If you're talking about a few individuals who stand out over all the rest of the human race probably for all time, that is genius. I think the reason you don't want to use the word with Vaughn Williams is because he acted unlike a genius. He was not arrogant, flighty, erratic or wild, he was a sturdy, down-to-earth, unpretentious man with a methodical style and method. He lived to his 90s and his last symphony was composed just before he died. So he doesn't seem like the image of ... GENIUS. In many respects he was similar - though with the prototypical English character - to Bruckner, who was a humble Austrian from a rural background. But his particular genius also took him into the rarest company.
I was somewhat conotradictory before - I meant I was not AWARE of those later Goldsmith scores as individual entities apart from the lousy films. But no one seems disturbed by this - that the greatest composer would have to work on bad films. It shouldn't happen. Why does it happen? He is at the pinnacle of success. Is that what a beginner struggles through for years - scoring TV commercials and industrial films and falling into the black hole of library material - to reach? The offer to score shallow drivel like Basic Instinct?
It has become almost a reversal of the past: nowadays, a composer's best chance of getting a film to score that is a worthwhile project is a low budget independent movie, not a studio film. And of course that will not pay much money. To me this is a severely dysfunctional art form.
Paul, that is a fascinating and important point you make about the early schooling you received. In other words, with that humble set up, your teacher was able to concentrate upon the essence of what needed to be learned, instead of getting lost in the maze of computers and internet and "teaching tools."
I was somewhat conotradictory before - I meant I was not AWARE of those later Goldsmith scores as individual entities apart from the lousy films. But no one seems disturbed by this - that the greatest composer would have to work on bad films. It shouldn't happen. Why does it happen? He is at the pinnacle of success. Is that what a beginner struggles through for years - scoring TV commercials and industrial films and falling into the black hole of library material - to reach? The offer to score shallow drivel like Basic Instinct?
It has become almost a reversal of the past: nowadays, a composer's best chance of getting a film to score that is a worthwhile project is a low budget independent movie, not a studio film. And of course that will not pay much money. To me this is a severely dysfunctional art form.
Paul, that is a fascinating and important point you make about the early schooling you received. In other words, with that humble set up, your teacher was able to concentrate upon the essence of what needed to be learned, instead of getting lost in the maze of computers and internet and "teaching tools."