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  • It's not at all unprofessional to disagree with a director, and in fact I would find it more unprofessional for a composer to act as a Yes-Man. And experience has little to do with it - before "Phantom Menace," Lucas had only directed American Graffiti, THX and A New Hope, and he had been out of practice in the directing world for 22 years (and it shows). Williams was infinitely more experienced than Lucas, and if Lucas had any sense he would have trusted Williams 100% of the way (which, for all we know, he did).  If Lucas had insisted on that particular tone of the music to the point where Williams, had he disagreed, felt that he had better leave the project, well, that would have been professional of Williams as well. Of course we're talking entirely hypothetically here, who really knows what was going on. But there's a good argument to be made that the disaster that was "Phantom Menace" was entirely the result of George surrounding himself with Yes-Men - whether or not Williams was one, well, who knows. It's not really the point, the point is that a composer as famous and rich as Williams is 100% responsible for any music he writes in a film, no question, regardless of whose idea it was, unless the director I guess played tricks during the editing or the mixing. Given the standard to which Williams clearly holds himself to, I'm sure he would agree with me. At that level, a director may be the boss, but the composer is not his slave. 

    Anyway, you didn't really respond to anything I said - we're in agreement that "Duel of the Fates" is well made music, but you didn't address anything I brought up re: it being a pretty close replay of Orff, or more importantly the pretension of music that was made to encapsualte huge ideas being the score for a movie about space wizards. 

    As for the new things you brought up, it's true that what Williams wrote is very impressive for a 70 year old, and it's also true that it's less vital than Star Wars/Raiders/Close Encounters/Superman era Williams. If you want to pinpoint where the spark died down, I'd go way back actually. I don't even find that his 90s work (yes, even Schindler's List)


  • It's not at all unprofessional to disagree with a director, and in fact I would find it more unprofessional for a composer to act as a Yes-Man. And experience has little to do with it - before "Phantom Menace," Lucas had only directed American Graffiti, THX and A New Hope, and he had been out of practice in the directing world for 22 years (and it shows). Williams was infinitely more experienced than Lucas, and if Lucas had any sense he would have trusted Williams 100% of the way (which, for all we know, he did).  If Lucas had insisted on that particular tone of the music to the point where Williams, had he disagreed, felt that he had better leave the project, well, that would have been professional of Williams as well. Of course we're talking entirely hypothetically here, who really knows what was going on. But there's a good argument to be made that the disaster that was "Phantom Menace" was entirely the result of George surrounding himself with Yes-Men - whether or not Williams was one, well, who knows. It's not really the point, the point is that a composer as famous and rich as Williams is 100% responsible for any music he writes in a film, no question, regardless of whose idea it was, unless the director I guess played tricks during the editing or the mixing. Given the standard to which Williams clearly holds himself to, I'm sure he would agree with me. At that level, a director may be the boss, but the composer is not his slave. 

    Anyway, you didn't really respond to anything I said - we're in agreement that "Duel of the Fates" is well made music, but you didn't address anything I brought up re: it being a pretty close replay of Orff, or more importantly the pretension of a musical style that was made to encapsualte huge ideas like Fate and Luck being the score for a movie about space wizards. 

    As for the new things you brought up, it's true that what Williams wrote is very impressive for a 70 year old, and it's also true that it's less vital than Star Wars/Raiders/Close Encounters/Superman era Williams. If you want to pinpoint where the spark died down, I'd go way back actually. I don't even find his 90s work (yes, even Schindler's List) to be the same standard as his 70s and 80s stuff


  • I addressed what I felt I should address. Personally I don't find this score any closer to Orff than I find E.T. to Prokofiev or a lot of his stuff to Stravinsky, Shostakovich or Mahler, so I didn't think the point merited any more special attention, and I agree about the space wizards.

    I disagree strongly about the Lucas point. It doesn't matter that he is the culprit behind 'Howard the Duck' or 'Slipstream' etc. He is the experienced director and producer of his film and if Williams thought he was crap he simply would not work for him. I don't see Williams as an inexperienced petulant youngster that will - as you put it - "stand up to him"... There is a difference between being a 'Yes-Man' and 'Standing-Up' to directors. In this case, those two know each other very well and I am sure they discussed everything very professionally and cordially and even if we don't know whose idea the choirs were, it was Williams' duty to deliver what the director wanted, unless it really went against his grain, it obvioulsy didn't. And of course he takes full responsibility. Plus, like I said, in my opinion the other 100 minutes or whatever of the soundtrack are just beyond professional and the call of duty.

    'Schindler's List' left me rather cold in all respects; I don't think Spielberg is the director for that kind of thing, and Williams, again the consummate professional, turned in the best he could in an area that really isn't his strength at all (lyrical heartfelt melodies). If he didn't walk away from that (let alone getting an Oscar for it, but we know how those work), I don't see how he would have a problem with the 'Duel of Fates'.

    P.S.: You can press 'Edit' and amend your posts, you don't need to re-post them.


  • It's gone a bit off-topic. And as usual, we are now talking about John Williams [:)]


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    @Errikos said:

    'Schindler's List' left me rather cold in all respects; I don't think Spielberg is the director for that kind of thing, and Williams, again the consummate professional, turned in the best he could in an area that really isn't his strength at all (lyrical heartfelt melodies). 

    Liam Neeson's  performance under any circumstances should have won an oscar. But oscars are not given out for performances or any kind of quality.  His performance in that film was towering. But Spielberg did with that film what any Jewish director would do - he over sentimentalized as usual. Most of Spielberg's films are laden with sentimentality, providing you're not a Nazi of course. Which is not a bad thing if that's what you like. However, Schindler's List is more about acting performances from the three Irish/British contingent than anything else. Very unlikely that there was or is any American actor that could have done those performances. 

    If you look at Spielberg's films through time they are sentimental. And for anything other that an American audience they can appear to be sometimes like saccharine.  On top of that there is a unhealthy obsession with the use of Nazis throughout his films - either in comedy roles such as the Indiana Jones rubbish, or indeed the more serious takes such as Schindler's or Private Ryan. And indeed Private Ryan, while a triumph in terms of technical logistics and acting achievements, again was laden with sentimentality right from the very first scene. Spielbergs best film was probably Duel followed by Jaws. I don't recall too many Nazis in either of those. With Spielberg's obsession with sentimentality and dysfunctional family life, there naturally follows all of that reflected in the music. Namely John Williams scores. Take ET for example. Doesn't get anymore sentimental than that.

    On the other hand, take the scores of Herrmann, especially when scoring for Hitchcock. Forget sentimentality from either of those two masters and just watch and learn. David Lean and Michael Powell were two others who knew when to turn in on and off. Spielberg never really got to grips with that.


  • Man do I agree with you regarding Spielberg's saccharine movies - I wouldn't even call them sentimental, they're way beyond that... That's why I was one of the very few young teens who hated 'E.T.', but even as a child in mid-primary school I remember thinking how I also could not relate - and most of us in Athens back then - to those dysfunctional families like in 'Close Encounters', then 'E.T.', etc. And even back then the over-sentimental, the over-wearing-your-heart-on-the-sleeve was incredulous if not sickening... Be that as it may, I don't think Spielberg is oblivious to this or cannot imitate better directors; I think it is his trademark and that he deliberately exploits it for he knows where the big box-office receipts lie. Knowing that you don't possess talent to mix it with the big boys, why not make some tons of cash instead? And I have to say, that only he could make 'Indiana Jones', which as much as it isn't a cinephile's top preference, it certainly provided this 13-year old with awe-inspiring entertainment, helped a lot by the great soundtrack. For me, the music of the Indiana series is rivalled only by 'Star Wars' in Williams' output. And I have to give it to Williams. I mean Herrmann was scoring some pretty good flicks. WIlliams has been scoring 'Star Wars', Superman', 'E.T.', 'Home Alone', and 'The Prisoner of Azkaban' for Christ's sake. To be able to come up with such awe-inspiring music and breathe life and character into such non-entities as M a r k  H a m  i l l  people(!!), I admire that!


  •  Yes Paul and Errikos, but the Spielberg movies that made him so rich are worse than sentimental - they are juvenile.  They are responsible - along with Lucas's films - for the juvenilization of adventure films.  If you think back to the great adventure films of the past - "Gunga Din," Korda's  "Four Feathers" or perhaps "Mutiny on the Bounty" - here are rip-roaring adventures but they are intelligent, and for adults (though not inappropriate for children either). This has all been changed due to Spielberg-Lucas being wildly successful and everyone copying them. 


  •  BTW is that new Bruckner film good? 


  • I haven't seen the Korda 'Four Feathers', I saw Sharp's one in a hotel somewhere, again I was quite young and was impressed; I don't know what I would think of it today.

    Yes, Spielberg and Lucas are responsible for the state of sci-fi/adventure today and I agree on all points. I must admit though I never left the cinema cursing I had spent the ticket money and wasted two hours of my life during the early 'Star Wars' and 'Indiana Jones'; in fact I had really enjoyed myself. I was a child to a young adult of course, and maybe that's the demographic these directors are interested in, and I never remember either of them betraying artistic pretensions in interviews - "I really wanted to say a lot with this film" or "there are onion-like hermeneutical layers in this" or words to that effect. I think they both have been comfortable with who they are and what they serve. Who's fault it is for them having become the dominant forces I won't explore here.

    They do however have my sincere and heartfelt thanks, not for the multiple 2-hour action entertainment and phantasmagoria they have put out all these years, but for having engaged the best composer for the specific jobs. Well done for having been able to recognize and demand that kind of quality in the music department. After all, it is the saddest case of affairs to notice that only Williams and Morricone (Barry's retired) are the only ones left (and over 80?) that could mix it with the previous generations of composers. Everybody else, like YOU-KNOW-WHO (don't say his name!), would have been assigned to coffee-duty!

    P.S.: I would also appreciate a trustworthy review of the Bruckner film - for the life of me I can't see how they could have constructed a riveting narrative from that guy's life...


  • .S.: I would also appreciate a trustworthy review of the Bruckner film - for the life of me I can't see how they could have constructed a riveting narrative from that guy's life... No kidding. Of all the composers to pick. I mean Schubert or Schumann at least give you something to use but Bruckner ? I think composer films should not focus on the composers themselves but rather the time setting. Like a film that takes place in France in a salon and at the piano is Chopin. Not really all about the composer but more so the art community as a whole.

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    @BadOrange said:

    . I think composer films should not focus on the composers themselves but rather the time setting. Like a film that takes place in France in a salon and at the piano is Chopin. Not really all about the composer but more so the art community as a whole.

    I very much agree. Why doesn't someone do a film about a fly on the wall, or a secondary character (one of those countesses) during the times of Chopin, Brahms, Wagner, Tchaikovsky, Debussy, Ravel, Stravinsky, Rakhmaninov, Prokofiev (not the Coco Chanel CRAP). Not to mention the literary, artistic, and scientific figures of the times. Put as many as you can in, and go nuts as the real meeting between Picasso, Proust, Joyce, and Stravinsky (wasn't that the quartet? It's really late here and I have been drinking brandy for the last hour and a half), was real boring...


  • If I had a couple million lying around I would commission a film about Satie, Cocteau and Picasso. Those three had enough personality for a 20 part miniseries. And just a general biopic on Satie would be great (well, if it were done well, obviously).

    What's this about a Bruckner film? Haven't heard of it


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    @mikezaz_27157 said:

    Haha I kind of despise choirs of any kind in films these days because, like you say, they're so overplayed. They no longer mean what they used to, and instead just feel like an insincere and manipulative gesture 99% of the time. It's like the film and the composer don't really "earn" them -  or else it just feels tonally inappropriate (see: every movie trailer meant to feel "epic" - including harry fucking potter). Or another good example is comparing the original Star Wars trilogy score to the new prequel trilogy. Battles that used to be underscored by Stravinskyish/Holstish/early 20th century post romantic type cues with loads of chromaticism are now replaced with big surging Orff choirs singing long diatonic phrases, and even though Williams is really a very decent and thorough guy, it still feels lame and pretentious to me. I guess you can make an analog to how the gritty and functional production design and VFX of the original trilogy was replaced by clean and pristine CGI. 

    If memory serves me right, the choir was first introduced in the original Star Wars trilogy during Return of the Jedi.  The choir only plays when Emporer Palpatine is on screen or nearby.  I can't remember who but I think it was Lucas who asked Williams to do something "different" for the emporer, because Williams composes a theme for every main character.  To accomodate, Williams composed a choir heavy score for the emperor.  The emperor is also a strong religious figure in the series so what musical device works extremely well for religious themes?  That's right, a choir.  At first, Lucas was apprehensive but went along with it.  Lucas has stated that the chior heavy score during the duel between Darth Vador and Luke Skywalker, where Emperor Palpatine watches, at the end of Return of the Jedi is his favorite score of the entire triology.  Interesting, since that score is really not all that popular amongst Star Wars fans.

    During Post production of the Phantom Menace it was decided to keep the tradition of having a choir play anytime the Sith were on screen to tie it all back to Return of the Jedi.  I could be wrong but the only time you hear a choir during the prequel triology is when the Sith are doing battle or are somehow involved.  I believe Lucas wanted a subtle choir part for Senator Palpatine's theme to sort of forshadow his true identity but I can't remember Palpatine even having a theme, at least  I don't remember in Phantom...  Maybe Williams talked George out of it.

    I do agree, however, that choirs are being overused in film to the point to where they are just cliche now.  Mr. Elfman, are you reading this?  Don't get me wrong, I think you're a fine composer but maybe give the choirs a rest every once in a while.   

       


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    @BadOrange said:

    .S.: I would also appreciate a trustworthy review of the Bruckner film - for the life of me I can't see how they could have constructed a riveting narrative from that guy's life... No kidding. Of all the composers to pick. I mean Schubert or Schumann at least give you something to use but Bruckner ? I think composer films should not focus on the composers themselves but rather the time setting. Like a film that takes place in France in a salon and at the piano is Chopin. Not really all about the composer but more so the art community as a whole.

    Yes, Bruckner would not seem a normal bio subject, as he was a kindly, old-fashioned man of the country who happened to write great music.  However, he did have some kinks, like obsessive counting, and having a bible he presented to a girl he loved thrown at him as she screamed a rejection at him, as well as undisclosed problems that led to his institutionlization at the point that this film apparently deals with.  Also, his spiritual, backwoodsy nature being thrust into the city life of Vienna - that might be interesting also. 

    BTW you are right to mention Schuman - now there is a great subject for an extremely dramatic film about a composer.  First of all he is in love with a beautiful young pianist whose father forbids their marriage.  Secondly he forms a group dedicated to young composers advancing music against the Phillistines (whatever those are).  Thirdly he was the first to notice Brahms and promote him. Fourth he went insane and started hearing a constant "A" pitch, causing him to collapse during conducting. And finally he tried to commit suicide before being thrown into an asylum.  So his life was extremely dramatic, and the times he lived in inherently interesting - the mid to late Romantic period.    That film previously mentioned - "Song of Love" is actually a pretty good depiction of Schumann's life even though it was a studio era Hollywood biopic.  Unfortunately NOT available on DVD!


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    @William said:

    First of all he is in love with a beautiful young pianist whose father forbids their marriage.  Secondly he forms a group dedicated to young composers advancing music against the Phillistines (whatever those are).  Thirdly he was the first to notice Brahms and promote him. Fourth he went insane and started hearing a constant "A" pitch, causing him to collapse during conducting. And finally he tried to commit suicide before being thrown into an asylum.  

    What's so dramatic about that. Sounds like a normal, run-of-the -mill day.


  • 'Song of Love' I enjoyed thoroughly, if for no other reason because there was still some nobility in the actors back then, necessary to depict the romantic elite as accurately as possible in their stylized behaviour; it's a pity they have re-released obscure black-and-whites and not this film...

    There is another Bruckner moment to be included in what should be a boring film unless it includes a lot of his music (even then...), is when he greeted a woman at the door stark naked - he was taking a bath and was absent minded when he heard the knocking (Mahler recalls, Lebrecht relates)...


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    @Errikos said:

    he greeted a woman at the door stark naked - he was taking a bath and was absent minded when he heard the knocking (Mahler recalls, Lebrecht relates)...

    Don't you hate it when that happens.  It has certainly caused me a lot of embarrassment over the years[:$]  Especially since I wasn't even bathing.


  •  Bruckner was always trying to get a girlfriend but never did, apparently. 

    Now if he had written shorter symphonies he might have had some time to develop a strategy for getting dates.


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    @William said:

     Bruckner was always trying to get a girlfriend but never did, apparently. 

    And he finally got into some trouble over that. But so has the LIBERAL MP for Portsmouth. Tall, blonde girls from Russia and now has finally 'done a Bruckner' . Guffaw!


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    @Errikos said:

    he greeted a woman at the door stark naked - he was taking a bath and was absent minded when he heard the knocking (Mahler recalls, Lebrecht relates)...

    Don't you hate it when that happens.  It has certainly caused me a lot of embarrassment over the years  Especially since I wasn't even bathing.

    I believe that if one is writing at Bruckner's level and above, one should be allowed, even expected to prance around naked; I think Wagner might have endorsed that... Conversely, I also believe that if one is writing at You-Know-Who's level and below should even be deprived of speech! Would sure make one think twice about sharing one's twaddle with the rest of the world now wouldn't it?...