You've certainly done your homework mike. I had to turn a way for a minute. Watching david lynch. And some others. These were great people with a conscience. Choked up for a minute... Anyway, if I'm correct, the origin of this string were trying to make a point, that these all were from 25 years ago. Where are the present themes ? The computer and software took hold in the last ten years... The live acts are gone also. There was a time when all the major hotels had live acts in them. New york lit up as vegas. That's all gone because of machines. And of-course there are those whom are taking claim and responsibility for it, as if it's the plan they had all along. The Insanity is overwhelming. Didn't congress just pass a bill in turning down the commercials ? finally.... Television music is so loud now, that I have to turn caption hearing on for the impaired to understand what anyone is saying anymore. Source music mixed with synthesized sounds. This is junk. There was a time when a great song took hold and was recognized also. That is no longer either. Therefore, humans are now coat tailing a flimsy business of gamblers. And the market of banking are doing the same also. It's spread all across the board. A couple of elected politicians just spent 100 million and the other 50 million. One won and the other lost. Imagine loosing 50 million in one shot. There is a money gap so wide between these professions that it's no longer fun to participate on an on-going conversation or any type of power for the fear of fear. If you're somebody today. Look out ! .. It's difficult for moderators to keep things toned down also.
Hi Lon,
First off, if you want me to narrow my list down to just those composed in the last 10 years, I would be happy to:
- Perfume: The Story of a Murderer by Reinhold Heil (performed by the Berlin Phil!! Has the kind of deeply rich string writing that reminds me of Herrman's 451 score)
- Punch Drunk Love, by Jon Brion (I talked a lot about this music on Page 4 of this thread, I think)
- Lord of the Rings, the Gondor Theme, by Howard Shore
- A History of Violence by Howard Shore
- The Incredibles, by Michael Giaccino
- A Serious Man, by Carter Burwell
- The Joker theme, by Hans Zimmer
- The Prestige, by David Julyan
- Memento, by David Julyan
- The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis
- Brick by Nathan Johnson
These are all off the top of my head, and aren't even necessarily my absolute favorites, just ones that I thought of first. If you'd like a broader list, I can spend some more time and come up with one for you 😊 Most of these movies are very good, and I recommend them. Also, if you want me to replace the excellent Blue Velvet theme with an equally excellent and more recent Lynch/Badalamenti collaboration, here is the Mulholland Drive theme from, I think, 2002: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gpP4nJtGvaE&feature=related
It's more subtle and less referential than Blue Velvet, but I think it's still very good. Also, I can do this excercise with any modern genre you want - there are things that I love everywhere. Mainstream film, underground film, rock music, folk, pop, "art" music, ragga jungle, whatever you want. I like a lot of it, and I can hopefully show you why someone would like it and find worth in it, even if you yourself may not.
Secondly, I absolutely do not deny that there are terrible problems in the world today, both the world of music and the world at large. But that has always been the case, no? After all, how long ago was it that every person on Earth had to live in constant fear of the two imperial superpowers on the verge of annihilating everything for no reason? And of course, the more we look back through history, the more terror and inhumanity we see. How much worse are things actually today than they were then? I'm not trying to argue that history is the narrative of human progress - faaaaaarrrrr from it. But I also don't believe the sky is falling.