We are going away for a few days, and, rather than
scrambling to get a few posts ahead so there would be no “dead air” on Just Speaking, I thought I would instead
present a handful of selections from my favorite movies scores.
Also, it’s easier.
Although not as easy as I had hoped.
To me, film scores are our classical music. In not a few cases, they are more memorable
than the movies they accompany, the soundtracks remaining happily stuck in our
heads after the recollections of films they were composed for have long since dissolved
and disappeared.
Perhaps – not “perhaps;
it is – the most evocative
demonstration of the integral significance of movie soundtracks took place during
the 1982 Oscars presentation. To explain how the musical underscoring
enhances the movie, they showed a clip from the ultimate 1982 “Original Film
Score” winner, Chariots of Fire.
The clip showed a gaggle of English competitors preparing
for the 1924 Olympics, running on the beach, backed by the now iconic Vangelis
composition.
Immediately thereafter, they reran the same clip, this time
with the musical accompaniment edited out.
What the audience then witnessed was a bunch of Englishmen in short
pants padding noiselessly in the sand.
It was truly hilarious.
And it successfully made the point.
Film scores are really important. A great one can put you over the top.
I wanted you show you that Oscars Chariots of Fire film clip.
But after close to ten minutes of an all-out Internet “Search” – it was
probably closer to five – I was unable to find it.
That’s what I meant that doing this was “not as easy as I
had hoped.”
I don’t know if anyone else feels this way, but for me,
doing Internet research is excruciating and exhausting. Looking at the screen, trying to figure out the
precise way to word my request so as to obtain the information I am looking for
rapidly drains my body and depletes my spirit, I almost immediately lose
patience, my nose itches and my feel fall asleep, none of which I enthusiastically
I look forward to.
I’d make a terrible research scientist.
“Did you “Search”: “Similar
experiments throughout history”?
“I tried.”
Anyway…
Every day while I’m away, I shall present snippets from one
of my favorite film scores. I am sure
there are more than six examples but these are the ones that popped
immediately into my head. There is a
list of “Greatest Film Scores” I could have checked as a mind-jogging
reminder. But you know… it’s on the
Internet.
I have always written – and studied for exams – with some kind
of music playing. A quiet surrounding
feels oppressive to me. I get stomachaches
in libraries.
Passing my office at any studio I ever worked, you’d hear enlivening
music emanating from my office. Especially
film soundtracks. At Universal, my incomparable secretary Astrid
– she preferred that designation – would order stacks of soundtrack CDs from
the studio library, and when she was challenged about why I required so many of
them, she replied,
“They inspire him.”
She was right.
Check out this example, and you’ll understand.
From 1948, composed by Max Steiner, a demonstrative sampling
from the invigorating film score of Don
Juan.
An Unbidden Bonus:
I am also providing a magnificent sword fight.
You’re welcome and enjoy.
2 comments:
Good stuff, Errol Flynn was quite the swordsman. Check out Max Steiner's bio...very impressive!
This has numerous scenes from Chariots, and the entire main theme.
https://m.youtube.com/?tab=w1#/watch?v=CSav51fVlKU
Korngold - Robin Hood...https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uT6dLPfSCL8...
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