My e-mail: eedgert1@twcny.rr.com

Previous entries


Links

Cinema/Symphony
My Live365 station. Hasn't been updated in months, but there's about 7 hours of music on it.

Film Score 24
Steve Hill's station. Better film music content than mine.

Patrick Doyle
Unofficial website.

Intrada
and their new releases list.

Film Score Monthly
the magazine

FILMUS-L
Mailing list archives.

Filmmusic.com
My old stomping grounds.

Soundtrack Express
Tom Daish's review site.

Music from the Movies
the magazine

Tuesday, January 29, 2002
Coming up from the depths to let out a bubble... Kudos, applause, and noisy flipper-slapping for George Fenton and The Blue Planet. What a magnificent scoring job, such purpose and meaning! So good that I have more desire to buy a DVD of this than a CD. In fact, I'd buy a DVD player just to have this documentary. (Yeah, I don't have one yet. So?) Here in the U.S. the first four hours have aired, including "The Deep" which features quite a bit of very appropriate electronics. This is Art with a capital A. (Or, as they say among the sea lions, aaaaahhhrrrrrrt.) (OK, that was way too cutesy.)

Sunday, December 30, 2001
Someone at FSM's message board posted a link to the trailer for Killing Me Softly. Ah, I love Japanese movie trailers...they're so fantastically edited. Not. They have a different sensibility toward the art of the trailer over there. (And obviously have never heard of "This Preview Has Been Approved For General Audiences"...) However, it could be that they also use the film's own music because that sure sounded like Patrick Doyle to me. If not, a reasonable facsimile thereof.

Thursday, December 27, 2001
It's awards season again. Time for the different film music awards... and their agendas. Part one of several...

Is there such a thing as a really "real" film score award? One which is really about the best score (and best-scored film) of the year, the most outstanding work by dedicated career composers, and suchlike? If there is one, most would agree that the Oscars probably ain't it. The Oscar film score category has a long and notorious history, which I won't attempt to describe, although you can read blow-by-blow account here. The only question really answered by the Academy in its score nominations is, How Shall We Reward This Studio/Film With One More Nomination? Unless, of course, the composer is Alan Menken. (It seems like a very long time ago now that Alan Menken was the bane of all score fans come Oscar time. How times change.)

For decades, the only alternative to the Academy Awards for annual recognition of scoring in this country (in the mainstream film community, that is, not ASCAP) has been the Los Angeles Film Critics Association. Since 1976, the LAFCA has given out Best Music awards -- as well as a "runner-up" award -- to career film composers (Bernard Herrmann, John Williams, Howard Shore, Elliot Goldenthal, to name a few), to slumming concert composers (Phillip Glass, Toru Takemitsu), to dabblers (Carmine Coppola), as well as to flavors of the month (Giorgio Moroder, Tan Dun, and James Horner and the Busboys). And in one astonishing run during the early '90s, they gave an unprecedented three awards to Zbigniew Preisner -- for his work on seven films. (I guess that makes Preisner the Alan Menken of the LAFCA...)

Because it's not as if the LAFCA doesn't play favorites, or have an agenda. But the awards have been given out long enough for the agenda to have changed. It appears that during the early years of the awards, during the late Seventies, that the awards reflected more closely the tastes, or the tastelessness, of the Academy: the winners included John Williams for Star Wars, Carmine Coppola for The Black Stallion, Giorgio Moroder for Midnight Express, and Bernard Herrmann for Taxi Driver. During the 1980s, however, the LAFCA got adventurous with their music awards, citing composers and scores that Oscar wouldn't have touched -- Glass for Koyaanisqatsi, Ry Cooder for The Long Riders, Bill Lee for Do the Right Thing.

By the time the '90s rolled around, the LAFCA's agenda was pretty clear, at least where film music was concerned: anti-Hollywood, anti-blockbuster, and even anti-Western. Orchestral scores were out; ethnic and exotic (or just plain weird, in the case of Howard Shore's Ed Wood) were in. So it was a great decade for Ryuichi Sakamoto (who won twice, for The Last Emperor and The Sheltering Sky), Phillip Glass (Kundun), Patrick Doyle (A Little Princess) and Tan Dun (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon). And, of course, Zbigniew Preisner.

But LAFCA isn't completely elitist; for example, the surprising runner-up for Best Music in 1997 was none other than Horner's Titanic. This year, Howard Shore received his second LAFCA for The Lord of the Rings. It's too early to tell whether this selection reflects a vote against Hollywood (i.e., for Peter Jackson more than for Shore) or for the Big Orchestral Score. In any case, I don't believe that even an "alternative" annual film awards such as LAFCA are immune from using the score award to further the recognition of a film or director, or overall political mindset, rather than of scoring work itself. (By the way, check out this very revealing expose of the National Board of Review, which should give you an idea of the internal politics of the film awards industry. Somebody Talked!)