Hi Minstrel!
I think you've raised an important and interesting point - essentially that beauty is in the ear of the beholder; and that the intended beholder for film music probably has no musical training and thinks Korngold is a new breakfast cereal. It is also a painful reminder of a trap it is easy for composers to fall in to, to write music for yourself instead of the audience.
The cue you mentioned (had to resort to you-tube as I've never watched the film) is the kind of composition that would make many of the forum members here want to rant. I think when you've studied hard and worked to try and hone your craft in an industry where it's tough to get a break - it's really irritating when someone is obviously getting paid to repeat 4 chords with synth-pad style string writing. (I have to confess it's the programming - or lack of it - that wound me up. I've just spent 2 days tweaking a string cue to get it to sound realistic and it's always frustrating to see another composer getting commercial success with something they probably just inprovised in a couple of hours, pressed 'upload' and settled down to wait for the cheque to arrive).
The point however is that you as an audience member clearly enjoy listening to it - and that is the point of the exercise (at least within the context of the scene it underscored). I think maybe this is why these topics can get so emotive - and especially on a forum such as this, visited by so many who spend hours 'tweaking' stuff to get it just right. I often think that is why I feel comfortable with composers like Williams or Elfman - because they write 'crowd-pleasers' often with very simple melodic ideas, but I can appreciate the craft and detail that went in to what they did with those ideas. And that thinking affects my own work (maybe detrimentally?) - that no matter what s**t I'm asked to write, I can look at myself in the mirror once I've pressed 'upload' and know that it was the best quality s**t I'm capable of producing.
To go back to the topic, I can't say I've ever been offended by Zimmer's work in that regard - I'm sure his team put hours into programming and he feels proud that his audience can't see the joins between what is 'real' and what is 'sampled'.
I was recently asked by a library to write tracks in the style of Ludovico Einaudi's Primavera - and I just couldn't do it (I ended up with two tracks I've had to give to a different library because I tried to make them something I could bear to listen to - not deliberately, that is just how it kept happening). I have to confess if they'd asked me to write a track in the style of The Dark Knight I think I'd have been OK and actually quite enjoyed the experience. I think this is always a dilemma for media composers, how to put aside your own musical tastes and write something for the audience that is sufficiently 'accessible' on first hearing to easily communicate the emotions the director has in his/her vision. I think for the type of project Zimmer works on he clearly achieves that goal.
I was trying to think of an illustration - and suddenly got all 'piratey'! Take 3 pirate films, ranked by how often I listen to the scores as music:
- The Seahawk (Korngold)
- Cutthroat Island (Debney)
- POTC (Zimmer)
And ranked by how often I've watched the DVDs?
- POTC
- Cutthroat Island
- The Seahawk
As film music is about creating a movie that people want to watch (presumably because they enjoy watching it) which of these 3 'film composers' is really the best? [;)]
Cheers,
David.