Film Score Friday 11/2/01
by Lukas Kendall
I just attended the premiere DVD screening of Star Trek: The Motion
Picture: The Director's Edition at Paramount Pictures. Cast members
William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, Walter Koenig and George Takei were in
attendance, along with director Robert Wise, Jeffrey Katzenberg (a Paramount
executive at the time of the original production), and the restoration
team, Michael Mattesino, David Fein and Daren Dochterman. Plus a whole
bunch of sci-fi luminaries, and the original six-foot model of the Enterprise
itself. A pretty weird site to see this icon of Americana on the middle
of a buffet table....
The new edition of the film incorporates footage from the theatrical
and television cuts, but subtly trims and shapes the material to make it
flow better as a movie -- and adds some needed special effects which were
incomplete at the time of the film's release in December 1979. It does
not exist as a film print -- being produced for home video release only
-- but the DVD projection was impressively clear.
It's a must-get DVD -- available shortly.
Barry Back in Action?
Just when it seemed John Barry would never, ever return to the James
Bond series, the composer recently appeared on BBC TV and hinted that he'd
like to come back for Bond 20. The exchange was very cryptic, but it is
possible that Barry has assembled demos for the film's producers. Barry
said that everything was in the "early stages" and added, "I think one
would bring a freshness to it now, you know, having been away and done
so many other things in between time. It might be a fun thing to do, on
the other hand it might not -- we'll see."
David Arnold's representatives confirmed that as far as they know, Arnold
is signed as the composer for the next Bond movie, having scored Tomorrow
Never Dies and The World Is Not Enough. Then again, Arnold was
going to do The Patriot, and was replaced by John Williams...thanks to
Stephen Woolston for the scoop.
Personally, I found the last two Bond movies so grotesque and overblown
that I don't know how John Barry's style would possibly be still appropriate.
It would be like serving fine wine at McDonald's.
Canadian Emmy
John Van Tongeren has won his second Gemini award from Canada's Television
Academy, this one for Best Score for a Dramatic Series, "Simon Says" from
The Outer Limits. Van Tongeren won last year for the 100th episode
of The Outer Limits, "Tribunal."
Blast from the Past
Located and sent in by everybody's favorite Hollywood newspaper archivist,
Gary Hamann:
2/1/1947 HCN
EVEN MUSIC IN DUEL FILM CALLED SPICY
By Aline Mosby
Parents, if you intend to keep your children from seeing Duel In
the Sun, you'd better not let 'em hear it either.
Even the music in the film is sexy.
The composer, Dimitri Tiomkin, told us so.
"It's sensual, full, round, exciting and full of meaning, but subtle
and obvious," he said.
He's not worried, though, about feeling the long arm of the censor.
The average movie-goer, he said, won't notice the pulsy notes unless he
reads this first, which puts you a step ahead of the guy who didn't.
"The music contributes just as much passion to the picture as the
action and dialogue," Tiomkin explained. "But it's blended so well that
you won't notice it's sexyòit's just background."
There was a mighty fuss kicked up hereabouts after the Duel premiere,
so the movie is being toned down before it reaches your family theater.
Tiomkin's music got by, but some of the action didn't.
The cut scenes reported included those in which some actors, including
a preacher, cast longing glances at sloe-eyed Jennifer Jones. Those scenes
weren't set to music, so Tiomkin's suggestive tunes remain intact.
"There's nothing wrong with sensual music, anyway," Tiomkin insisted.
You can hear sex in a lot of long-hair tunes.
"Listen to Ravel's 'Bolero' and Richard Strauss' 'Don Juan,'Ç suggested
Mr. T., but we detected a not of caution. "They're based strictly on sex."
Tron?
From: "Yannick Fortin" <egopire@hotmail.com>
I was recently perusing Wendy Carlos' website (www.wendycarlos.com)
and came across her summary of the current state of her attempts to get
a remastered TRON score released (http://www.wendycarlos.com/faqs.html),
which I have pasted in below:
Q: When will the CD to TRON be released? (Note the other
variations on this most common request below...)
A: The short answer is: when Disney permits it. We've made several
good attempts to suggest to them that a definitive new remastered edition,
Hi-D and ultra-polished as all our other ESD releases have been, is way
overdue. So far it's been rather like the old joke about getting the mule's
attention: we've not found a large enough 2 x 4 to do the job yet. But
we do have other ideas we're trying to explore. I wish I could tell you
some of the absurdities and frustrations this has brought about, but let's
leave it at that right now. You possibly can help, if you write to Disney
to express your impatience and show that there are enough of us out here
to make it worthwhile for the sleeping giant to scratch our tiny itch.
Who to write there is anyone's guess, an exercise in creativity and intelligence,
to be sure.
I think it might be a good idea to do a story on this in Film Score
Daily, just to get some publicity for this project. I'm sure you people
know or can find out who to contact at Disney... maybe with some extra
publicity and a valid target at Disney to pester, we might see this happen,
perhaps in connection with the 20th Anniversary DVD Edition of TRON in
January? One can only hope...
I would LOVE to have a Tron CD release, but as much as I
appreciate Carlos's efforts, and past releases on her label, Disney is
unlikely to license to any outside label -- no matter how many letters
they receive. Vertical integration, baby!
Session Musician Interview
See Wednesday's
column for an interesting piece:
From: "Karl Morton IV" <kmiv@ix.netcom.com>
The Liliane Covington interview was one of the most enjoyable
things I've seen on your site since I can remember! Thanks so much for
resurrecting it and I hope you can dig up more of these people in the future.
Mmmmm, the stories they could tell, the sacred cows they could slaughter
- especially if you find a particularly elderly and loose-tongued individual....
;)
From: "Lester Sullivan" <lsulliva@xula.edu>
Your most recent Lost Issue Wednesday (October 31), an
interview with Liliane Covington, who performed in the Warner Bros. Studio
Orchestra, is a wonderful thing. Ms. Covington's comparisons of Steiner
and other composers are fascinating, and, as much as I enjoy Tiomkin's
music, something about it--I don't know if it is its Day-Glo colors, peculiar
structure, or marked aggressiveness--always made me suspect that he wasn't
the nicest kind of guy, which she seems to confirm. Every time FSM does
one of these things, it makes a major contribution to history.
Vampire Hunter D
See Roman
Deppe's interview and review of this score:
From: "John Takis" <takisjoh@msu.edu>
To begin with, in my review of the soundtrack CD I never
called "Metropolis" the "best anime ever" (I haven't even seen the film!)
... only that it had the potential to be the biggest "mainstream" anime
to hit American theaters since "Princess Mononoke."
Also, I regret to inform you that you have advertised a bootleg
CD. Ever Anime is a bootleg-producing company based out of Hong Kong, NOT
Japan, that does get a pretty wide distribution. If you really want to
support the film and Marco d'Ambrosio, buy a copy of the original. The
real label is Avex Mode, Catalog No. AVCA-14161. There were two pressings.
The first featured limited edition packaging and a booklet and is out-of-print,
but the standard release features the exact same music. Both are available
from www.amazon.com -- just look up "Vampire Hunter D."
From: "Jason Strohmaier" <jstroh@wam.umd.edu>
Agh, bootleg alert! In your review of Marco d'Ambrosio's
Vampire Hunter D soundtrack, you listed its distributor as Ever Anime and
its catalog number as A8-1368. Ever Anime, along with others like Son May
and Archer Records, is a bootleg company based in Taiwan which creates
illegal copies of CDs and sells them at relatively cheap prices. EA, SM
and all the rest have been the bane of the anime and game music community
for a while now. Some of the first Japanese CD stores carried only Son
May CDs, which meant that many of us bought the bootlegs without realizing
that they were fraudulent merchandise.
The authentic version of the new Vampire Hunter D soundtrack
is AVCA-14214. It can be found at certain Japanese CD stores including
CDJapan (www.cdjapan.co.jp). Hopefully
readers will see this before deciding to buy a bogus copy.
Mea culpa! I did not know.
John also added the following about another recent anime production:
From: "John Takis" <takisjoh@msu.edu>
The recently released Japanese animated film "Metropolis"
will be released stateside on a limited basis in January of 2002, NOT this
November (as previously announced in my soundtrack review.) You can go
to the new website at www.metropolis-movie.com
to see if it will be playing in a city near you. There is a trailer available
for download which features a decent cross-section of music from the soundtrack.
The website also reveals that Ray Charles' classic song "I Can't Stop Loving
You" will receive prominent use in the film. It's probably safe to expect
a DVD release soon after "Metropolis" finishes its limited-engagement run.
The "Metropolis" trailer on the new "Final Fantasy" DVD is the original
theatrical trailer from Japan. For some reason, the DVD producers decided
to eliminate the original trailer soundtrack (probably because of the Japanese
dialogue -- horrors!) Hence the horrible techno-vamp you hear is tracked
in, and bears NO RESEMBLANCE to the film's actual score! When you watch
the trailer, I advise you to kill your DVD audio and pop in a Ray Charles
CD. This is NOT the same trailer that is currently on the official website!
If you want to see the it with the original audio (which is from the film),
you can find a download in the trailer section of http://movie-asia.de/
The site is in German, but it's pretty easy to navigate for English-speakers.
Be a Composer
From: mmee1541 <mmee1541@postoffice.uri.edu>
I read the article "So you want to be a Film Composer" and I must say
I'm definetly glad I did. I am a freshman at the University of Rhode Island,
and I had planned to transfer to USC next year as a film scoring major,
but I just recently found out that they only accept about 8 new students
per year, and that because it is a four year program, transfer students
are rarely accepted. That really discouraged me. I had put so much energy
towards going to this school that I didn't think about other options. Now,
I might be considering going to Berklee in Boston. After reading this article
I now know what it REALLY takes to be successful, and Im glad I have gotten
rid of all those preconceptions about how my talent (and schooling) will
carry me all the way. I now know that its more about survival skills. I
feel better now because some of the mystery about this career has been
cleared. Thank you very much for writing it!
Thanks for your nice note. The article in question is one of our most
popular at the site: http://www.filmscoremonthly.com/features/beacomposer.asp.
Review Evolution
Here's a critical email we received of a recent
CD review of Evolution, followed by the reviewer's reply:
From: "Bondo 321" <bondo321@hotmail.com>
I just have to say that Josh Gizelt wrote a terribly poor
review of the EVOLUTION soundtrack by John Powell. The review is based
on ignorance. Mr. Gizelt is obviously not familiar with Powell's other
music, because if he WERE, he would find this very similar to other types
of works besides MediaVentures. In fact, it is a GREAT departure from the
typical MediaVentures soundtrack. In addition, he seems to forget that
the music was written not for someone to listen to on a CD, but for a MOVIE.
If he'd seen the movie, he'd know that the music fits in perfectly with
the movie.
This site is the only site I've seen that has given the EVOLUTION
soundtrack such a poor grade. The only thing similar would be those people
on Amazon.com complaining that there are no "songs".
The soundtrack has several things going for it:
1. Memorable theme
2. Exciting music
3. Varied music (chase, terror, funny, etc)
4. 40 minutes (not long, not short)
5. Full orchestra
I'm sorry, but the review is very poorly written, and is based upon
the ignorance of the reviewer.
From: "Josh Gizelt" <swashbuckler332@hotmail.com>
Unfortunately, I have to disagree with this assessment
of my review. While Bondo321 is certainly welcome to his opinion about
Evolution, I wish to take issue with the fact that my writing style has
come under fire. If Mr. Bondo321 had taken the time to read some of my
other works, including several plays written under my pen names William
Shakespeare, he would realize that I have a significantly developed writing
style that bespeaks of my considerable intelligence, copious wit and abundant
modesty.
Seriously, though, I make no apologies for my opinion, but I wish
to say that I didn't find the theme that memorable, the music was more
frenetic than exciting, the variation within the score wasn't held together
by anything, the length is immaterial if you're not enjoying the CD in
the first place, and while I like orchestras, it is not a prerequisite
for my liking a score. And while there will always rage a debate as to
whether it behooves a film score to work as an album as well, I wish to
point out that many film composers, from Max Steiner to Jerry Goldsmith,
from Franz Waxman to John Williams, have found ways to create scores that
not only work within the films themselves, but make great albums. I found
Evolution to be just tiresome and loud.
Links
Doug Fake has written about our Illustrated
Man CD release at his weekly column for Intrada. See http://www.intrada.com/doug/doug1001.htm.
Wolfgang Jahn has updated his site on Italian film music -- with info
on lots of rare LPs from the past. See http://www.italiansoundtracks.com.
Visit www.traxzone.com for the second part (of three) of Pierre Andre's
interview with composer Cliff Eidelman (in French): http://www.traxzone.com/content/index.asp?section=itvs&num=45
Visit Adam Corn's website, http://www.SoundtrackCentral.com,
for a variety of Anime and game soundtrack reviews.
MailBag@filmscoremonthly.com
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