Film music
I can't find any comments on R3's "Film Music fortnight" (or however long it's going on). For me, it's made we switch off the radio altogether.
There appears to be three sorts of film music.
(1) Through-written scores that seem to work in their own right. Prokofiev's "Alexander Nevsky", for example. Perhaps the fact that it was a "silent" film makes the score more important. Many are great.
(2) Scores written to underscore what is going on the screen. Bernard Hermann is a good example. But R3's playing of them endlessly seem to me to prove they do not stand up on their own. You need to see the images.
(3) Films that pinch existing music. R3 is delighting isn playing Mozart piano concertos and Mahler's symphonies as "film music".
There is also a (4). Film music that is not film music. I had the misfortune to hear an extract from "Fiddler on the Roof" the other day.It's a Stage play, R3 - it's a stage play!
I can't find any comments on R3's "Film Music fortnight" (or however long it's going on). For me, it's made we switch off the radio altogether.
There appears to be three sorts of film music.
(1) Through-written scores that seem to work in their own right. Prokofiev's "Alexander Nevsky", for example. Perhaps the fact that it was a "silent" film makes the score more important. Many are great.
(2) Scores written to underscore what is going on the screen. Bernard Hermann is a good example. But R3's playing of them endlessly seem to me to prove they do not stand up on their own. You need to see the images.
(3) Films that pinch existing music. R3 is delighting isn playing Mozart piano concertos and Mahler's symphonies as "film music".
There is also a (4). Film music that is not film music. I had the misfortune to hear an extract from "Fiddler on the Roof" the other day.It's a Stage play, R3 - it's a stage play!
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