FILM SCORE FRIDAY 1/31/03
By Scott Bettencourt
One final reminder from Lukas Kendall: the complete collection of Film
Score Monthly back issues will be available for $99.95 only through
Sunday, Feb. 2nd, after which the price will go up to $189.95.
Go to this
link to order.
Postage is free in the U.S., nominal surcharges for outside the country.
Lukas also recommends NPR's article on Leonard Slatkin's concert series
"Soundtracks: Music and Film," which can be accessed at this
link.
BAFTA, the British Academy of Film and Television Arts,
has announced their yearly award nominations, including their picks for
the "Anthony Asquith Award For Achievement in Film Music":
CATCH ME IF YOU CAN - John Williams
CHICAGO - Danny Elfman/John Kander/Fred Ebb
GANGS OF NEW YORK - Howard Shore
THE HOURS - Philip Glass
THE PIANIST - Wojciech Kilar
As you may have noticed from the list, BAFTA doesn't have the strict
guidelines for their music category that our own A.M.P.A.S. has, so their
nominations include one film (Chicago) which only features fifteen
minutes of scoring plus one new song, and another (Gangs of New York)
which features no original scoring at all. By BAFTA standards, the Strausses
could probably have been nominated for 2001: A Space Odyssey.
On the other hand, the Music Branch of the Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is working to make the qualifications
for Best Original Score even more stringent. In the January 18, 2003 issue
of the Los Angeles Times, pre-eminent film music journalist Jon
Burlingame reported that scores which feature themes from earlier films
will no longer be eligible in the category.
By this rule, Howard Shore's Two Towers score was originally
disqualified, and Shore was preparing to appeal this ruling when the Music
Branch decided to postpone the new rule for another year.
The new rule comes as a surprise, especially since sequel films (and
scores) are so popular. If the rule had been implemented this year, it
could easily have disqualified such other films as Attack of the Clones,
Austin Powers in Goldmember, Die Another Day, Halloween: Resurrection
(I know, not a likely nominee), Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets,
Jason X (as unlikely as Halloween), Men in Black II, Star
Trek: Nemesis and Stuart Little 2.
It would be nice, however, if the new ruling meant a return to the discontinued
"Best Original Song Score and Adaptation Score" category, under which such
sequel scores as Return of the Seven, The Return of the Pink Panther,
and Damien Omen II were once eligible.
The gallery at the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences in Beverly Hills has just opened a two-part exhibition celebrating
the seventy-fifth year of the Academy Awards. On the fourth floor is "And
The Oscar Went To," which features one hundred of the actual Oscars, with
at least one statuette from each year of the awards.
Among the music Oscars on display are John Williams' Oscar for Star
Wars and John Corigliano's for The Red Violin, as well as songwriting
Oscars won by Henry Mancini (Days of Wine and Roses), Alan Menken
(Beauty and the Beast), Will Jennings (Titanic) and Irving
Berlin ("White Christmas").
In the main lobby is "Academy Treasures: 75 Years of Collecting and
Preserving," featuring an artifact (including posters, production skills,
costume sketches, storyboards) representing a winning film from each year
of the Oscars.
Of greatest interest to film music fans will be the piece representing
1976 - a page of sheet music from "The Dogs Attack" from Jerry Goldsmith's
Oscar-winning score to The Omen, featuring the Latin lyrics and
handwritten instructions such as "cup hands over mouth" and "Piano -- strike
bass strings with bass drum stick."
The exhibits will be open through April 17, 2003. Gallery hours are
Tuesday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturday and Sunday, 12
a.m. to 6 p.m. The Academy is located at 8949 Wilshire Blvd. (between Almont
and LaPeer) in Beverly Hills.
If there are any people out there who still doubt the
importance of the composer/director relationship in today's film music,
of the 279 films declared eligible for Academy Award consideration in 2002,
at least 74 of them were scored by composers who'd worked with their directors
before - everything from About Schmidt to XXX.
CDS AVAILABLE THIS WEEK
Bram Stoker's Dracula & Other Film Music - Wojciech Kilar
- Marco Polo
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind - Alex Wurman (9 min. of score)
- Domo
Re-Animator - Richard Band - LaLaLand
The Recruit - Klaus Badelt - Varese Sarabande
Two Weeks Notice - John Powell - Varese Sarabande
IN THEATERS TODAY
Amen - Armand Amar
Biker Boyz - Camara Kambon - Song CD on Dreamworks
Final Destination 2 - Shirley Walker
The Guru - David Carbonara - Song CD on Universal
The Recruit - Klaus Badelt - Score CD on Varese Sarabande
Suddenly Naked - Chris Ainscough
COMING SOON
February 4
Gods and Generals - John Frizzell, Randy Edelman - Sony Classical
February 11
Diamonds Are Forever - John Barry - EMI/Capitol
Live and Let Die - George Martin - EMI/Capitol
On Her Majesty's Secret Service - John Barry - EMI/Capitol
February 18
The Guys - Mychael Danna - Sony Classical
February 25
Goldfinger - John Barry - EMI/Capitol
Nicholas Nickleby - Rachel Portman - Varese Sarabande
Thunderball - John Barry - EMI/Captol
You Only Live Twice - John Barry - EMI/Capitol
March 4
Daredevil - Graeme Revell - Varese Sarabande
Darkness Falls - Brian Tyler - Varese Sarabande
The Day the Earth Stood Still - Bernard Herrmann - Varese Sarabande
The Quiet American - Craig Armstrong - Varese Sarabande
March 11
The Hunted - Brian Tyler - Varese Sarabande
Date Unknown
Amerika - Basil Poledouris - Prometheus
The Big Sky - Dimitri Tiomkin - Screen Archives/BYU
Captain From Castile - Alfred Newman - Screen Archives
Dr. Phibes Rises Again - John Gale - Perseverance
From Beyond - Richard Band - LaLaLand
Invasion of the Body Snatchers - Denny Zeitlin - Perseverance
Mighty Joe Young, etc. - Roy Webb, et al - Monstrous Movie Music
Monte Walsh/The Crossfire Trail - Eric Colvin - LaLaLand
Prince Valiant - David Bergeaud - Perseverance
The Spirit is Wiling/The Busy Body - Vic Mizzy - Percepto
They - Elia Cmiral - LaLaLand
This Island Earth, etc. - Herman Stein, et al - Monstrous Movie
Music
THIS WEEK IN FILM MUSIC HISTORY
January 31 - Philip Glass born (1937)
February 1 - Herbert Stothart died (1949)
February 3 - Paul Sawtell born (1906)
February 3 - Lionel Newman died (1989)
DID THEY MENTION THE MUSIC?
DARKNESS FALLS - Brian Tyler
"[Director Jonathan] Liebesman's cast of virtually unknown actors do
their best to retain their dignity even as they play second banana to the
film's special effects, bombastic musical score and a creature designed
by master makeup artist Stan Winston."
Ann Hornaday, Washington Post
"The performers service underwritten parts with little gusto, while
the technical credits, from the extreme close-up photography, overburdening
music and mechanical special effects, aren't worthy of a TV movie."
Paul West, Seattle Post-Intelligencer
THE SLAUGHTER RULE - Jay Farrar
"Suffused with the cruel, crisp beauty of winter light, and accompanied
by No Depression ballads and a Jay Farrar score rich in strum, twang, and
drone (the soundtrack is out on Bloodshot next month), The Slaughter
Rule derives its metaphoric density from the brutality and intimacy
of contact sport."
Dennis Lim, Village Voice
PAGE COOK, PRO AND CON
In a recent Film
Score Friday, letter writer Jon Bell had harsh words to say about the
late film music critic Page Cook. Here are the responses:
FROM: "Preston Jones" <pjones@fulpat.com>
What a surprising non-sequitur to close off today's column
was Mr. Bell's diatribe against the late Page Cook. It might have helped
if either Mr. Bell, or you, had provided some context, because I doubt
that every visitor to your site has been around long enough to remember
"Page Cook," whose column on film music ran in FILMS IN REVIEW magazine.
I'm not sure of the dates, but I believe the column began in the
fifties and lasted until the writer's death in the late sixties or early
seventies. [He actually survived until at least the eighties -- SB]
Actually, the eccentric Mr. Cook committed a number of literary sins which
Mr. Bell doesn't even mention, such as making up his own words and musical
terminology, and sometimes devoting whole columns to imaginary movies and
composers he'd invented out of whole cloth. (He's credited with the liner
notes to the RCA Gerhardt album of Alfred Newman scores, but producer George
Korngold once told me that they'd had to completely re-write the mess that
Cook had submitted.) He also sometimes announced the news of recordings
which were really just wish-fulfillment on his part. He once proclaimed
that Bernard Haitink was going to conduct an album of Philip Sainton's
score to MOBY DICK. What a mad dream that was at the time, but I'm glad
I've lived long enough to see Morgan and Stromberg make it come true.
What surprises me is that Mr. Bell has bothered to resurrect the
ghost of Mr. Cook purely for the purpose of beating the poor dead horse.
For one thing, in terms of "Did They Mention the Music?," Mr. Bell has
had to yank Cook in from left field because, unlike all the other scribes
we've seen quoted, Cook was not a film critic who occasionally mentioned
scores, his was a column devoted ENTIRELY to scores, so naturally he ALWAYS
"mentioned" the music. You can confirm this or correct me if I'm wrong,
Dear Editor, but I imagine the likelihood that you've been on the verge
of quoting Page Cook has been nil. What's most surprising, however, is
simply that Mr. Bell is still so worked up, all these years later, over
Mr. Cook's largely forgotten oeuvre. With so much good music to be listening
to, and so many good books to read, I marvel that Mr. Bell felt compelled
to take the time and energy to lash out at the ghost of poor old Page.
Finally, although it should be obvious by now that I'm not what
one might call a "defender" of Page Cook, I do think it worth pointing
out that, however misguided the fellow was, and whatever his mental or
emotional issues may have been, his was for many years the lone voice crying
out in the wilderness, the one column in any respected film journal which
took film music seriously as something worth attending to and worth writing
about. (And yes, despite his prejudices, there was much film music that
he loved and wrote about positively.) Tony Thomas accomplished a great
deal with his books, albums and liner notes, but Cook's column, for better
or worse, was the only one of its kind published on a regular basis. Perhaps
it's a sad sign of the times that in those days film music's only consistent
in-print champion was the loony Page Cook, so why don't we just be grateful
that the world has grown up to the point where there is a lot more respect
for film music, and a lot less snobbishness against it, and let the shade
of poor old pioneer Page rest in peace?
FROM: "Gregory Scott Stevens" <gregorys@multcolib.org>
Page Cook certainly had his faults (his syntax and terminology
were often more entertaining than his comments), but I don't think critics
need be taken so seriously or required to be accomplished in the field
that they critic. Sure his diatribes could go on and on but, when I discovered
his writings in the early 70s, he was the lone source of published film
music appreciation and my introduction to the art. His "Best of the Year"
lists, from 1959 on, are still a reliable guide. His "venomous vituperation"
aimed at various "rock, pop, bebop" contributions to film making did belie
a genuine passion for the art. He wasn't so blind as to ignore a real achievement
(Jarre's POPE JOAN was cited as one of the best scores of the year) and
his in-depth articles on BEN-HUR, ALL ABOUT EVE, THE DIARY OF ANNE FRANK,
among others, have some merit.
FROM: "Steve Lehti" <Zoragoth@aol.com>
Much as I often disagreed with Cook's opinions (particularly
when it comes to Maurice Jarre and, especially, John Barry), even while
I enjoyed his colorful vocabulary, I must take issue with Bell's recollection
of what he calls Cook's attacks on the likes of Herrmann, Goldsmith and
Williams. It's been a few years, but I recall Cook heaping great praise
on these giants (though he was less than fond of those Indiana Jones scores,
if memory serves). And, Page Cook extolled Herrmann's opera WUTHERING
HEIGHTS as one of the best of the century, and Herrmann himself as "one
of the century's finest hearts and minds."
FROM: "Ron Pulliam" <ron.pulliam@acgov.org>
SUBJECT: Mr. Bell's comments on Page Cook
Balderdash, Mr. Bell.
There are perfectly valid forms of criticism by men and women who
do not compose or direct or act or write or sing or paint or take photographs.
They bring taste, talent and an aesthetic sensibility to their criticism.
I'm fairly certain that your own tastes have been formed by "informed opinions"
of folks who were not professionals in the crafts who shared their insights
with you. Thus it has been and shall ever be.
We, the unpaid critics, generally agree or disagree. But to "dis"
Page Cook's right to critique because he never composed is as "ignorant"
as your same criticism of him.
You don't like him -- that's fine. You may or may not have a critic
you do like to read.
If you read all of Page Cook's columns, you'd have learned that
there were several first-rate musicians in the film music world who agreed
with some of his perspectives, including Hugo Friedhofer and Ken Darby
-- men I would readily choose to believe over you.
You'd be amazed at how severe film musicians can be about each other.
The world is too full of this glad-handing "it's-all-good" mentality.
It isn't all good. Quite a bit of it is CRAP!
Page Cook thought some film music was crap and said so. Others find
the music he admired to be crap, too. One man's crap is another man's joy.
No one has to agree with him. But he was right about much of it!
Shame on you for suggesting his voice be silenced.
FROM: "John S. Walsh" <Spark654@aol.com>
Please excerpt some of Mr. Cook's work. He had a genuine
love of film music, as many who disliked him do. He had his blind spots,
as we all do, but his praise of such scores as Sarde's Fort Saganne, Mancini's
Lifeforce and (though faint) Horner's Search for Spock were quite interesting.
Many of today's score fans have never read a word of the late Mr. "Cook's"
words and would enjoy his analysis.
Maybe his critical writings are not for everyone. Whose are?
FROM: "John S. Douglas" <jstevensd@attbi.com>
The comments on Page Cook that closed last week's "Film
Score Friday" column have inspired me to offer this appreciation of Cook's
unique brand of film music criticism.
Sometime in the late 70's I stumbled upon his writings while perusing
my Father's collection of "Films In Review." His was the only film music
criticism I could find at the time and I was fascinated. Here was a guy
who wrote about film scoring with an enthusiasm that compelled my attention.
If he liked the music he was grandiose in his praise - if he didn't like
it he was cutting and dismissive. There seemed to be no middle ground for
Page Cook.
He most highly regarded the "golden age" composers like Alfred Newman,
Miklos Rozsa, Franz Waxman, Bernard Herrmann, Hugo Friedhofer and their
like. He alternately praised and damned the work of our current "old guard"
- John Williams, Jerry Goldsmith and Elmer Bernstein. He absolutely detested
the likes of Dimitri Tiomkin, Maurice Jarre, and Ennio Morricone. He so
routinely flogged the work of Quincy Jones that Elmer Bernstein was moved
to complain by letter that he should give the guy a break.
His views certainly reflected a snobbery towards more progressive
forms of film music composition and they often clashed with my own tastes.
However, I quickly learned that when he said a thing was good - it generally
was. He opened my ears to composers like Alfred Newman and Hugo Friedhofer
- whose work I had not been exposed to. Had he lived to see them, I'm sure
he would've heaped much praise on the "Film Score Monthly Golden Age Classics"
series (although, by the same token, he'd probably not be as kind to the
"Silver Age" releases). It is certain that without Cook's articles, I would
not be buying these CDs as much as I have been.
I always found his flowery prose style to be highly amusing. When
he dismissed a score he used phrases (in addition to "meandering droolings")
like "non- regenerative and overblown" (THE RIGHT STUFF), "solemnity via
sonambulism" (SILKWOOD), "mediocre majesties" (RETURN OF THE JEDI), "noisome
saccharinities" (SIX WEEKS), and "bird-brained galumphings" (FIREFOX).
These non-technical cut- downs made Cook sound something like a soundtrack
obsessed Dr. Smith.
When praising a score he fell into high-flown descriptive passages
like the following quoted from his review of David Shire's RETURN TO OZ
score in reference to the end titles music:
"Scored as a duet for violin and cello with orchestra, the development,
the very unalterable genius of the scheme, the bridge, the key change,
coalesce with one of the most devastatingly beautiful melodies ever created
from the strands and tissues of innocence, memory and the future."
It may seem over-stated at first glance, but what he is attempting
to communicate is a feeling about the music that goes beyond the technical
and literal. This was something he did better than almost any other film
music critic I've ever read - give expression to the intangible things
brought out in the music, free from the images.
I didn't agree with everything he wrote about, but he certainly
influenced my appreciation for the art of film scoring and for that I will
always be grateful.
FROM: "Mark Wallace" <mwallace@gsi.ca>
SUBJECT: RE: Jon Bell's dumping on Page Cook
Shush, child.
MailBag@filmscoremonthly.com
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