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    @vibrato said:

    1. Memoirs of a Geisha

    2. Munich

    3. A.I

    4. Munich

    ...

    Well, #4 definitely looks like it's copied from #2...

    Good one Mike!!!


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    @mathis said:

    Is that maybe a constructive comment?



    That is hilarious Mathis! I love it.


  • I can remember listening to the score for The Rock and thinking 'OK, seems to work for the movie'. Then I heard the score for Man In The Iron Mask and thought 'that's insane, it's the same bloody score for a totally different movie???'. At that point I have to confess I started a bit of a hate / hate relationship with Mr. Zimmer - but over time my view has softened a bit.

    I agree with previous posters who have pointed out Zimmer's pioneering work with his bank of Akai samplers and the creation of a new sound-world for filmscores. I respect any composer - or band for that matter who can be successful having created a 'sound' that they own. I do wonder however whether those beginnings and the risk aversion of the industry have painted him into a bit of a box. Even though he now has access to real musicians, he still produces a lot of stuff that would work well on an Akai S2000. But isn't that what his clients are paying him for? When you hire Hans Zimmer, you don't expect a score that sounds like Danny Elfman.

    Maybe the Rock / Iron Mask thing that wound me up all those years ago is part of his risk management strategy - copy elements from the previous film(s) and add a new bit in each new project (maybe a new intern on the team?). Maybe he's progressing as fast as his clients will let him / are comfortable with? There are elements in Da Vinci Code which are a world away from The Rock (maybe not a world away from elements of Hannibal or The Dark Knight) - but his 'sound'(and chord sequences!) is what he's hired to reproduce. Goldsmith (unless you're a bit of a score geek) didn't have a signature sound as such, but was hired as a 'safe pair of hands' - different kind of risk management, a guy who has years of good scores in several genres behind him - and that allowed him the licence to experiment - his clients didn't expect him to replicate Planet of The Apes, just that he would come up with something appropriate and good.

    That brings me to another point. I'm as guilty as the next composer of listening to scores critically as music, but it isn't really fair is it? - these guys were hired to underscore a movie and they're being paid for the 'movie + score combo' - so judging their craft only makes sense on that basis. If the end result is something like JW's Imperial March then the stand alone quality is a bonus.

    Which brings me to JW. I'm not going to repeat the obvious already stated in this thread of examples - but anyone who doesn't respect his craft and contribution to film scoring is unlikely to find value in VSL either. I get really irritated when people say there's no place for melodic / noticeable music in films today or that we should be using sounds and frequencies to communicate with audiences as an emotional rather than intellectual level. What matters is what works - and I can't help but suspect that the real lack of appeal to this school of 'sound design is the new music' brigade is the rather irritating amount of training and years of experience it takes to have the skill to produce work like JW's. All that aside, anyone here who has had to produce a cue or God forbid entire score in the style of JW using only samples - even if you can replicate his orchestration theoretically - boy does that involve some hours of improvisation and tweaking. It is certainly easier to hold down a pedal point for 20 seconds with a Symphobia brass Sfz-cresc chord at the end of it instead. All I know is that I don't want to go see Indiana Jones without the JW approach to scoring.

    I'm not saying there is no place for the 'sound design approach' - but it's 'horses for courses' Whatever approach you take it needs to work for the specific film in question and the director's vision for it. For some reason, Bernard H is the one composer everyone has to respect - and I for one agree that his Vertigo score is sublime. But I think his horse fitted Hitchcock's course - I'm not sure I want to live in a world where BH or JW scored everything, but I'm pretty glad they scored some things. I wouldn't want to have missed (musically) American Beauty, Beetlejuice, Independence Day, Van Helsing or even POTC.

    Which brings me to my conclusion - Hans Zimmer is I suspect the right horse for certain courses. Did Pirates need BH? Did The Rock need JW - would Da Vinci Code have worked better scored by Korngold (not sure - but it would be cool to find out???). These days I can't remember having left a Zimmer scored film thinking 'well, Hans ruined that film-going experience for me!' but I can remember thinking 'this or that bit was pretty cool - I wonder how he did that...'

    For the most part I think he writes appropriate music for the projects he is hired to undertake - so I'm reluctant to diss the guy, or any other composer who competently does what they're hired to do - maybe with a couple of moments I kind of wish I'd written myself.

    However, if someone would like to start a James Horner bashing thread ... [;)]

    David.


  • I've silently been following this topic with quite some interest.

    First, let me say I'm not much of a musician. I've got some talent when it comes to writing memorable melodies, and I can pull off a decent sounding pop/rock-tune. When it comes to the art of orchestration, I'm quite lost though. I really repsect the skills of those more knowledgeable than me, which would be everyone in this forum, I'm quite sure.

    Anyway, much of the discussion, at least from my perspective, seems to boil down to the question of what constitutes "real" music and the qualitites of a "real" composer. Most of the threads participants seems to have a very intellectual angle on the art of music, and that's all fine by me. After all, composing is in large part an intellectual excersise, requiring extensive knowledge. However, it's possible to convey emotions effectively without the same amount of knowledge as John Williams, and sometimes, the most simple piece of music can achieve this.

    I'd like to mention John Murphy's Adagio in D-minor from Sunshine as an, IMHO, brilliant example of this. I guess many of you will think I'm musically retarded, but I absolutely love this piece of music. Even with my very limited knowledge, I could very well have written it, from an intellectual standpoint at least. There's nothing extraordinary going on, it's a basic chord progression consisting of 4 chords repeated over and over again, with a bass line as boring as Pachabels Canon in D. Yet, I can listen to it over and over again, and find it extremely beautiful.

    I guess my point is that while you can approach music from a more scientific standpoint, at the end of the day, some aspects of music will not lend itself well to being measured, and these aspects sometimes might be the difference between a successful composer and an unemployed one.


  • 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:

    1. The Seahawk (Korngold)
    2. Cutthroat Island (Debney)
    3. POTC (Zimmer)

    And ranked by how often I've watched the DVDs?

    1. POTC
    2. Cutthroat Island
    3. 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.


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    @mathis said:

    Is that maybe a constructive comment?






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    I'm going to preface with, I haven't seen most of these movies, and I never will. It's strictly-from-commercial most of it, and it doesn't get my wallet out.

    @Another User said:

    What matters is what works - and I can't help but suspect that the real lack of appeal to this school of 'sound design is the new music' brigade is the rather irritating amount of training and years of experience it takes to have the skill to produce work like JW's.
    You 'can't help but...', based on what? The assumption that "sound design" really isn't squat, that it takes no training, no work, we got it all sussed in an afternoon? Where does that assumption stem from?


  • Hi Gianna,

    I think the point I was trying to make is that there are people who express the opinion that there is only one style of composition (i.e. their's) which is the right way to compose film music in 2010 and that traditional classically based orchestration is dead. Conveniently (based only on my experience) the style they propose (using drum loops, off the shelf midi files, synth drones, Symphobia ( a product incidentally I often use myself for the brass ensemble patches), 'cinematic ambience effects' CDs and so forth) take way less time and skill to programme than something like VSL. If you've taken a look at any of Guy Bacos' tutorials it's a pretty good illustration of the amount of layering and programming required to replicate an orchestral sound.

    I'm not saying that this style of production takes no effort or does not take time and practice to get a good result - but that the relative time taken is different to a considerable degree. I guess it is also a question of what you're used to and feel comfortable with - I can remember early in my career spending two days in the studio with a band who'd asked me to write a string arangement for one of their tracks, and being driven nuts (compared to working with orchestral musicians as I was used to) that no-one could read music and nothing was written down. I spent the first day just transcribing what they played so I had something to take home and work on. I can see how in reverse having a 'classical cat' who can't jam without having something written down for them would be equally frustrating from the band's point of view.

    I guess this is a a similar argument to - 'which is easier to become competent on, the electric guitar or the violin'. I would argue that after 5 years of dedicated study, a violinist can still be painful to listen to but after 5 days it would be possible to get away with smoke on the water on the guitar. That doesn't mean I think Itzhak Perlman is an artist and Hendrix wasn't.

    Programming a convincing rock track (and it wasn't rock I was referring to as 'sound design' of course - see description above) or a JW score involve similar processes of learning (listen to a lot of examples of the genre (both in terms of sound and how that style of composition works)  and tweak the composition, programming & mix until it sounds the same as your examples. But just as the guitar has a long finger friendly neck with frets [ and a lod of different amp, pedals & effects to change the tonal quality) and a violin has a short one without frets or electronic assistance - one takes a lot more work to be basically competent on than the other. As a listener I can enjoy the results of both without needing to know the player's CV - but as a composer there's a big difference in time & complexity between recreating the two.

    My bottom line of course is that neither approach (classically based or sound design) is right or wrong - the test is whether the chosen genre is right for the project. A heavy rock score for Raiders of The Lost Ark (seen that one ? [;)] ) or a JW-type score for Resident Evil wouldn't have been good choices, no matter how skillful the programming.

    Cheers,

    David.


  • Ummm... so I devoted about 3 days of my life to read through this post from front to back...(sarcasm)...


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    @brad_11465 said:

    Ummm... so I devoted about 3 days of my life to read through this post from front to back...(sarcasm)...

    I can sympathise, I'm a slow reader myself ... [;)]

    Still, you'll have learnt a valuable lesson - if you're not into narrow minded ranting and flame wars - never click on a thread with the word 'Zimmer' in the subject. [^o)]

    D.


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    @David Gosnell said:

    if you're not into narrow minded ranting and flame wars - never click on a thread with the word 'Zimmer' in the subject.

    Good One David ! ! !


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    @David Gosnell said:

    if you're not into narrow minded ranting and flame wars - never click on a thread with the word 'Zimmer' in the subject.

    Good One David ! ! !

     

     LOL!!  I love it actually!!

    Brad


  • Hi Guys,

      This thread has lasted for awhile.  Interesting topic!  I've done some scoring for tv, and time was a BIG consideration.  So many film scores seem to have minimal orchestration, and that probably boils down to time and $ (when does it not?.)  What bothers me is the heavy emphasis on "chase scene" cues.  Many are tedious and formulaic.  The slower, more lyrical passages seem to give the film score guys a better chance to shine, and here I disagree a bit with William.  I think Hans Zimmer is quite capable in the lyricism department.  (His live CD, "Wings of a Film" is a good example of this.  Check it out.)  True, one has to weed through a lot of uninspired stuff, but I still think he is somewhat deserving of his popularity (especially some his earlier scores.)

      That said, I think some scores really run with minimal thematic-orchestration approach.  Some that come to mind--Hans Z (Beyond Rangoon, Crimson Tide) John Barry (Dances with Wolves, The Scarlet Letter) James Newton Howard (The Sixth Sense) and two from the infamous Mel Gibson's films (Braveheart-James Horner and We Were Soldiers by Nick Glennie-Smith.)  I just listened to the We Were Soldiers CD last night, after many years.  Simple themes, but nicely orchestrated and quite moving.  (Does anyone know what Nick Glennie-Smith is up to?  I haven't seen his name on any films for some time.)

      Lately I've been listening a lot to American composers William Schuman, Roy Harris and Samuel Barber.  Wish these guys were around to score some films today!  

                                                       Tom


  • Have a listen to a 'chase' scene done by Herrmann, Williams, Barry, Jarre and the like, and compare... As far as deadlines go, have a look at a YouTube documentary on Williams doing the score for the original Star Wars - before the age of computer neat-scoring programs and libraries - talking something about 8 weeks(!) for that score(!!!). As for the current state of affairs in lyrical/dramatic scoring, the less said the better (I have neither the time, nor the vocabulary to accurately articulate my feelings; the adjectives 'vile', 'uninspired', 'ineffective', 'meretricious', 'supremely incompetent', only begin to describe them).


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    @Errikos said:

    As for the current state of affairs in lyrical/dramatic scoring, the less said the better (I have neither the time, nor the vocabulary to accurately articulate my feelings; the adjectives 'vile', 'uninspired', 'ineffective', 'meretricious', 'supremely incompetent', only begin to describe them).

    I tend to think this way also. 

    never mind though - I shouldn't advise people about anything.


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    @Tom23 said:

      Lately I've been listening a lot to American composers William Schuman                                                  

    Tom

    What about Walter Schuman?  [<:o)]

    Filmscore music is a lot like 3 minute popular music. It's a done genre. Why do you think everyone complains that pop music is nothing like it was in the 60's and even the 70's? Because the genre has been done to death. Same as film music. You gents don't really think there's going to be anymore genuinely original pop or film music do you? Just because a genre is created through historic knowledge and recreation of all that comes before, it definitely doesn't mean it's a necessary requisite that it's going to keep going and constantly be original and interesting.

    Pop music and filmscore are almost always a rehash today. Why - because the fucking films are!!!!!  With Hans, I already said he's basically a pop/rocker that got into filmscoring. Don't blame Hans - blame the idiot directors today. These are the people that make the fucking films in the first place. These people have no inkling about film making a lot of the time. They bow to CGI and anything thats easy with regard to entertainment for the low IQ. I keep telling you - that's where the money is. This business about the last Batman film FFS - how many people really remember a film like that 20 minutes later? It's technically well-made crap for people living in an intellectual wilderness.

    Good day!


  • Interesting and long discussion. I did not read every post in detail though...

    I'm not a pro-composer, but I was wondering what you guys think about Zimmer's scores for Da Vinci Code and Angels & Demons?

    I quite liked those two.


  • Oh sure...., I wonder why it never occurs to Williams to base a whole soundtrack on the basest arpeggiator passage (alla Da Vinci Code, the Dark Knight, etc.). Ah, I keep forgetting that he actually has technique to make the music move forward and doesn't need the computer to do it for him...

    If all I can do is put my hands on the keyboard and press some white-note chords every few seconds and have no inkling of how to drive musical material forward, thank Heavens for the arpeggiator... It sure makes the Alberti bass look sophisticated but what can I do? I studied composition under a DJ instead of going to university. Instead of laying down a drum beat so I can compose a song over it, I lay strings (sorry, I tell the computer to lay down strings), and then improvise my puerile harmonic language over them, while the football team of orchestrators await my asinine three-track masterwork patiently in their cubicles...

    Two million dollars please...


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    @Jef de Corte said:

    Interesting and long discussion. I did not read every post in detail though...

    I'm not a pro-composer, but I was wondering what you guys think about Zimmer's scores for Da Vinci Code and Angels & Demons?

    I quite liked those two.

    Listen to the new theme tune from Pillars of the Earth.  A new TV series written by a fucking hack and after 10 minutes of it I put myself up for being 'put to death' as more preferable than having another 1 hour and 50 minutes of shyte.

    Here's the theme. Go figure.


    is music for little boys. Little boys that have no music education whatsoever and absolutely no sense of anything historical.

  • "Pillars of Earth" soundtrack is from Trevor Morris, who worked under Zimmer.

    I didn't see or hear it, but I like his Tudors soundtracks though...