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John Williams
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Minion
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Old Mar 9, 2006, 07:47 PM #26 of 71
Also, Lehah is probably unfamilar with Scriabin's "mystic" chord. But anyway, it's not as if harmony is the only area for possible musical innovation.

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Old Mar 9, 2006, 08:11 PM #27 of 71
Originally Posted by goldeneye2131
Does anyone know if that is another album similar to that of the Phantom Menace's Ultimate Edition?
There will (thankfully) never be another UE album. Sony has said such.

Originally Posted by Arkhangelsk
Everything is both old and new.
I like how some dumbass on the internet can decide to ignore the rules of music theory for the last 140 years just because.

Originally Posted by Minion
But anyway, it's not as if harmony is the only area for possible musical innovation.
Well, then name some type of experimentation that was not an offshoot of what I previously made an example of.

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Old Mar 9, 2006, 08:27 PM Local time: Mar 9, 2006, 07:27 PM #28 of 71
I just wanna remind you all that I was just curious to here other members' favorites of John Williams not an argument of what's his best.

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Old Mar 10, 2006, 12:06 AM #29 of 71
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Well, then name some type of experimentation that was not an offshoot of what I previously made an example of.
What about Jazz? Music pre-dating Jazz was composed almost entire in Ionian (Major) or Aeolian (Minor) modes. Jazz's "blues scales" are actually a mode that was almost never, if ever, used previously.

I was speaking idiomatically.
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Old Mar 10, 2006, 12:35 AM Local time: Mar 10, 2006, 06:35 AM #30 of 71
Williams is great when it comes to memorable themes though the meat between those bones got kinda old over the years. But that's probably a question of personal taste, I do for example enjoy every minute of Elfman's recent scores, no matter how re-hashed they may sound.

Edit:
As for my favorite works, it's a pretty close tie between the original SW trilogy and the Indy movies.

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Last edited by Cyrus XIII; Mar 10, 2006 at 12:47 AM.
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Old Mar 10, 2006, 03:24 AM Local time: Mar 10, 2006, 07:24 PM #31 of 71
Is anyone else really sick of Hook? I know it's great, and I loved it for a while but I find it a tad overrated. I'm also starting to find ESB the same (but conversely my appreciation for the original Star Wars continues to climb).
Anyways, yeah, Williams fan here. Been one since as long as I can remember, but I started collecting back when I was 11 and Harry Potter came out. Great score. Not so good sequel though (actually, a terrible sequel, both film and score - Fawkes' theme is overrated). But enough overratedness. Give me "For Gillian" and "Epilogue" from The Fury any day. My current absolute favourite tracks.

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Old Mar 10, 2006, 02:46 PM Local time: Mar 10, 2006, 07:46 PM #32 of 71
I didn't like Hook when I got a chance to listen to it. It just seemed to drag on, but maybe I wasn't in the right mood for it at the time.....

Now, it's a huge cliche to say my favourite Williams score is a Star Wars score - and probably even more cliche to mention that it was the first Williams score I bought - but The Empire Strikes Back probably is my favourite John Williams score. I listen to it very infrequently but, when I do, it manages to capture my attention completely, no matter what else is going on. I don't think I've heard many other scores that can manage that.

Excluding Star Wars, I'd probably say E.T.

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Old Mar 10, 2006, 03:18 PM #33 of 71
Originally Posted by Minion
What about Jazz? Music pre-dating Jazz was composed almost entire in Ionian (Major) or Aeolian (Minor) modes. Jazz's "blues scales" are actually a mode that was almost never, if ever, used previously.
I run the risk of sounding more of an ass than usual - so allow me to say this much. I am not a music professor and am not as well versed in theory as some people seem to paint me or how I sometimes paint myself. This stuff is a hobby for me and I'm learning it slowly - and in a sense backwards, since I have a hard enough time reading sheet.

I also need to correct myself. I earlier misstated the Tristan Chord - I looked it up and it's actually F, B, D# and G#.

This being said, lets move on to Minion's topic.

I've been questioning the whole "unoriginal music" thing for sometime and haven't been able to come up with a truely solid answer. Because while Wagner's Tristan... brilliantly introduces dissonance in the peice, there are other things that were musically created afterwords. Take for instance pandiatonicism which was a method of connecting notes that didn't nessessarily "make sense". It's commonly found in americana music like Aaron Copland.

However, pandiatonicism was a word made in the early 20th century by a Russian composer who's name I cannot remember. So how can something written 60 years prior be the "final" thought in music?

However, despite my misgivings and possibly because of my undereducation on music theory, I don't find myself able to contradict or dismiss the idea that Tristan is what it is seen as. I might be an ambulatory penis on the internet for the last decade, but I know better than to think my "world's smartest cockroach" mentality means anything to all the people who've studied music for the last century and a half. I cannot fight the concensus of that many people.

Does that make me right in this arguement? Not really. Not any more than any of us can say "I know Seattle is the captial of Washington"; we all learned that by rote, not because it was ingrained into our very beings by trial and error or some survival instinct.

Originally Posted by Cyrus XIII
I do for example enjoy every minute of Elfman's recent scores, no matter how re-hashed they may sound.
This isn't a knock at you - but Elfman writes like a commercial jingle. You remember it because it's catchy, not because it's good

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Last edited by Misogynyst Gynecologist; Mar 10, 2006 at 03:22 PM.
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Old Mar 10, 2006, 03:28 PM #34 of 71
Dude, no one mentioned "Raiders March"? C'mon, that's the shit.

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Old Mar 10, 2006, 03:55 PM #35 of 71
The funny thing is, I've read that many composers, including Bach and Beethoven, and even some pre-baroque composers used the Tristan chord somewhere in the body of their works. It's in a Beethoven sonata and some piece in Bach's WTC. Actually, pretty much everything you can think of appears in Bach's WTC or Beethoven's Sonatas. Part of the reason they are so highly regarded is because they are a kind of microcosm of music. Everything is there. If you can play them, you can play anything. But that doesn't make Wagner any less original because his originality is in his style. When you can listen to a piece you've never heard before and say "yeah, that's definitley Wagner", that's how you know Wagner was original. He wasn't the last of his ilk, though. You should check out Scriabin's music, Lehah. And I'm sure you're familiar enough with Prokofiev and Debussy.

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Old Mar 10, 2006, 04:09 PM #36 of 71
Originally Posted by Greykin
Dude, no one mentioned "Raiders March"? C'mon, that's the shit.
I mentioned Indiana Jones in general several posts back, but you're the first to mention them again since then, interestingly enough. I like "Raiders March", particularly the version of it in The Last Crusade. Can't believe I forgot about 'Escape From Venice' too. That song's awesome.

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Old Mar 10, 2006, 04:31 PM #37 of 71
Originally Posted by Minion
The funny thing is, I've read that many composers, including Bach and Beethoven, and even some pre-baroque composers used the Tristan chord somewhere in the body of their works. It's in a Beethoven sonata and some piece in Bach's WTC. Actually, pretty much everything you can think of appears in Bach's WTC or Beethoven's Sonatas.
You just off-handedly agreed with me about my original Tristan... statement, Minion.

However, I failed to mention that timing is important for the Tristan Chord. The "motif" (though I loathe to use that word, most people know what it is) is only stated in fragment until the end. Wagner did that to give the story a sense of longing (as its romantic tragedy) for both the characters and as a sense of tonal completion.

Originally Posted by Josiah
I mentioned Indiana Jones in general several posts back, but you're the first to mention them again since then, interestingly enough. I like "Raiders March", particularly the version of it in The Last Crusade. Can't believe I forgot about 'Escape From Venice' too. That song's awesome.
As fantastic as Last Crusade is, I still find Temple Of Doom to be far and away the best of the three Indy scores.

I was speaking idiomatically.
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Old Mar 10, 2006, 04:34 PM #38 of 71
Yeah, that is how they justify it being his, although I can't see any technical reason for regarding a chord as anything more than 2 notes in harmony.

I agree with you in part and in part I disagree. Nothing is new under the sun, but originality is in the presentation, not so much the materials. In that sense, Wagner is original as are many who came after him.

What kind of toxic man-thing is happening now?

Last edited by Minion; Mar 10, 2006 at 04:37 PM.
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Old Mar 10, 2006, 05:19 PM #39 of 71
Originally Posted by Minion
I agree with you in part and in part I disagree. Nothing is new under the sun, but originality is in the presentation, not so much the materials. In that sense, Wagner is original as are many who came after him.
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Old Mar 11, 2006, 04:22 PM Local time: Mar 11, 2006, 09:22 PM #40 of 71
Apart from 'Cavatina' from 'The Deer Hunter', I'm not a fan of Williams. I just find him a bit OTT and lacking subtlety. I much prefer Hermann.

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Old Mar 11, 2006, 05:21 PM #41 of 71
Originally Posted by kinkymagic
I much prefer Hermann.
Herrmann was many things - but I don't think he was ever once subtle.

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Old Mar 11, 2006, 05:38 PM Local time: Mar 11, 2006, 02:38 PM #42 of 71
Originally Posted by LeHah
There will (thankfully) never be another UE album. Sony has said such.
Problem is, that goes for any sort of expanded set, UE or not...

I guess those who gave them crap on the set are getting what they want, nothing!

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Old Mar 11, 2006, 09:07 PM Local time: Mar 12, 2006, 02:07 AM #43 of 71
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Herrmann was many things - but I don't think he was ever once subtle.
How about Taxi Driver?

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Old Mar 11, 2006, 09:58 PM #44 of 71
Originally Posted by kinkymagic
How about Taxi Driver?
You mean outside of the gigantic building drumroll and brass hits?

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Old Mar 11, 2006, 10:00 PM #45 of 71
My dad acted like a dolt and couldn't remember the name of the song that I previously mentioned sounded like "Across the Stars", even though I sang it out for him and mentioned involved instruments. It sucks ass that I share half of his genes. Maybe in some future I can fix that.

I was speaking idiomatically.
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Old Mar 12, 2006, 12:47 AM Local time: Mar 12, 2006, 01:47 PM #46 of 71
I like John Williams' work on the olympic themes.

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Old Mar 12, 2006, 12:50 AM #47 of 71
Originally Posted by Thanatos
I like John Williams' work on the olympic themes.
Agreed. However, the 1996 "Summon The Heroes" album was a hell of a lot better than the one that followed it.

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Old Mar 12, 2006, 12:59 AM Local time: Mar 12, 2006, 01:59 PM #48 of 71
Really? Hmm... If so, I should start looking for it then.

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Old Mar 12, 2006, 01:58 PM Local time: Mar 12, 2006, 06:58 PM #49 of 71
Quote:
You mean outside of the gigantic building drumroll and brass hits?
Which were off-set by the smooth jazz, representing Travis' mental decline. Hermann's scores often mirrored multiple facets of the film. Just listen to the music from Vertigo.

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Old Mar 12, 2006, 04:43 PM #50 of 71
Originally Posted by kinkymagic
Which were off-set by the smooth jazz, representing Travis' mental decline.
That... does nothing to defuse my earlier point. Taxi Driver is not subtle.

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