Wednesday, October 30, 2013

A great article on the composing process

http://www.buzzfeed.com/adambvary/hans-zimmer-film-composer-inside-his-studio?s=mobile

Monday, September 2, 2013

Oblivion OST - Original Music by M83 Score Composed by Anthony Gonzalez and Joseph Trapenese

Oblivion - An Odd Blend

Found that this score helped make the film both surreal and grounded.  What are your thoughts?

Take a listen: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RRywL8RKIQE


Original Music by M83
Score Composed by Anthony Gonzalez and Joseph Trapenese

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Hopeful Resurrection

I recently came upon an expanded version soundtrack for a movie that came out in 1994 that wasn't that popular to begin with; The Shadow. Seeing this makes me hopeful that other albums will come out with expanded film score so you can hear those tracks that aren't usually put on commercially available albums.  I often find that there is music in movies that is not included on something you can purchase whether it be CDs or mp3 downloads. Jerry Goldsmith's work on this album is a welcome edition and mayhap a sign of things to come.



Thursday, June 13, 2013

To Boldly Go

Been watching a lot of the old Star Trek movies and enjoyed Into Darkness so I had to reflect on the music.  Jerry Goldsmith and James Horner were major players in the film franchises' score.  This article explains it well.  Not bad for an encyclopedia. Check it out!

List of Star Trek composers - Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Star_Trek_composers_and_music#The_Original_Series







Friday, February 1, 2013

Review: Game of Thrones Soundtracks





Preview and purchase the Game of Thrones soundtracks and episodes at Itunes
Photo credit: Entertainment Weekly
Source ew.com


The first time I remember hearing Ramin Djawadi's score was on a film I very much looked forward to and thoroughly enjoyed: Iron Man.  The music didn't much impress me, most of it sounding like the contrived music preceding a professional wrestler's entrance into the arena.  Despite this, a few songs appealed to us Marvel reading, Nintendo playing fans, sounding like something out of a Capcom arcade game.

The next time was the remake of Clash of the Titans and I remembering being altogether more satisfied with this album.  The leitmotifs were rather simple, but catchy and did the film more justice than its visual direction did.  I don't know if I just liked Ralph Feinnes in the role or if it was Djawadi that made me love  Hades, god of the underworld, and I'm inclined to think the latter.  Tracks built up with a melodic intensity in ways reminiscent of the late, ever great Jerry Goldsmith. This work was better, some tracks more than others, than Iron Man was, but as an album, nothing to blow the hair back.

It was only when heard his compositions for HBO's Game of Thrones series did my appreciation for Djawadi skyrocket.  It's hard not to talk about how good I feel the series is. It's even harder to separate my appreciation of other facets of the show, it's dramatic narrative and acting to start, from my appreciation of what Djawadi set the GoT world to.

The theme song is catchy like some of his prior works, but also reflects the complexity that is the show's, and the novel series', intricate plot.  To me it almost sounds like someone is composing a medieval tapestry with violins and cellos and that people are at work conspiring.  And many tracks on both the first and second season albums have a stringed eloquence to them that adds feature film depth to television, something, in my opinion, that is very hard to achieve.

When watching a scene displaying the Red Priestess presiding over a seemingly dark ritual, I heard an extremely eerie and haunting melody almost chanted in the night air with her disciples.  The track is called "Warrior of Light" and its leitmotif seems to be the theme for Stannis Baratheon and the Lord of Light he and Melissandre stock their faith in.


"Warrior of Light" - starts off incredibly haunting and then turns heavier toward the end of the track.

  In tracks like "Don't Die With a Clean Sword" this eerie melody is made louder and thrust into battle, much the way Stannis' troops are to the Lannisters. The notes seem to powerfully invert things.

Speaking of Lannisters, I haven't been able to get "The Rains of Castamere" out of my head for weeks now.  It is called the Lannister Song and tells a somewhat sad story from what I can gather.  We can thank George R.R. Martin, author of the A Song of Ice and Fire series, for the lyrics to the song and only wonder if he collaborated with Djawadi for the musical part of it.  Even if not, it is the theme for members of House Lannister and when the soldiers or "smallfolk" sing it, it makes me feel like I'm somewhere between high fantasy and historical reality.  It sounds like a royal anthem or drunken sea shanty, depending upon how you look at it and definitely takes you somewhere else.

And the score on the East side of the Narrow Sea is no less interesting.  It reflects the often quite different environments and cultures that are present in Essos with the Targarian side of the story.  When in D'othraki lands and with the horde there is a very tribal sound, but an eclectic one.  Again, I'm no musician, but at times it sounded like a fusion of African drumming, Peruvian flutes and with a Arabian tones all at the time time.  A melange of different cultural sounds, different from a more European Westeros, but no less regal.

Then you have tracks like "King in the North" that sort of convey a certain royal dignity and hope that only gets you further immersed in the events of the series.  Djawadi does a great job with it all, whether it be playful score behind "The Sword Dance" or the ominous and dreadful drumming and string-work in "Three Blasts". It's amazing how so much disparity, of character and setting, is so artfully mirrored in the series' score, and yet still retains a cohesion. Despite the diversity, all the tracks sound ancient and mystical.  Djawadi has made me a believer in dragons, white walkers and the Red God.  The show would simply not be as epic without his haunting and mystical contributions.

Did you like the Game of Thrones soundtrack or what music you hear in the series?  What are your thoughts on this or other Djawadi works?

Update 6/13/13

Djawadi did it again for the Season 3 soundtrack, now available for purchase.  Imagine the Unsullied marching and dragons flying to silence or the Red Wedding with the Rains of Castamere and you'll realize just how important orchestral score is to even a TV show.  Tracks to check out for sure "Dracarys", "White Walkers" and of course "Mhysa", a tribal reworking of Daenerys' leitmotif.

Update: 1/19/2016

Season 3 - Suggested Tracks:
         Dracarys
        Mhysa

Season 4 - Suggested Tracks
Let's Kill Some Crows
Thenns
The Real North

Season 5 - Suggested Tracks: 
A Dance With Dragons



                                   

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

The Dark Knights: Zimmer & Howard

 


To preview or purchase The Dark Knight trilogy movies or mp3s, got to Amazon

Photo Credit: http://eyemdope.com/?tag=the-dark-knight-trilogy

Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight Trilogy has definitely earned a place in the canon of modern superhero movies.  Nolan's attention to complex narrative detail lends a realistic gravity to all his films, even ones involving the masked and caped.  His dark, yet direct visual style is greatly supported by Hans Zimmer and James Newton Howard through this intense series.

I remember watching Batman Begins and wondering if I was watching a superhero flick or a military/espionage thriller.  However minimalist at times, there was always a sense of a something being imminently revealed.  In the same way the viewer could feel like every frame of the film was somehow crucial, Zimmer and Howard audibly elicit a sense of awe and hope that comes as a result of the Caped Crusader's ethical austerity.  At once the score dances between a mission driven momentum and some dark primal honor.  

The hype of theatrical performances aside (even though to an extent they are warranted), The Dark Knight's score added another element to this consistently dark and driven soundtrack in much the same way the Joker character introduced anarchy to Gotham City, and to Batman's soul.  The opening shot of the movie provides the clearest example of what the composers imposed, the gradual sound of what to me sounded like a violin plugged into an amplifier with reverb on it.  Now, like I've stated in previous posts, I have no musical training beyond middle school general music, so I may be totally wrong on what this effect is, but nevertheless, it's eerie in the same way Ledger's portrayal is.  In fact, there was a sort of grunge/punk feel to much of the crazy clown's image and some of the music building dead-ended in electric guitar riffs.  I found this to be crude at first, but once I embraced the film's psychological texture, I began to appreciate it.  

 The Dark Knight Rises is definitely the biggest and boldest of the three soundtracks and in my opinion the best of them.  Zimmer and Howard continue their tradition of keeping a string driven, serious sounding score, lacking the big brass that we heard in Silvestri's work for The Avengers, which still impressive in its own right. But, at times, they got quite creative with the strings.  In tracks like "The Fire Rises" we hear something new and even more chaotic than oddly timed guitar riffs.  We hear the alternating strings unleash havoc like that of Bane; a sense that time is ticking out for us helplessly.  With "Gotham's Reckoning" and its recurring chanting and bells throughout other tracks, I detect a possible theme for the villain, which makes me very happy.  I really love different themes for different characters in movies, because they lend a sense of depth and culture. Still with tracks like "Why Do We Fall?" and "Rise" we're grounded in the emotion that is at the heart of any good heroic tale.


Zimmer has never disappointed me and neither has Howard.  From what I know of Howard's work, primarily album's like the OST for Falling Down, he was likely a big influence on the crime thriller sounding realism behind The Dark Knight Trilogy. Not that Hans Zimmer is any stranger to this, but I do feel that he's more diverse of composer, addressing a wide array of genres.  The fusion of these two provides this series with an musical ambiance that's just realistic enough to be believable, but epic enough to be the stuff of comic books.