Aggie's Music

I usually blab about film scores on this blog, but I don't mind the occasional tangent towards other interests. :)

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

On The Track

Apparently, I was soooo good this year that ol' Santa gave me my present a month in advance! I'm very excited to sink my brains into it...

On The Track

Revised Second Edition by Fred Karlin (2004)

I've been trying to find a recent film score book for a while now, and it looks like this is the closest. It's a big ass book (a little over 500 pages) so I'll probably spend most of my time reading it during the winter holiday. I've been hearing that this is like the bible for aspiring film composers. I sure hope so.

I only read the forward so far, written by John Williams. I'm not a big fan of the man, but his words do want me to continue reading. Alas, exams are coming up. Maybe a few pages per night. :)

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Basil Poledouris (1945 - 2006)

I didn't know about this a few days later, but considering all the stress this past week has piled on my chest, I suppose it was best that way.

A great film composer left us on November 8th. He goes by the name of Basil Poledouris. He did a load of work, but you may know him best for his work on Conan the Barbarian, Hunt for Red October, and Starship Troopers. I would remember him for his work on Free Willy, which is in my collection.

He was one of those composers that I was excited to meet in the future. He appeared at the Ubeda Film Music Congress 2006 in Spain between July 20th and 23rd. It peeved me that I would be visiting Spain two months earlier, therefore missing the opportunity to meet the man. I was encouraged to obtain the chance next year, but now I know it's too late to see this film composer.

Rest in peace, Basil. I'll be sure to catch up on your work in the past. Thank you.

Thursday, November 02, 2006

David Newman - Part 2 (most likely the last part)

“It’s also one of the only scores where I’ve been able to follow my muse, because Jerry, Willard and Tom believed in choosing people who they felt were talented, and then let them work with no interference. Anastasia and Ice Age were much more ‘managed’ than this. The Brave Little Toaster is my score. And I think the film has stood the test of time because it’s real. It’s sincere.”

If you’re curious, Jerry was the director, Willard the executive producer, and Tom the producer of The Brave Little Toaster. This excerpt (taken from the score booklet) holds a lot of truth, and hopefully, after I finished this David Newman analysis, I can get into detail about the relationship between the director and film composer.

Since I’ve already blabbed about David Newman’s best score (The Brave Little Toaster) in my previous post, I will fast-forward ten years to when his score for Anastasia was made. Here, we have an entirely different take on the music. You know how you can tell when a score was composed by James Horner just by listening to two... maybe three seconds of music on the screen, no matter what year it is? This definitely isn’t the case.

The film in general doesn’t strike me as one of great beauty... it’s definitely not one of my favourites (the grandmother's facial movements literally scare me), but I’ll give props for naming the bat, Bartok, after a great contemporary composer (or so is my guess...). I found it pretty difficult to watch different scenes a second time in order to get a better feel of the music, because the sound effects are so friggen loud... especially in the finale. Don't you hate it when you've practically got a war going on screen and you can't hear the action of the music? Why make the score in the first place? I had to listen to the score on its own, but I shouldn’t need to do that.

In any case, what can I say about the music? It’s very melodic and tonal. I know, that’s pretty much the definition of the majority of film scores done in the past... what... three to four decades? The main theme is pretty simple... two notes going back and forth and not a great development from that. You see, when I have trouble giving a review for a score, that’s not a very good thing. I usually try to go for things that stand out, but this could’ve passed as an Alan Menken-ish Disney score in the end. Maybe that’s what Fox was going for. The most amusing track was ‘The Nightmare’, where you’ve got two melodies (a major and minor) weaving past each other in order to give the right colour to the scene – Anastasia’s pretty dream turning into a nightmare. It doesn’t come close to The Brave Little Toaster’s emotional impact and richness. The reason could be related to the quote I posted at the top.

I don’t think I have the strength to get into David Newman’s score for ‘Ice Age’, so I might just leave it at that. I really want to get into the whole film director blab. Maybe at the end of November... it’s getting pretty busy at university.

Has anybody seen Mozart’s ‘Don Giovanni’? What a wonderful opera! It’s basically about an assertive pimp in the eighteenth century. How can you NOT love that? :)

Oh, P.S.! Check out David Valdez' jazz blog; it's quite interesting!