film music

  • Best of 2009: New Film Music

    This was a great year for animated film scores with a strong score for CORALINE by Bruno Coulais kicking off a host of scores that often recalled Hollywood’s 1940s and 1950s (mostly because their alien themes often referenced those eras).  Giacchino’s UP is probably the best of the lot though no real commercial release appeared (you can download the score the so I’ve included it here).  Young’s score to a really scary film is one of his best while Beltrami provided an equally great score to KNOWING often recalling approaches by Goldsmith.  Giacchino’s other great score for 2009, STAR TREK, is worthy to be included on the Oscar short list if not a real nominee.  Hamlisch’s score for THE INFORMANT! was a welcome return to film music for the composer after an absence that has been way too long.  Danna’s score for the uneven sci-fi romance is among his most mainstream accessible scores but draws the listener into the narrative quite well.  Perhaps one of the best surprise scores was Henry Jackman’s MONSTERS VS. ALIENS which referenced classic Herrmann scores and falls along the lines of Elfman’s MARS ATTACKS!

     

     

      Best New Soundtrack Releases of 2009 

    Listed in alphabetical order:

    Drag Me To Hell – Christopher Young

    The informant! – Marvin Hamlisch

    Knowing – Marco Beltrami

    Red Cliff – Taro Iwashiro

    STAR TREK – Michael Giacchino

    The Time Traveler’s Wife – Mychael Danna

    UP – Michael Giacchino

      Best New Soundtrack Releases of 2009, Honorable Mention 

     

    Aliens in the Attic – John Debney

    Monsters vs. aliens – Henry Jackman

    SIN NOMBRE – Marcelo Zarvos

  • Review: New Guitar Film Music CD!

    Last year, Gregg Nestor released a surprisingly engaging album of film music, and a few concert miniatures, by Miklos Rosza.  The disc drew on the composer’s wealth of thematic ideas that laid well in guitar arrangements, many by the performer himself.  That was an album worthy of anyone’s attention worth adding to any order that will include this latest release from BSX.  One of the attractive things about the release is that it pulls together familiar themes, often for two guitars now, as well as lesser known ones (like Korngold’s early song “My Love and I” from Give Us This Night) all in performances that sparkle.

    Just looking at the film titles represented here, mostly from the Golden Age of Hollywood, might make one wonder just how these will translate into more intimate situations.  Gold’s finale for It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World opens the disc as an unlikely candidate even for two guitars, but it soon takes on the character of even the finest Spanish guitar music in its dance-like rhythms.  The many quick key changes meant that each segment had to be recorded separately and then edited together for the recording.  It makes for a rather smooth bit of music making when all is said and done.  The opening for All About Eve is another unlikely candidate that turns out to work surprisingly well in this intimate setting.  For his Rosza album, Nestor chose a number of dance-like formal pieces that had a decidedly Baroque influence.  There is less of that here, but the same idea is in place for the little “Hornpipe” from Down to the Sea in Ships.  “Cathy’s Theme” from Wuthering Heights is simply exquisite in this setting giving it a very poignant intimate sense that only a solo guitar performance can bring to this music.

    The center piece of this disc is a concert arrangement of music by Miklos Rozsa.  His “Suite in Olden Style” is an obvious influence to how Nestor has taken to delving into film music that lays well for guitar.  The suite was put together shortly before the composer’s death by his long-time friend, Christopher Palmer.  That particular arrangement was arranged for harpsichord with flute, oboe, and cello giving it a Trio Sonata feel.  The transcription of the keyboard part to guitar feels effortless and very appropriate to the style of the period implied in the selections chosen for the original suite.  Nestor has added an additional movement, the “Bouree” from Moonfleet to make it a six-movement work.

    Odder still, though no less successful, is a suite of music from Herrmann’s Psycho.  Here it feels like a perfectly normal little 20th century guitar piece closer to something by Castelnuovo-Tedesco.  It somehow works quite well though.  The Impressionistic colors of Morley’s beautiful main theme is one of the many highlights of the album as is the theme from Friendly Persuasion.  The performance by Anna Bartos of “Music of the Night” from I Confess is an interesting choice in an otherwise instrumental disc.  Bartos does a fine job of turning Tiomkin’s little tune almost into a polished art song.  The selection helps make the transition to the final part of the disc which features that composer’s music and culminates in a to minute suite of music, which adds harmonica, from the 1966 film A President’s Country.  We leave with a definite sense of the Old West in our ear, a far cry from the Baroque-styled, and semi-romantic themes which opened the disc.  The piece is taken from a short film that featured a number of familiar Western Tiomkin themes arranged for small orchestra.  It makes for a trip through some of the composer’s best Western songs, complete with a little horse whip for the theme from Rawhide.  It works for the most part, adding a bit of humor perhaps to an otherwise serious disc and it makes an apt conclusion to the disc.

    Overall You Must Remember This Too makes for an amazingly enjoyable near hour of fine music making.  There are enough familiar tunes to help the hesitant be drawn into the disc as a listening experience.  It is a well-though out program as well that has enough variety to make it thoroughly enjoyable.  Highly recommended!

    You can get yourself a copy from most on-line retailers (Intrada, Screen Archives, etc.) or from the BSX Records website:  www.buysoundtrax.com.