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Film Score Friday 3/30/01

...is finally up. Sorry about the delay.

See the pages on our new CDs:

Untamed by Franz Waxman

The Towering Inferno by John Williams

Sound clips have been loaded for each -- quite a pair of powerful main titles!

News

Jerry Goldsmith is scoring Rod Lurie's next film, The Castle.

Tan Dun won the Best Original Score Oscar at the 73rd Academy Awards last week for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, beating Hans Zimmer in what was a surprise for most people (including Zimmer, judging by his good-natured reaction at the ceremony). Bob Dylan won the Best Original Song for "Things Have Changed" from Wonder Boys.

Shafted

I wrote a CD review column for last Wednesday -- my first in some time. I shoulda known better!

From: Mike Copping <copping@cableinet.co.uk>

I am rarely moved to respond to an opinion, but the comment included below annoyed me so much it surprised me. Therefore; I am responding!

Speaking of Shaft in Africa:

"The elements of funk and drama blend well, as do the references to the urban and African settings; in contrast the score to Shaft's Big Score was by Gordon Parks (the director) with a dozen arrangers and is a hopeless attempt at "faking it," even including a shameless rip-off by O.C. Smith of Hayes' "Who's the man who's a private dick...?" routine." - Lukas Kendall

I could not believe that you had written this, about one of my all time favourite scores, and albums. For a start, this "hopeless attempt at faking it," is a seamless blend of the kind of music (70's soul) being written at the time, and the more traditional big band orchestral music you might have expected Jerry Fielding to have written. Admittedly it's a departure from the first film, but I think it works, after all we are talking about the Big Apple here, in terms of local colour, and as an urban setting.

If you pay attention during the first film, there are a couple of scenes that are scored differently from the rest of the movie. These scenes contain purely functional suspense music, as opposed to the over-all "cool soul" approach by Isaac Hayes. These are the work of the director.

The music for Shaft's Big Score was written AND recorded during a two week period, which is a punishing schedule for any composer, to say the least. The "arrangers" were in fact orchestrators (Dick Hazzard, Tom McIntosh, Jimmy Jones, and Dale Oehler; I didn't know four constituted a dozen), there is a difference. Given the time frame this is not unusual anyway.

Director Gordon Parks has created a score that not only works dramatically (e.g.: the Main Titles, the Love Theme, The Water Ballet), but manages to feature some very fine jazz solos by musical giants including FreddieHubbard on trumpet, Joe Pass on guitar, and Marshal Royal on Alto Sax. Their presence and talent lends the music a richness and class missing from many contemporary scores. Alex North writes a ballet for the round-up sequence in The Misfits, and is (quite rightly) praised to the skies. Parks wrote a kind of big band jazz ballet for the final chase sequences in the film, but this is dismissed as "faking it"?!!! It has energy, power, and drives the movie along while punctuating the drama during the climactic moments. How is that faking it?

As for the comments about O.C. Smith's song, it is stylistically different from Hayes wonderful original, and is an integral part of the new musical philosophy/identity created by Parks (who also wrote all the lyrics for his songs) for the movie. Incidentally I noticed you conveniently forgot to mention the wonderful love theme Don't Misunderstand, also performed by Smith, which seems to me to sum up not just how Shaft sees women, but how his white counterpart (James Bond) does too.

The other song written by Parks for the movie is the wonderfully percussive and over the top Move On In, which effectively gives the listener an impression of what it must be like to be under the kind of pressure that John Shaft is under in this movie. The whole score is (in keeping with the tone of the film) magnificently overblown. After all, we are kind of mirroring the Bond series here, and this sequel was supposed to be bigger and better than the original. For the record, the first movie is unquestionably the best of the three, but Shaft's Big Score is no turkey, as a film, or as a score.

Within the confines of the times, the style of the film, and the schedule, Shaft's Big Score is an amazing achievement, and sounds far more cohesive as a whole, than the over-rated and overblown Gladiator. That this score has never been issued on CD is a tragedy, not only for film music fans, but for jazz fans as well. Ryko, if you're listening?


Mike is obviously more acquainted with and affectionate towards this score...all I can say is that I got heavily into blaxploitation soundtracks around 3-4 years ago and listened to well over a dozen of them. Of all of them, I found Shaft's Big Score lacking the "soul" of soul and more mechanical and traditional than the other soundtracks, my favorites being Superfly, the original Shaft, Black Caesar, The Mack, Foxy Brown and Across 110th Street.

Electronics

See the recent column on electronics in film scores and then the follow-up mail bag:

From: "Richard Street" <Streetrw@btinternet.com>

There is a brief demonstration of these on the "Making Of Alien Resurrection" documentary, a rare example of a "Making Of..." programme that features the score to any degree. In addition to John Frizzell describing these, and the sound produced by rubbing a "Superball" (some kind of lolly / candy / sweet) on a gong, there are brief appearances by Jerry Goldsmith and Elliot Goldenthal, describing their scores to Alien and Alien 3.


From: "Randy Derchan" <rderchan@visualdatainc.com>

"And how could any discussion leave out Jerry Goldsmiths own "Runaway"? A MIDI masterpiece."
It's great to see someone else appreciate Goldsmith's work on "Runaway". A score often dissed and yet actually has some very complicated writing in it. I would like to add one correction though, with due respect to the comment a "MIDI masterpiece", I don't believe it was done via midi or at least sequenced by midi. I spoke to Jonathan Goldsmith about the recording of that score and he told me it was all recorded to tape by overdubs. Midi sequencing was too premature at the time. That even makes the score more organic for me, I feel.


I think you are correct in that Runaway was pre-MIDI and performed live. I like Runaway and find it does have a organic feel and a "symphonic" orchestrational approach despite consisting entirely of electronics.

Rozsa Review

From: "Dana Wilcox" <dwilcox9@netzero.net>

Thanks for the review of Chapter III's release of El Cid. One of the things a prospective buyer is interested in hearing about is of course the sound quality, which was addressed in the review. My only "quibble" with Mr. Gizelt's rapid fire dash through the tracks was his failure to mention "Fight for Calahorra" -- a highlight of the score and a peculiar omission. In any event, El Cid is a wonderful score with great range and hardly a false note, either compositionally or performance-wise, and ranks close to Ben-Hur among Rozsa's best.


Links

Marc Escauriaza at the John Towner Williams Homepage has loaded photographs from Elmer Bernstein's film music concerts last week in Barcelona. Go to the home page (http://www.geocities.com/hollywood/studio/7728) and click on the concert section.

Also re: Bernstein:

From: "Tsiantis, Lee " <Lee.Tsiantis@turner.com>

NPR's "Morning Edition" had a piece on Elmer Bernstein and Christopher Parkening re: EB's "Guitar Concerto." You can hear it via RealAudio at www.npr.org <http://www.npr.org> . Find "Morning Edition" in "latest show" (Friday's, 3/23), & scroll down to the following segment description:

Composer Bernstein (14.4 <http://www.npr.org/ramfiles/me/20010323.me.06.ram  > | 28.8 <http://www.npr.org/ramfiles/me/20010323.me.06.rmm> ) -- Pat Dowell reports on Elmer Bernstein who, after composing scores for more than 200 movies, is moving to writing concert music. Bernstein regrets the state of film music today -- which he says lacks emotion, and is included primarily to create an atmosphere, rather than impart a grand musical theme. (8:47)


From: carl.sackis@abnamro.com

You really have to check out this soundtrack-associational item description. It's really quite funny.

The link is: http://cgi.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=1419521829. I checked it out, and it really is bizarre....


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