Well
well well, where to begin…
This
is going to be “stream of consciousness" stuff, I apologize in advance but I am
not going to comment separately on everybody.
I
agree with both Colin and PaulR. With Colin because he identifies gradations of
quality within the sorry state of film music today (true enough), and with
PaulR’s comments on his post regarding “Lord of the Rings” etc. verbatim –
although I do profess my ignorance of what else Giacchino has done, what he did
to STXI was enough for me. Without knowing Colin, I am guessing in general that
the younger members of this forum would expectedly be kinder to the current
torch-bearers than we are (allowing for exceptions) for many reasons, including
the fact that they haven’t physically experienced this decline in aesthetics
themselves. They were born into the current state of affairs and have only
records from which to extrapolate a bygone era, not the gestalt understanding
the rest of us possess. It is not that I lived through the Herrmann era myself
(except the “Taxi-Driver”), but the film composers I grew up with were closer
in aesthetics to Steiner, Rosenman, Herrmann etc. of many decades ago, than to
their successors only a few years later… For example:
For
how many of the movies of today can we say that the film will be forgotten, but never the music (not because of hit-songs please)?
I
submit a small list of yester-examples right now off the top of my head:
“Dangerous
Moonlight”, “Hangover Square”, “Summer of ‘42”, “Somewhere in Time”, “The
Legend” (Scott), “The Secret of Nimh”, “The Black Hole”, etc. The list of
instances where both film and music will always remain memorable would take
pages…
Not
only can I not think of any examples today where the soundtrack will outlive the
film (save those from the old guard again), but I find myself - erroneously perhaps, actually preferring to have composed Fiedel’s “Terminator” theme,
or Folk’s “Police Academy” theme, than any super-sophisticatedly orchestrated
mastered and mixed turgidity to which I am consistently subjected today… As hard as it is to swallow, there is a soundtrack aesthetic, or school if you prefer, that would consider Shore's amazing effort (so many hours, no orchestrators) as shite... Better than Zimmer and Howard, but still shite. DON'T just blame the composers though. As responsible as they are about this, it is the studios and the directors that call the shots, never forget that... We need to be constantly educating them!
On another
point, I agree that the English should not be classified as Europeans for a
number of reasons, even though they clearly stem from an imponderable amount of European semen that has fertilized that island (an afternoon swim away from Calais) since the Iron Age, the term 'English' is European, and so is the
language by over 80%.
In any case, if I am going to make distinctions between American and European cinemas, I will include the English offerings to the latter group.
DG:
Like I
said, I did not wish to start a philosophical discussion about library vs.
tailor made film music. There are many aesthetic considerations (especially
from a director's and scriptwriter's point of view) in making creative choices,
as well as a host of other reasons why this is happening, whether it's good or
degenerative, etc. I don't think any of us wishes to go into diatribes here to
make a point. I see your reasons for doing it are sensible ones, but I think
reason No.4 makes my point as well. If there is something we all agree on, is
the degraded quality of film music. The Death of
Film Music could very well be very much in the works, but
it is only the logical consequence of The Death of
Symphonic Music, which
occurred long time ago. What we have left is a comatose corpse in life-support (see
most academic music), and its ghost still haunting us (recordings and concerts
of the old music). If the advent of digital technology had not taken place,
leading everyone to re-purchase all of their classical recordings and more, effectively
jump-starting the industry, I shudder to think where we'd be today...