Film Score Friday 7/7/00
by Lukas Kendall
"An Evening with Marc Shaiman" is kicking off Outfest 2000
here in Los Angeles this Sunday, July 9th, at 7PM. Shaiman will share his
insights and stories about film scoring -- along with probably some musical
performances and special guests. The event is promised to be "an entertaining
(and very gay) look into the art of film music." It's at the Village
at Ed Gould Plaza, 1125 N McCadden Place, call 323-960-0618.
Film Score Monthly extends its warm welcome and thanks to our many gay
and lesbian readers. You are good customers and passionate fans. Even Marc.
News
The Japanese branch of Warner Bros. Records, WEA, is releasing the first-ever
CD of Twilight Zone: The Movie (Jerry Goldsmith, WPCR-10768) on
August 23rd. Also coming on that date are a reissue of Under Fire (Goldsmith,
WPCR-10771), Sunset 77 (Warren Parker) and James Dean Films (Rosenman/Tiomkin).
It is doubtful there will be any previously unreleased music. It will be
fantastic to have a CD of Twilight Zone: The Movie.
Taylor White's Percepto Records -- which teamed with FSM on the Mad
Monster Party CD -- is releasing a limited edition disc of two classic
Ronald Steiner scores, The Haunted Palace and The Premature Burial
(AIP/Poe films directed by Roger Corman). These are from the original
soundtrack recordings. The CD will be available exclusively from www.percepto.com
(under construction) and specialty outlets.
The next club CD from Promethus Records is John Barry's Hammett,
never before available.
There will be a promotional CD forthcoming of Richard Marvin's score
to U-571 -- get it from the specialty outlets only, like www.screenarchives.com
and www.intrada.com.
Michael Whalen has a new documentary score CD coming up, Lost Liners
-- to be available exclusively online. See www.michaelwhalen.com.
Concerts
The world concert premiere of Hans Zimmer's Gladiator will be
under the baton of John Mauceri at the Hollywood Bowl, July 14 and 15.
Bruce Broughton is conducting the Metropolitan Winds in two film music
concerts this Sunday, July 9th, at 2PM and 7:30PM at Meyerson Symphony
Center, Dallas, Texas. The concert will be hosted by Joe Bob Briggs. Bruce's
wife Belinda will make a cameo performance as well, playing violin on Young
Frankenstein -- and there's even supposed to be a guest theremin player.
Call Ticketmaster at 214-631-2787. Here's the program:
FIRST HALF
- Airport (Alfred Newman) Main Title
- The Sea Hawk Suite (Erich Korngold)
- Bride of Frankenstein (Franz Waxman) "Creation of the Female Monster"
- Young Frankenstein (John Morris) Main Title
- North by Northwest (Bernard Herrmann) Main Title
- High Anxiety (John Morris) Main Title
- The Wind & the Lion Suite (Jerry Goldsmith)
- The Pink Panther Theme (Henry Mancini)
- The Phantom Menace (John Williams) "Duel of the Fates"
- Captain from Castille (Alfred Newman) "Conquest"
SECOND HALF
(All selections by Bruce Broughton)
- JAG Theme
- Miracle on 34th Street Selections
- Baby's Day Out Main Title
- O, Pioneers! Suite
- Homeward Bound End Credits
- Young Sherlock Holmes Suite
- Lost In Space (Main Title)
- Harry and the Hendersons Main Title
- Silverado Suite
Finally, it's not exactly a soundtrack event, but the local film center
in San Rafael, CA is having an evening with Ray Harryhausen on July 23rd,
two Sundays from Sunday. Jason and the Argonauts and The 7th
Voyage of Sinbad will be the feature presentations. Thanks to Steve
Stromberg for the info.
Tora! Tora! Tora!
Our new CD of
this classic Jerry Goldsmith OST is now available!
From: christian lauliac <christian.l@ideale-audience.fr>
I must congratulate you folks at FSM for once again providing us
with another superb Jerry Goldsmith score. I think Jerry's WWII scores
rank among his best efforts. But until today I used to think Tora! Tora!Tora
was only a 15 minutes score. Little did I know! I have been a fan of Goldsmith's
exotic scores and with this year's release of "The Challenge"
and now "Tora! Tora! Tora!, I am simply overjoyed. By the way, I think
you should send a copy to Michael Bay, director of the upcoming "Pearl
Harbor". Maybe Jerry will score the movie next year instead of some
lame Media Ventures clone. But seriously, let's get back to Jerry. Once
more, bravo, and I am looking forward to receiving my CD and savor every
note of it. I hope this release is not the last in your Goldsmith projects.
Sayonara!
Of course not! More Goldsmith to come...
From: Sean Nethery <SNethery@cpr.org>
Having just ordered my copy of "Tora," I wanted to send
you my official appreciation for your release recently of "Beneath
the Planet of the Apes." And more, to try to help convince any
fence sitters to BUY THESE FILM SCORE MONTHLY CDs if you have any interest
in (or even just curiosity about) the material.
When you announced Beneath some weeks ago, I was pleased, but also
hesitant. I have most everything of Rosenman's that's been in print over
the past ten years or so. His music is usually quite challenging - and
also more similar in effect from work to work than many artists - and I
find I don't listen to his work as often as more accessible works (though
I should stress that I've been sympathetic to avant-garde music for decades).
So I wasn't sure I really needed any more, especially since I already have
Fantastic Voyage, and have frankly found that a difficult album to get
through.
Still, I was always hopeful that Rosenman's Apes scores would be
released - they blend his sophisticated compositional style with raucous
rhythms in a way I find both exciting and disconcerting - and I love that
feeling. But what I expected to see was a single release featuring both
scores, since neither Beneath nor Battle for the Planet of the Apes seemed
to have that much music.
So when you came out with your Beneath release, I was glad to see
it, but also disappointed that instead of combining both scores you essentially
coupled two complementary - but mostly duplicative - versions of just one
score. So I watched my copy of the movie to listen to the music, went back
and forth for a couple of weeks, and finally ordered the "Damn, Dirty"
thing.
Boy was I wrong. Your release of Beneath the Planet of the Apes
is, in a word, fabulous. The presentation of the score as heard in the
film is probably the most enjoyable of Rosenman's more extreme scores -
more variety, more moment-by-moment interest than I at least find in Fantastic
Voyage. And what a wonderful solution to end the score segment (when the
score doesn't really end at all) with Brett's organ slaps - it's not only
a perfect punctuation, but it artistically reflects the surprisingly jarring,
nihilistic end of the movie. (Talk about something you don't see any more.)
And then, after a significant pause, and a few minutes of transitional
bleeping and blooping (which is also quite cooly representative of the
wonderful experimental trend in film music at the time), we enter into
the world of 1970s concept soundtrack albums, and it's like a whole new
work! I'm a fan of Miles Davis' Bitches Brew (which came out around the
same time as this), but I'm telling you what, it sounds like Burt Bacharach
compared to these "Lenny and the Fuzz Creepers" rock and roll
arrangements of this frankly experimental music. It reminds me that I saw
the original album once in a used record store selling for a premium at
a time when I wouldn't pay collector's fees. Jeez, how could I have missed
this for so many years!
But that's not all. I open the CD case, and on the back cover of
the booklet is this wowzer poster art (for the original album) that looks
suspiciously like the same hand as did the Star Trek TMP poster. Just the
head of General Ursus and Lady Mutant back-to-back in the center of the
image, split in half by the Alpha Omega missile - and a huge orange flash
of what I still think of as 1970s ABC Movie of the Week colors (by way
of 2001, by the way). I love this so much I had to turn the booklet around
so the front of the box always shows me this crazy image.
So, when I saw the order form for Tora Tora Tora this morning, I
didn't deliberate (yeah, I have the re-recording, I just bought The Challenge
- how much bad-tempered Asian Goldsmith music do I need?). I just ordered
it. Cause I know I'll love it. And I know you'll have put it together very
well indeed. Just like you did with Rio Conchos. And - no, I'm not going
to list any more. Just like you've done with everything I've bought.
Thanks!
Spellbound
From: spsaudiomixers@webtv.net (Steven Schwartz)
Just wondering if anyone else was as surprised and delighted as
I was with the recent "restored" presentation of SPELLBOUND on
AMC's continuing Hitchcock "festival". What surprised me was
the inclusion of a music-only "overture" (over 5 minutes long),
and also a similar, but different music-only "Exit" music piece
before and right after the film itself, with just a still-frame showing
(along with a cg time "count-down" readout in the corner)!
The two music pieces were of the same vintage sound as the rest
of Rozsa's great score, so they were undoubtedly recorded and produced
at the same time as the film's score. But I had never heard those two versions
of the main themes in those particular arrangements on the many, many albums
and concert renditions I've heard, seen printed music for, and even performed.
My question is, does anyone know if the movie was presented in theaters
(in it's first runs in 1945) with those two musical interludes (before
and after the feature) like the "overtures" and "intermission"
music segments in some of the recent big "road-show" features,
(of the past 40 years, or so) or not? If so, I guess the composer's BEN
HUR and EL CID-vintage overtures weren't his first such pieces to be heard
in a darkened theater by audiences before the actual movie began, not to
mention as "exit music" after the final credit had rolled. A
refinement I certainly wish would return to more larger scale pictures
in the present.
That's cool -- I didn't know that. Can anyone write in to help?
A note about the Bernard Herrmann roundtable we
mentioned as being at AMC's website, www.amctv.com
-- we forgot to mention the writer/editor of the roundtable, Julie Kirgo,
a regular on FILMUS-L, the film music mailing list.
Intermissions
From: Robert DiMucci <rdimucci@erols.com>
I have to agree with Michael R. Goolsby's comments in the June
26 Film Score Daily that today's longer films need intermissions. I
thus disagree with Lukas' response that "audiences would [not] tolerate
an intermission anymore; nor would theater owners wanting movies to be
shorter, so they can cram in more screenings per day." Last weekend,
I attended the 3-hour movie "Sunshine", and I'm sure most people
in the audience would have welcomed an intermission. As Mr. Goolsby noted,
everyone benefits. Many in the audience can get a needed bathroom break.
(Who dares buy one of those quart-size sodas, knowing the ordeal to come?)
The theater owners would have a second opportunity to sell refreshments
to everyone (which is where most of their profit is made). And no showings
would be lost. A theater typically cannot schedule more than 4 or 5 showings
of a 3-hour film in a day. Adding a 15-minute intermission to each would
add only 60-75 minutes per day. Eliminating the intermission cannot yield
enough time to squeeze in an extra show. As for audiences "not tolerating"
an intermission, I can't believe that they will tolerate bad projection,
lousy sound, and high prices, but be driven screaming from the theater
by an intermission. I don't see a downside.
My only disagreement with Mr. Goolsby (sadly), is that even with
an intermission, we film music fans are unlikely to get the musical playouts
and entr'actes that we desire. Few theater owners could stand to lose a
minute of time during the intermission in showing their slide show advertisements
and playing their paid-for popular music radio feeds. Thus, the intermission,
which can be used to add considerably to the mood and grandeur of a film,
would end up being the ultimate mood destroyer.
On a brighter note, despite the loss of overtures and intermissions,
we modern audiences do have one musical advantage over earlier movie generations.
In the '50s and '60s, exit music was limited to a few road-show productions.
But today's endless credit scrolls guarantee that EVERY film has considerable
exit music. Even if you first have to sit through some "inspired by"
rock song, most credits run long enough to allow the composer to provide
a significant reprise of the film's underscore. If you ever want an indication
of how few film music devotees there are in the world, look around and
see who's remaining in the theater to listen to the last notes of the score
at the end of the credits. You'll invariably be alone with the clean-up
crew.
Well, OK, but I doubt we'll see any intermissions -- not a single one
-- in any upcoming movie in the foreseeable future. I just think moviemakers
don't want to give audiences any chance to leave the theater.
Links
See Cinema Concerto (http://members.aol.com/marcgothic)
for a review of our Beneath
the Planet of the Apes CD.
Randy Salas wrote a great piece on our FSM
CD series for the Minneapolis Star Tribune; here's the link for the
story: http://www.startribune.com/cgi-bin/stOnLine/article?thisSlug=fsm25
MailBag@filmscoremonthly.com
|