I agree that the Danube was appropriate not inappropriate, BUT just because Alex North wrote a nice score doesn't mean it was a good one. I fully support Kubrick's decision NOT to have original music. The film works best that way. It transcends the medium better than typical methods.@William said:
I think that the Blue Danube was oddly appropriate in "2001" but Alex North's rejected score was a thousand times better.
It takes a really good composer to say, on a film he's hired for, "I think the best score for this film ... is to have none!". I'm sorry, but all these guys just sweatin' to scribble notes on the page are missing something if they'd just backup and get some perspective. Film is an art. Writing a score for one is not always the best choice a composer can make.
That's why I believe the most powerful and effective film composers are those willing to try anything, even if it's not musical. As I have quoted myself saying on my own website for many years now:
"Film scoring is an artform seperate than any other ... including music."
Evan Evans