Originally posted by Dave Payn
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Proms 29 & 30: The Warner Brothers Story 9.08.19
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Originally posted by jonfan View PostCan you give more details about these four recordings of Eric Coates please? I note that a first issue of Coates’ music is out on 27 September with the BBC Phil. A CD just out of Korngold that looks tempting. I recommend JW’s CDs of Copland wholeheartedly.
Just bought the Korngold. Haven't listened to it yet.
The other three Coates/Wilson recorded collaborations are London Again with the RLPO on the Avie label AV 2070, The Enchanted Garden - 10 Orchestral Pieces with the BBCCO, ASV CD WHL 2112, and Under The Stars - 17 Orchestral Miniatures with the BBCCO, ASV CD WHL 2107.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostMy three, favourite film makers are:
Bunuel (who doesn't use music at all, except when characters are playing it on gramophones or hearing it in the street.)
Tarkovsky (who chose collaborators on the grounds that you don't "notice" the music at all while you're watching - Eduard Artemyev's electronic work with him is perfection, otherwise AT uses snippets of Bach or Russian liturgical music to bolster his themes of religious aspiration and numinous experience, never under speech.)
Ozu (who only uses music - sugary, sentimental "light music" - strictly between scenes, to ironically distance our emotions. Again, apart from street/bar music, there is no music used during scenes here.)
Apologies for my somewhat grumpy post last night (fresh from the wonders of Jephtha) but as you can see from the above, I like film music which either isn't there at all, which works so subtly that you don't notice, or is there simply as a contrasted (and pretty much irrelevant) "interlude".
I think what gets my goat is the middle-brow tone of certain R3 presenters, who with that wink and smile in the voice seem to be implying "we know this is what we all prefer, really, to that intellectual stuff that gives you a headache because you have to think about it". Light music (bless it) is one thing, to refresh the palate: Film music adulterates our tastebuds.
With a very few exceptions, where the music is the film (e.g. Walton's Henry V, Prokofiev's Nevsky, Glass's Koyaanisqatsi ...) [/I], devoting valuable space to film music is the last refuge of the bankrupt concert programmer. It's about making money, not art.
Shame you seem so down on John Williams....the sequence from about 20' in of Jurassic Park (1), from the helicopter's approach to the island up to the Brachiosaur's stunning first appearance, is one of the great, most perfectly-matched, image/music sequences in movie history!
(As for Henry V, Koyaanisqatsi, Nevsky....great films made great & greater by their music.... it is a close, intimate, creative collaboration, like Williams/Spielberg...try watching with the sound muted.....)Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 31-08-19, 12:50.
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Whatever you think about the musical quality of film music ( and with Britten, Shostakovich, Walton and Prokofiev evidence that they took it seriously - all producing quality work ) you have to admire the craft of the film composer . The integration of each bar of the score to each cut in the rough edit and the replication of that in the recording studio takes huge skill from composer , conductor and performers . A doc I saw on Richard Rodney Bennett took you through the process. His waltz to accompany the steaming up and pulling out from the station of the Orient Express is a masterpiece of the film composer’s , film director’s, film editor’s and dubbing mixer’s art . It’s also a bloody good tune...
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Originally posted by Dave Payn View PostThe Coates BBC Phil Vol. 1 was released on download by Chandos yesterday. You can find it on theclassicalshop.net but yes, the CD itself won't be released until 27th September.
Just bought the Korngold. Haven't listened to it yet.
The other three Coates/Wilson recorded collaborations are London Again with the RLPO on the Avie label AV 2070, The Enchanted Garden - 10 Orchestral Pieces with the BBCCO, ASV CD WHL 2112, and Under The Stars - 17 Orchestral Miniatures with the BBCCO, ASV CD WHL 2107.
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostWhatever you think about the musical quality of film music ( and with Britten, Shostakovich, Walton and Prokofiev evidence that they took it seriously - all producing quality work ) you have to admire the craft of the film composer . The integration of each bar of the score to each cut in the rough edit and the replication of that in the recording studio takes huge skill from composer , conductor and performers . A doc I saw on Richard Rodney Bennett took you through the process. His waltz to accompany the steaming up and pulling out from the station of the Orient Express is a masterpiece of the film composer’s , film director’s, film editor’s and dubbing mixer’s art . It’s also a bloody good tune...
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostCertainly not. Ars longa, vita brevis!
Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostAs for "light music", there's more imagination and technical artistry in one, three-minute piece by Ronnie Binge than in the whole of the Star Wars musical scores, laid end to end.
Which one? I give you Elizabethan Serenade!"...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..."
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostWhatever you think about the musical quality of film music ( and with Britten, Shostakovich, Walton and Prokofiev evidence that they took it seriously - all producing quality work ) you have to admire the craft of the film composer . The integration of each bar of the score to each cut in the rough edit and the replication of that in the recording studio takes huge skill from composer , conductor and performers . A doc I saw on Richard Rodney Bennett took you through the process. His waltz to accompany the steaming up and pulling out from the station of the Orient Express is a masterpiece of the film composer’s , film director’s, film editor’s and dubbing mixer’s art . It’s also a bloody good tune...
one of the formative experiences of my student days, such a wonderful musician and generous with time and sharing skill even at 4:30am with a screening due to start at 9:30 and much to do.... I could almost forgive his "American Songbook" stuff that came later
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Originally posted by jonfan View PostMany thanks Dave. I can see my bank balance is going to be sorely challenged again this month.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostA fascinating documentary a few weeks ago on BBC4 about Malolm Arnold's Oscar-winning music for David Lean's Bridge on the River Kwai and challenges involved. I'd have added a link but it's no longer available. Plenty of classic collaborations - off the top of my head: Hitchcock/Herrmann, Feĺlini/Nino Rota (eg two favourites, Amacord, Otto e mezzo), Leone/Morricone. Ry Cooder for Wenders' Paris, Texas is one of the few soundtrack recordings I have actually bought.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostIsn’t the point of the argument on this thread is ‘film music is for films and not for concerts (let alone for the proms)’?
To extend the logic of the argument, recording music designed for religious occaisions isn't "acceptable" either.
So bye bye Bach CDs etc etc etc
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Originally posted by Caliban View Post
I’ll see your Elizabethan Serenade, and raise you Korngold’s Sea Hawk - arguably more relevant, as it was actually in the concert under discussion...
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostAmazed that you "wouldn't notice" that Bach/Artemyev soundtrack for Solaris... It is an essential, haunting, memorable element in a film which would always be in my top ten, if not top five.... without the music.... nothing ever so great....it comes to sound as the voice of the planet itself...
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostIs dance music just for dancing ?
To extend the logic of the argument, recording music designed for religious occaisions isn't "acceptable" either.
So bye bye Bach CDs etc etc etc
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