Hi.
I think Stanley Kubrick had a genius for "superbly inappropriate" music - music which doesn't just amplify or enhance the latent drama or emotion, but turns the scene inside out. Johann Strauss in "2001" is a famous example, but there's a scene in "Full Metal Jacket" where the most vile, irritating comedy-novelty record from the 1960s is played as loudly as possible through a scene of total carnage. Its slapstick, happy-go-lucky dumbness is far more unsettling than any dissonant score would be. It's weird to think that a really bad piece of music serves the scene far better than any "good" music could.
Guy
I think Stanley Kubrick had a genius for "superbly inappropriate" music - music which doesn't just amplify or enhance the latent drama or emotion, but turns the scene inside out. Johann Strauss in "2001" is a famous example, but there's a scene in "Full Metal Jacket" where the most vile, irritating comedy-novelty record from the 1960s is played as loudly as possible through a scene of total carnage. Its slapstick, happy-go-lucky dumbness is far more unsettling than any dissonant score would be. It's weird to think that a really bad piece of music serves the scene far better than any "good" music could.
Guy