Zimmer

  • Oscar 2011: Score nominees

    When it comes to scores nominated by AMPAS one sometimes shakes the head in wonderment.  This year though at least most of the scores nominated seem to have received a fairly broad critical recognition.  In the past, I've tended to list five reasons why each score should receive an Oscar but I am going to part ways this year with that criteria.  The five scores nominated this year are:

    127 Hours, A.R. Rahman
    How To Train Your Dragon, John Powell
    Inception, Hans Zimmer
    The King’s Speech, Alexandre Desplat
    The Social Network, Trent Reznor, Atticus Ross

    Each has its unique points but two of them have something in common.  Both Inception and The Social Network feature scores composed away from the film and then edited into the final product by their respective directors.  The procedure is similar to what directors do when they license songs or other classical material for a film and edit it into the final product.  Depending on your point of view, this is either an interesting technical achievement or runs counter to how film music should be written.  Traditionally, composers would sit through a film ("spot") and then determine where music could go--it is what essentially separated a film composer from any other composer because it takes a real special skill to figure this out.  Details get worked out on the scoring stage so that the music can be adjusted to fit the finished (sometimes not completely finished) film.  In both of these current scores that did not happen.  The process might best be likened to that often used by television composers in the 1950s and on where library cues were written to depict certain types of scenes or emotions and then were tracked in as needed, sometimes as recorded, or more often, edited to fit.  So the question would be for the Oscar voter whether or not they liked this approach.  Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross already have a Golden Globe to show for their effort so it is possible that they might pick up an Oscar here--but one wonders if the film has lost some momentum.

    Rahman's film underscores a strong performance and a film that seems to be getting more legs.  I can't honestly comment much on it having not had a chance to catch the film or hear much from the score at this time.  It is not like Rahman has not scored a dramatic film, but this one gives him the chance to do that apart from engaging song material.

    Desplat's score for The King's Speech is the sort of music one expects for a drama about a disability.  It sounds a lot like The Accidental Tourist (a 1988 nominated score by John Williams).  Two things going for this film have nothing to do with the craft of its composition.  The first is that a pivotal scene uses music by Beethoven for its emotional punch.  On a technical level, the score was recorded with microphones from the period lending it a different sound than contemporary scores.  So it is an example of the technology having an impact on the final product--the way Zimmer's recording approach to Sherlock Holmes garnered a nod last year.

    John Powell's first Oscar nomination for How to Train Your Dragon is well-deserved as it is one of his finest scores.  It boasts a more traditional big orchestral sound and technique where music follows the action on screen.  It works unbelievably well in the film and on its own. 

    Powell's score deserves an Oscar if you subscribe to that recognition of classic film scoring with big orchestral sound.  However, if you don't, and there are many who will be voting for these scores that don't, this will not be a selling feature and most likely your vote will go to The Social Network.  It is the score most likely to win and drive film music enthusiasts nuts.  But there is a slight chance that Desplat's score will nudge forward and claim him his first Oscar.  Of the four nominees, only Rahman and Zimmer have won and if name recognition has something to do with this Zimmer may pick up his first Oscar since The Lion King (1994). 

    The music category may not have many waiting to hear the winner, but regardless of who wins, the choice will be historic.  I'm pulling for Powell and Desplat personally but wish all the nominees the best!  There's always next year!

     

  • Best of 2010: New Score Releases & Twas the Night Before Oscar...Announcements

    I have spent ten years now writing and paying close attention to film music old and new.  There was a stretch from the mid-1990s until about 6 years ago that I managed to predict the five score nominees (I think 2003 was the last year of my perfect streak.)  Since then I have somehow managed to bat 3 of 5 most of the time.  This year though is a real head scratcher

    It is sort of odd that one of the best "new score" releases of 2010 was actually an expanded 2-disc set of 2009's Star Trek!  After that I can perhaps point to 5 or 6 more.  Danny Elfman has two of my favorite scores on the list.  The first is his interesting score for Alice in Wonderland with one of the most memorable themes that permeates this score and film.  The other was for the at times laughable remake of The Wolfman with a beautifully perfect score in a more classic horror movie vein.

    I'm also a big fan of Alexandre Desplat, and though I have yet to hear The King's Speech, I suspect it would make an expanded list of scores.  At any rate, his fascinating Herrmann-esque music for The Ghost Writer continues to linger in the ear.  It is definitely worth being on the Oscar short-list, but I doubt many will remember this release from early last year.

    Hands down, the one score that worked so well in a film and on its own was John Powell's fantastic effort in How To Train Your Dragon.  This is one of his strongest scores in a while with perfect action sequences and great thematic development all around.

    Two scores featuring music from other sources were also among the better releases.  First was Christopher Gordon's beautiful music for Mao's Last Dancer.  Those whom I have heard from who also discovered this film and score tend to agree that it is another strong effort.  Gordon's day will hopefully come someday.  The other score is Clint Mansell's music for Black Swan.  This is a score that warrants repeated listening so that you can pick out the threads of the Tchaikovsky source music adn Mansell's deconstructing of it within the score.  It's pretty amazing the more you think about it.  Unfortunately, the score was deemed 'ineligible" by the Academy which is rather unfortunate because rather than just use the source material, Mansell really transforms it throughout the film.

    Two other films featured scores by master composers.  The first is actually from a 2009 film, Baaria, by Tornatore.  Ennio Morricone continues his fruitful collaboration with the director in a score that continues to build on approaches taken in earlier Tornatore films.  There are engaging themes and plenty of interesting orchestral choices to go around.  The other film is about Darwin, Creation, and features a surprisingly good score by Christopher Young who seems to be enjoying flexing his compositional style in a variety of genres of late.  Both scores are perfect efforts with Young's perhaps being the better of the two if one had to choose.

    So with these thoughts in mind, I turn to thinking a little about this year's Oscar possibilities.  The Social Network score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross may have received a Golden Globe, but I cannot see this making it to the final five.  The other four scores nominated for Golden Globes though may have a chance.

    Though A.R. Rahman captured the imagination with Slumdog Millionaire, it is hard to believe that his music for 127 Hours will have the same critical awareness.  Elfman's Alice in Wonderland, Desplat's The King's Speech, and Zimmer's Inception are more likely to appear on Tuesday's list.  In the case of the latter, I am not quite sure why the score would be considered "best" of the year.  It seems to work well in the film, but it often seems so much like everything else by Zimmer--less distinct than Sherlock Holmes--but, didn't some used to say the same about every "older" generation of composers.  It would be wonderful if Powell's How To Train Your Dragon made the cut as well--it certainly has garnered critical attention in music and film circles.  In fact each of these scores have been nominated for the Anthony Asquith Award in Film Music (BAFTA). 

    That list may repeat Tuesday morning.  But somehow I feel there may be a surprise or two.  I will laugh out loud if The Ghost Writer is nominated over The King's Speech, but it would not be the first time one of Desplat's scores was edged out over another.  I have to wonder if the dark horse this year is Carter Burwell's True Grit though. So, here is my tentatively chosen list and I await to be surprised in the morning:

    Alice in Wonderland - Danny Elfman
    How to Train Your Dragon - John Powell
    Inception - Hans Zimmer
    The King's Speech - Alexandre Desplat
    True Grit - Carter Burwell