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I don't only like "serious" music. I was listening to Bach Cantatas (serious) and not the the film day but having read all the negative stuff on here I decided to give it a go. Colonel Bogey came on. Cheered me up on a grey Sunday morning.
Only going to dip in. I'm switching to James Graham on Desert Island Discs now and there's some good footie and rugby coming up on TV later. I don't see why Radio 3 shouldn't try something a bit different.
Why not? On average R3 customers listen for just an hour a day - so it's not intruding on normal lifestyle. Anyway people should be listening to Mum saying how naughty they were when ...
Having switched off during a day devoted entirely to women composers yesterday I can certainly empathise with you, KB. It’s not that I don’t enjoy women composers’ music, I do, it’s just that we’ve probably got the political message by now. It doesn’t need reinforcing, does it?
A whole day devoted to cinema music? Well, as it happens we cashed in a Christmas gift voucher for a new local cinema and saw Dune 2 at an afternoon sitting just this week. I emerged from the movie, blinking in the late afternoon sunshine, for once, in agreement with reviewers. It’s a visually stunning, beautifully crafted movie and Hans Zimmer’s score is ‘a sonic landscape as overwhelming as Arrakis itself’. Matthew Sweet’s interview on Sound of Cinema this afternoon with director Denis Villeneuve was an unexpected treat for me. Highly recommended if you like that sort of thing.
Being of the opinion that cinema music is probably the closest that many people get to serious orchestral music these days and might even provide a gateway for the curious to a lot of new music I shall be popping in tomorrow. I’m particularly looking forward to Hannah French’s examination of representations of period music in film on The Early Music Show special edition.
If you were sitting where we were in the front row, KB, I don't think you would have described the Dune soundtrack as anodyne and unobtrusive, LOL. It was a bit loud, the soundwaves resonating in the sternum somehow.
Hans Zimmer's 'overwhelming' scores sadly led me to stop watching David Attenborough documentaries. The sight of one animal chasing another is enough in itself to allow me to assess the degree of danger without the help of an overblown orchestral accompaniment. Nor do I need Mr Z's help to appreciate the grandeur of a mountain range, the cold beauty of a polar landscape, or the innocent joy of bear cubs at play..
Sound of Cinema: A-Z of Baroque at the Box Office
The Early Music Show, Sat 14 Sep 2013 13:00
Catherine Bott gives us a whistle-stop A-Z tour of how early music has been featured in mainstream films to both poignant and ironic effect; from Allegri and Albinoni to Zadok and Zoolander.
#BBCSoundofCinema.
Eeh, there's nothing new, is there? Not on R3, at least
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
I'm sticking with Breakfast out of a kind of loyalty. But most or all of what I've heard supports my contention that film music without the pictures is rather vacuous. OK the occasional tune is memorable …
I’ll listen to Breakfast for a similar reason, and tend to agree with what you say about film music although I’d frame the exception rather wider than ‘the occasional tune’. There are quite a lot of film music numbers that are generally felicitous and bear repeated listening without the accompanying images, but it’s true I think, the majority don’t.
For example, I’ve not heard anything by a much-vaunted name, Alexandre Des Plats, which is anything other than deeply tedious taken out of context - but it does his work a disservice so to take it, no doubt it admirably and discreetly serves the filmic action he’s scoring.
One reason for me is that he and a lot of others in recent years resort to minimalist-style repetition of small motifs (understandably, as they’re writing by the metre, or rather minute - good way of filling silence easily…). But this kind of music has the same effect on my brain as strobe lights to an epileptic (There was a prime example on the EMS just now: OFF went the radio)
"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
The thing about some film music is that it takes on a life of its own when it is arranged as a concert work - and gets played. Someone (as in 'certain people') must recognise the potential and arrange it, and others recognise the quality (qualis) and programme it. Antartica in reverse.
I don't know but perhaps most film music played separately from its cinema context is appreciated by those who have seen the film and for whom the the music recaptures something of that film.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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