Perhaps this continues to happen because Zimmer's music is so simple that it cannot be studied or discussed at length because of this.. D'ya think?
I saw in a Zimmer interview once where Hans commented on how, (paraphrasing) when asked he replied that he felt his music wasn't great. This was in response to a reference on how successful he has become in the film industry. He went on to emphasize how great Williams was and that he could only hope to write as good as him someday.....
If Zimmer said that it changes my attitude completely - that humbleness is very impressive. Though as I said in the first post I was not trashing him personally but rather criticizing the overly block chordal scores I have heard of his that are for the biggest films in the world which makes them seem very dominating, as if they are the "greatest" when they are far from that. Sorry if these posts were a bit harsh to vibrato, etc. - I am just enthusiastic! [8o|] I do think Paul is onto something when he talks about how films have changed. Perhaps Zimmer is correct to some extent to score a giant monolith of undifferentiated sound if the rest of the soundtrack is constant explosions and gun battles. Though that doesn't make it any better unfortunately. On the Inception film the director/writer apparently thinks that dreams are Matrix style FX action sequences. Maybe his are. But I was hoping for some Dali-deChirico style surrealism (with the oppotunity of Herrmannesque music - ha-ha! Yeah right sure) and was severely disappointed just as I was with the boringly dull production design and simplistic music of Dark Knight. Oh well, not that it matters...