Paul,
Amazing once again. World at War is a favorite of mine since my youth and also how I came to know Davis' work. I mentioned that score to the head of the composition department back in college days as I told him I wanted to do something like it. Davis works with Mr. McCartney a lot these days.
I also very much liked the Howards End, Remains of the Day scores. Couldn't miss that wonderful writing. Is that Gabriel Yared? (He did that Ralph Feines WW II Oscar winner I'm pretty sure.)
Goldsmith arrived at his seventh decade recently I believe. He's by far the most versatile composer ever: no one even close. Some people consider versitility (assuming the highest level of talent) as the criteria for greatest ever (Mozart.) On that count JG is at the top of the heap.
Not a phony bone in the man's body btw. Absolutely exudes genius (having spent a fair amount of time with him.) I will tell the story of his reaction to a second engineer accidently wiping a very long 80 piece orchestral cue (which was a keeper.)
As he glared at the guy saying, "That's a Television first."
DC
Amazing once again. World at War is a favorite of mine since my youth and also how I came to know Davis' work. I mentioned that score to the head of the composition department back in college days as I told him I wanted to do something like it. Davis works with Mr. McCartney a lot these days.
I also very much liked the Howards End, Remains of the Day scores. Couldn't miss that wonderful writing. Is that Gabriel Yared? (He did that Ralph Feines WW II Oscar winner I'm pretty sure.)
Goldsmith arrived at his seventh decade recently I believe. He's by far the most versatile composer ever: no one even close. Some people consider versitility (assuming the highest level of talent) as the criteria for greatest ever (Mozart.) On that count JG is at the top of the heap.
Not a phony bone in the man's body btw. Absolutely exudes genius (having spent a fair amount of time with him.) I will tell the story of his reaction to a second engineer accidently wiping a very long 80 piece orchestral cue (which was a keeper.)
As he glared at the guy saying, "That's a Television first."
DC