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Seeing the announcement for Casper and noting that it was the 25th anniversary made me realize what else is joining the 25 year mark: Crimson Tide Braveheart Apollo 13 Batman Forever Waterworld Goldeneye Toy Story Mr. Holland's Opus First Knight Jumanji Sabrina Cutthroat Island (eerrrrgh) Just for example. I mean, I remember spending a LOT of money on CDs back then. I'm realizing why. It's also the summer that I bought my first copy of FSM! Hulk smash! (Anyone remembering that stretch might know what I'm talking about.)
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Nixon by JW
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I seem to recall 1995 as a good John Barry year: Moviola 2 Cry the Beloved Country Across the Sea of Time The Scarlet Letter
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I still recall the FSM magazine in-depth multi-review issue of the scores for summer movies that year. LK's rather scornful takes on the music of Braveheart, Batman Forever, etc. (I think he was more into offbeat stuff such as Seven), consensus summary of reader's reviews, and then the regular columnists' write-ups! That was a great summer for melodic movie music - Joel McNeely's "Hollywood '95" Varese CD sums it up nicely.
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Balto (another Horner).
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I still recall the FSM magazine in-depth multi-review issue of the scores for summer movies that year. LK's rather scornful takes on the music of Braveheart, Batman Forever, etc. (I think he was more into offbeat stuff such as Seven), consensus summary of reader's reviews, and then the regular columnists' write-ups! That was a great summer for melodic movie music - Joel McNeely's "Hollywood '95" Varese CD sums it up nicely. Braveheart (or was it Legends of the Fall?): Score that feels most like drowning. That has stuck with me for a quarter century. Man, those Hollywood discs were great. I still listen to them regularly. I'm glad that Casper fans are getting an expansion, but I got rid of my disc when I found that everything I wanted from it was on the McNeely disc. (Hey, I want an expanded Goldeneye and I KNOW that isn't a popular opinion.) Is Crimson Tide the moment that Zimmer became a superstar or is it just when I started paying attention?
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Braveheart, Toy Story, GoldenEye, Crimson Tide, and Jumanji all in the same year. That is powerful. Yes waiter, thank you sir, I'll have a GoldenEye and Crimson Tide expansion/remaster please. Also, may I have a side order of Jumanji with that? And a diet coke please. Thank you.
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Man, those Hollywood discs were great. I still listen to them regularly. I'm glad that Casper fans are getting an expansion, but I got rid of my disc when I found that everything I wanted from it was on the McNeely disc. (Hey, I want an expanded Goldeneye and I KNOW that isn't a popular opinion.) Is Crimson Tide the moment that Zimmer became a superstar or is it just when I started paying attention? So first off, an expanded GoldenEye is a popular opinion in my book! Anyone who has seen me post here has seen me go off endlessly about that John Altman version of the Tank Chase. I love the entire score to be honest. I wish it were remastered tomorrow. I'd buy it instantly. As for Crimson Tide, I don't know if it's what made him a superstar but it is what first got me hooked onto his work. I am a big fan of him and his team's 90s action scores. Crimson Tide, Broken Arrow, The Rock, The Peacemaker, etc.
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Posted: |
Aug 6, 2020 - 7:39 AM
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By: |
Omni
(Member)
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Man, those Hollywood discs were great. I still listen to them regularly. I'm glad that Casper fans are getting an expansion, but I got rid of my disc when I found that everything I wanted from it was on the McNeely disc. (Hey, I want an expanded Goldeneye and I KNOW that isn't a popular opinion.) Is Crimson Tide the moment that Zimmer became a superstar or is it just when I started paying attention? So first off, an expanded GoldenEye is a popular opinion in my book! Anyone who has seen me post here has seen me go off endlessly about that John Altman version of the Tank Chase. I love the entire score to be honest. I wish it were remastered tomorrow. I'd buy it instantly. As for Crimson Tide, I don't know if it's what made him a superstar but it is what first got me hooked onto his work. I am a big fan of him and his team's 90s action scores. Crimson Tide, Broken Arrow, The Rock, The Peacemaker, etc. I thought Hans Zimmer became popular since he won the oscar for best score to The Lion King in 1994? Which I liked also as well as CT and his other 90's scores.
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1995 was a terrific time. Personally, it was one of the happiest single years of my life, and the icing on the cake was all the great scores. We were riding high on all those CD reissues (many of them in expanded form) as well premiere releases of older titles which we'd long been told "would never be released". I was busy writing for FSM -- which at that point was still being published out of Lukas' dorm room! Yeah, 1995 had its share of lead balloons (like First Knight and Rob Roy) but many composers were in a period of enormous creativity -- like Horner (Braveheart remains on of his finest), and there was Kamen's Mr. Holland's Opus (one of his best) and Don Juan DeMarco. John Williams was shedding his "big brassy score" reputation (with Nixon and Sabrina), and Elmer Bernstein had five films with his name on them released in 1995. Who'd have though that ten years later, Barry and Jarre would be retired, Goldsmith, Bernstein -- and even Kamen -- would be gone, and "The Borg" (i.e. Zimmer & Media Ventures) would be assimilating the film scoring business. As for my personal favorites for 1995: Sabrina (Williams) Richard III (Jones) Devil in a Blue Dress (Bernstein) The Scarlet Letter (Barry) Braveheart (Horner) A Walk in the Clouds (Jarre) Mr. Holland's Opus (Kamen)
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Goldsmith had kind of a trilogy: First Knight, First Contact, Air Force One.
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Posted: |
Aug 6, 2020 - 12:16 PM
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By: |
SBD
(Member)
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A lot of great headliner scores that year (Outbreak is a favorite, as well as Casper, Batman Forever, Dolores Claiborne, Cutthroat Island, The Usual Suspects and the one-two Silvestri punch of Quick and the Dead and Judge Dredd), but there's also the bottom of the bill stuff that entertains me: Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls, Chris Young's genre trilogy (Tales from the Hood, Species and Virtuosity), Dracula: Dead and Loving It, Dr. Jekyll and Ms. Hyde, Far from Home: the Adventures of Yellow Dog, Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, Mortal Kombat, Nick of Time, Operation Dumbo Drop, The Thief and the Cobbler and Under Siege 2
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