Mike: Thanks for joining in the humour. Without wishing to go into the completely unacceptable Crowe's theme, the great rip you missed (you got some that I missed), was the main theme, straight from 1492. It seems Scott wanted to re-use Vangelis' theme and obviously could not for obvious reasons. Hans is not to blame for this of course, but to credit him with a great theme when clearly it is somebody else's.... I am both astonished and happy that The Academy has yet to furnish this master with 3 or 4 Awards for his "offerings" (people seem to be missing this when considering Hans' dominance the last few decades). The only one came in 1995 for a very different score, one that the copy-paste arpeggiatorks today would find hard to imitate. And whatever little sounds great in his orchestral scapes, he does employ an army of actual musicians in his bunker. On that point I have to say I am almost equally tired of the Thomas Newman fad. Those static forlorn string-chords were fantastic in Shawshank 20 years ago, but mercy already...
You also said two or three times film being entertainment for the masses (therefore why ask for great music). I agree that it has become this way, but as a composer I miss the past. I miss the times where "films" like Airplane, Top Secret, Conan, Gremlins, E.T., Indiana Jones, etc. were scored way-way above their worth. And it's not that I maintain that it has to be complex or it's crap. I've mentioned before how I love some of Carpenter's scoring, or Brad Fiedel's fantastic Terminator music.
Where did you hear VSL is releasing wet libraries?! Would that not be paradoxical with all the effort that went into MIR and the Suite? We shall see I suppose. Their greatest by far - "unforgivable" - ommission has been the lack of a Violins II section. Hopefully this will be remedied but I am not holding my breath after 12 years.
Thanks for the music request, I shall arrange this privately.
quioloy: It is only of good composers that we should be speaking, and they borrow only to a point. And there, when the material is instantly recognizable, they have so much personality of their own that the borrowing is assimilated, hence not bothersome. My issue with Hans is not this though. I am stupefied that some of you credit him as being a 'memorable themes' writer; "some of the most memorable ones"!.... What bloody themes are we talking about? Maybe you are in your 20s, yes? (No offence meant, I wish I were). And not really watching cinema from the '30s up to the late '80s? For the most memorable themes have been composed by people named Steiner, Rozsa, Tiomkin, Waxman, Newman, Herrmann, Korngold, Mancini, Rota, Goldsmith, Jarre, Barry, Morricone, Williams, to start with. And we are talking about 'Themes' proper. Themes that have been 'covered' by choirs, singers, instrumentalists, jazz bands, etc. a hundred times over. Long after the Dim7ths for the scary bits and Aug5ths for the magical ones that pianists/organists provided in silent film. What can a singer, flutist or guitarist play of Hans in a concert? I credit him for establishing his own style - that is, applying Garage Band song structure methodologies to symphonic writing - but that is it. I hate the style, it is the most limiting style of symphonic music I can think of to apply to film (dodecaphony maybe would be another one?). The absolutely mesmerizing imagery of Inception called for a composer with the widest possible orchestral palette instead of 3 hours of didi-dada-didi-dada-didi-dada-didi-dada over some boring brass, and so did TRON.
I certainly don't consider Hans an artist in order to respect or disrespect him. That people buy his stuff is immaterial to me, for people also buy Bieber, Swift, and - what is it called? I forget - Gangrene style?
You are very right in wondering about random generator creating Zimmer-esque textures for independent film makers. They are here already and proudly used by many.
William: Carmina Burana in Glory, The Planets in Star Trek II, the list is endless really, but Horner was actually a symphonic musician.