, austere score for the 1991 Bruce Beresford film “Black Robe,” based on a novel by the Irish Canadian writer Brian Moore, in which a Jesuit priest treks through 1500 miles of Canadian wilderness on a mission to convert the native tribes of the Huron and the Algonquin.

    Ennio Morricone’s moving music for Roland Joffé’s 1986 film “The Mission,” which featured Jeremy Irons as a Jesuit priest and Robert DeNiro as a reformed slave hunter in the South American jungle, has received a great deal of exposure over the years, both through its use in television commercials and by figure skaters, who made “Gabriel’s Oboe” a recognizable hit. It has become one of Morricone’s best-loved scores.

    Join me for “Holy Men and Missions” this week, on “Picture Perfect” – music for the movies – this Friday evening at 6 ET, or listen to it later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.

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