.
-
There is definitely a certain tradition associated with the symphony orchestra and a historical legacy. We honor this history and will continue to do so. A relatively small number of individuals are able to work in that musical context. To execute works for this medium requires extensive training and understanding about the symphony orchestra, a lot of which comes only through actual experience. And that is fine. Its extremely expensive, financially, for an orchestra to muck its way through a score created by someone that doesn't know what they are doing. I think its completely valid to say that actual symphony orchestras and their committees should be (and are) discerning about which works they will be willing to perform, which meet a certain level of competency in that specific field of music. No argument.
I am thankful that VSL and other sample developers have made it their mission to make these kinds of sample based tools available for the rest of us mere mortals to compose and learn about the symphony orchestra and try ideas out. I actually specifically chose the VSL VI series initially for exactly the reason that it was not a big set of layered trailer music tools...it was a set of articulations covering the instruments of the symphony orchestra and would REQUIRE me to learn how to properly articulate instrument parts, layer instruments to create sonic timbres, balance them and work with them in ways that might be closer to reality. I realize its still possible to do things completely wrong with sample libraries that would never work with real players...but I feel VSL has done an incredible job of staying close to the original instruments. It honors the symphony orchestra, its tradition and legacy. 20 years ago, this was simply not possible (or may have been out of my budget at the time).
But I also think that we have a lot more sonic potential beyond the symphony orchestra. We have instruments made possible by modern technology. Its easier to work with, less expensive to work with and can be used to create endless sonic possibilities, perhaps some that have not been tried yet.
Hans Zimmer's score from Dune is an awesome example of this, IMHO.
There are many things said here that I would disagree with, and not bother to respond. But one thing you said compelled me respond: you used the phrase 'sonic possibilities' and immediately followed it with Hans Zimmer as an example. In my opinion the two dont go together. HZ single handedly killed sonic possibility for generations to come, thanks to sampled instruments that he had in his finger tips. If there is no electric current there is no Hans Zimmer, and Debussy or Strauss or John Williams created infinitely more sonic possibilities simply using their imagination (and training!), pencil and paper and the orchestra....no electricity needed except for recording.
You imply that sample libraries help create limitless sonic potential even in the hands of amateurs as opposed to the good ole symphony orchestra. Wrong again, IMHO. Do you think orchestral music ended with Mozart? Listen to some 20th century music all the way till Dutilleux and the likes. It is impossible to create sonic potential beyond what they did with sound libraries without knowing how an orchestra works or having solid musical training. All we get is moronic and monotonous HZs thump thump ostinatos and the same goddamn drone shit that permeates every movie.
It is amusing that you think the symphony orchestra is some relic of the past and things have evolved into something better. LOL
As an example of 'sonic possibility' just listen to the opening of this movement from Arnold Bax. This score from a 100 years ago hands down beats anything possible today with the most advanced tech. I wish some intelligent director used this incredible score in a sci-fi movie! The Dune score is toilet paper compared to this.
And just the other day I was watching The Shining, with Penderecki and Ligeti's incredible and complex string textures. Just mind boggling variety of sound.
There is something those composers knew that today's drone zombies don't, and THAT is the craft that is dying. Everyone thinks making orchestral music should be easy, and as we sow, so we reap.
Hope you educate yourself!
Cheers
Anand
-
There is something those composers knew that today's drone zombies don't, and THAT is the craft that is dying. Everyone thinks making orchestral music should be easy, and as we sow, so we reap.
ooohhh zombies. wow. I haven't ever seen one of those.
I certainly didn't say orch music was easy and I don't think anyone on this thread has said that either. With modern tech we have endless new possibilities. You don't like Hans Zimmer, fine that is your opinion. I certainly am not going to compare him to some of the composers you mentioned, no doubt about that. But I think future great composers that rival them will use these new tools, perhaps in addition to the symphony orchestra...or perhaps not. Its also possible the symphony orchestra will eventually die due to the cost required. The main thing that symphony orchestra does very very well is combine the talents of 80 players on a stage, which bring in humanism and dynamics that are very very difficult, if not impossible, to perform using current midi devices, etc. But this will change in time.
-
Seriously now. As the originator of this thread, I've a few observations on its development.
1. The theme of the thread has been essentially an opinion piece; a bit of (non-academic) philosophy, if you will. I really do not believe there's enough scope to underpin the discussion with hard objective facts, to the extent that a logically solid and universally valid conclusion could be derived. It's not science. There is no scientific paradigm to guide us, nor to be broken and replaced by a new paradigm. Hence at most it's mere philosophy.
2. A good number of useful perspectives and insights have been contributed and have, I hope, enriched and perhaps even enlightened some readers in their thoughts, feelings and attitudes on this topic. I can certainly say I've appreciated and also learned from much that's been said here.
3. We hit an obstacle early in the course of the discussion when, it seems, a certain member objected to the topic being discussed at all by anyone he deemed to be an 'outsider', or otherwise 'unqualified' to offer opinions on the topic. The discussion grew somewhat ugly as a result of that, but nevertheless yet more useful perspectives and insights were contributed by others. Even so, the dismissive, grandiose and illiberal attitude of this one member has persisted. In my book this has on the one hand sullied the debate, but on the other hand been met by others with trenchant and illuminating contributions. Whether or not the illiberal content has inadvertently served as pieces of grit from which pearls grew, is difficult to answer; but the 'illiberal member' is now, sad to say, a marked man.
4. The debate remains open to all of course. But I for one have said my piece and enjoyed the free part of the debate, especially the contributions of the two main luminaries, William and Errikos. My sincere thanks to them both for their contributions.
5. Of course in any lively debate there is much cut and thrust, but at the end of the day there is always the need for agreeing to differ on disparate or even diametrically opposed opinions. Any who can't or won't do that would be foolish to think that anything goes these days; certain things are most assuredly not tolerable for most of us who enjoy living in what remains of our free democracies. One of those intolerable things is the attempt to shut down free, decent debate. (Trolling is also not acceptable - mind how you go, trolls.)
Happy moots!
-
Hope you took note of what I said about trolls and trolling, dudboy.
Talking about needing to go pro, here are some great tips from JP Sears:
I like the brown water bit - reminds me of a certain piece of junk hacked and hyped by an irresponsible amateur as a great improvement over VSL's equivalent.
Happy new career as a troll.
Lol de lol de lol.
-
I will say this about Hans Zimmer...as it pertains perhaps more directly to the thread topic... I am a huge fan of the Dune score, as I already said. But prior to that, I have not been a very big HZ fan...and one of the reasons is precisely because he has represented the ultimate commercialization of music. His studio in L.A. is famous for creating an assembly line process whereby film scores could be cranked out very efficiently under deadlines and lowest possible cost, using sampling, percussive beds and other tricks that sound cool, big, catchy...but do not necessarily involve the same kind of symphonic craftsmanship that some on this thread have advocated, and I would agree with you by the way.
HZ fundamentally changed the game in the film scoring world. He also happens to be kind of gifted in terms of the art of film scoring, meaning...coming up with the right music for the scene to capture the feeling needed for the story telling, etc. But unlike John Williams and others who were masters of the symphony orchestra, he used modern tech, numerous ghost writers and created essentially a film score factory in L.A.
Back to the topic, doing this for fun or for livelihood. HZ is the ultimate representation of what will happen when "livelihood" is the focus. He fully embraced that goal and we can now 40 years later observe the outcome. Master of deadlines! Yep...HZ and his factory did exactly that!
-
use of the blue font means this is passing difficult to read in dark mode.
Perhaps just as well, as this kind of post strikes me as less than collegial, frankly
-
Ah, dammit, I'm sorry about that - wierd, the text is black on my iMac screen in Monterey. I copied it across from Apple text editor. Thanks for the heads up. I'll try to fix it. ....... Done, any better now?
BTW I left college an awfully long time ago; a lot of water has passed under the bridge since then.
-
I've noticed Zimmer's work twice in my life, that is outside this subforum of VSL Forums anyway. The first was a Youtube going a little bit into his use of cello for the Joker music in one of the Batman pictures. It was quite interesting, to me. Very creative, and stimulating in terms of ideas.
The second time was a Superman picture I very much liked, and the music at the end of the picture really impressed me, a 20th c. style a little reminiscent of Jerry Goldsmith, very well crafted and in an advanced harmonic style.
Somewhere in here was one of *these* threads where certain members were here to pontificate on what an awful hack is Zimmer. One thing that I checked out here was a Youtube where HZ discussed how he came up with a song in a flick. Ok, the modi operandi here was not at all the usual you've done the part-writing up the yinyang and you talk in terms of figured bass and that area of technique, but a lot more like a rock guy writing a song from chord blocks. Now, I relate to the former and didn't do much of the latter for most of my life, and when I was more naive I wasn't composing that music, but arranging it. The upshot of this story is, the song was freaking gorgeous. :shrug:Didn't matter at all to the usual suspect doing that dissing, it was however obviously a major confirmation of their bias.
-
Afterthought - Apples v Oranges
All the fanboy talk here of Zimmer jolted me into a realisation - apples and oranges are being conflated; knowingly or unknowingly. How many music-makers hired for film scoring really are composers, as distinct from what I'd call "music mechanics"? What's the difference?
Usually, composers and mechanics come from two very different cultural backgrounds: middle class and working class, respectively. During the European modern era (from about 1500), the middle class grew and became distinctive owing largely to the exalted role and status of the intellect within their mental physiology. Indeed Hegel insisted (incorrectly, as neurobiologists now tell us) that the intellect is - or should be - sovereign in the mind. Working-class culture, by contrast, characteristically treats the intellect as a service faculty and chooses not to let it ever dominate the mind anything like as much as in middle-class culture.
Popular music is essentially a working-class endeavour; 'serious music' written by composers, essentially middle class. A simple, straightforward, widely recognised typology thus far, right?
Probably so, at least up until the internet age began to bypass or undermine traditional cultural norms, standards and strictures. But furthermore, especially nowadays, we are blighted by a certain widespread and particularly toxic type of so-called "personality disorder". These types are fundamentally weak in musical intuition and sensibilities but try to compensate by forcing the intellect to outwardly mimic a normal personality. And they can all too often manage to masquerade as musically competent and intellectually able to compose music. Yes I'm talking about our old foe - aka the most toxic personality on the planet - NPD.
NPDs typically do not respect boundaries - whether interpersonal, cultural or national. Honesty is ruthlessly pushed aside as needed by the crucial expediencies of maintaining control over their supremely important "fuel supply", (i.e. attention, status, acquisition of character traits and residual benefits). Empathy with others is poor or non-existent. Management of their public image is their art. Controlling others in order to secure their fuel supply is their game.
NPDs have a gaping void where a real, normal, adult personality should be. Instead, they acquire character traits from others and use these to concoct what seems, outwardly, to be a good, sound character of their own. Thus they are unable to speak truthfully and honestly from their heart or soul. This is one of the most obvious giveaways when an NPD attempts to create music, especially orchestral music.
The NPD intellect, despite all its cunning and ingenuity, cannot fake good music. It ends up sounding like it comes from a music-mechanic totally out of his depth and class. Honest, normal mechanics of course know their limitations and don't attempt to stray beyond their well-established boundaries. NPDs don't bother with such 'trivialities'. Elsewhere in modern life, NPDs have been able to hide in plain sight - but not in music!
I'm in no way professionally qualified to diagnose NPD. However, as the fast-growing wealth of incisive tutorial videos (including many by licensed clinicians) on the topic tends to indicate, making an informal, well-informed guess at a diagnosis of NPD is well within the capabilities of most of us, once we've taken the trouble to learn conscientiously as much as possible about NPD. So I'll leave it to you to learn to make your own guesses. Join the new game in town!
Good hunting!
-
Hey Macker what is NPD? New Product Development?
Anyway, I wanted to mention that the Master of Self-Contradiction and "Professional" Egotism - Jerry Gerber - is also head of a fine Baby Food Product line. Did you know that? Yes! He actually he grinds out pablum in his studio along with his symphonies. Please follow up on this as I think his expertise with zwieback and other teething biscuits could be of great use to musicians. He is a pro after all...
-
Collegial in the sense I mean (it's the only sense I know of the word, however I did just see a secondary definition conflating it with collegiate) means you are dealing with the others as colleagues, with a similar or shared purpose.
-
Civilization 3, Ziimmer's music, honestly, just isn't my cup of tea. Much of it I don't think warrants calling him a composer. But that's just my opinion. I'm not trying to shut down or cancel anyone else's honest opinion.
"Colleagues" in what sense? I'm not aware of any formally structured organisation that I joined by becoming a member of this open forum. Yes we're all customers of VSL, but in my opinion that hardly constitutes us becoming "colleagues".
-
I've heard more than one of Mr Gerber's orchestral pieces. He's pretty freaking good, and his virtual orchestration is extremely well made and sounds utterly convincing. I don't personally think one is doing one's self any favors talking smack on a personal level (William)
-
"Colleagues" in what sense? I'm not aware of any formally structured organisation that I joined by becoming a member of this open forum. Yes we're all customers of VSL, but in my opinion that hardly constitutes us becoming "colleagues".
The way you're writing comports well with having never heard it.
No, we wouldn't literally be colleagues, thanks for 'splaininIt's the spirit of the thing.
I'm going to step away from this, there's no percentage in explaining it to one that doesn't see it or why a spirit of collegiality (or even feigning so) is preferable in discourse to forming enemies to no gain.
-
William, NPD = Narcissistic Personality Disorder, as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5). But in this case I think New Product Developer serves just as well, lolol. (Sorry, being a bit slow tonight. I need a nap - about 8 hours should do the trick, lol.)
Interesting bit of background on Mr Gerber. Teething biscuits indeed. Well I'm sure it's tremendously valuable in helping Mr Gerber to compose. And I suppose he's the only one in any position to explain how it helps, because yes, after all, he proclaims that he is "a real composer".
Well one lives and learns. Making baby teething biccies is his actual livelihood, uh? Who knew? Of course as he has pointed out, I'm in no way permitted to make any comments or have any opinions on "real composers" and "real composing", so I'll just happily rest in the safe belief that baby teething biscuit manufacturing probably ought to be promoted as an essential part of "real composing"!
Lolol.