[net.movies] RR's opinion of soundtrack composers

moriarty@uw-june.UUCP (05/19/84)

>
>> ... (too bad John Williams, Jerry Gold-
>> smith or Michael Kamen didn't get to score it).
>
>John Williams, perhaps the greatest thief in the history of music.  What's
>worse, with his highly derivative Star Wars score, he started an horrific
>trend towards making ALL adventure movie scores sound like ripoffs of
>a combination between Holst's "Mars" and Stravinsky's "Sacre du Printemps".
>Rick Wakeman is an amateur next to Williams.  (Didn't Williams also write the
>theme music from Lost in Space?).  Goldsmith is not much better.  Where is
>Bernard Herrmann when you need him???
>-- 
>	Rich Rosen    pyuxn!rlr
 
Hold on a minute, Rich.  While I agree that I wouldn't have liked to see
Williams score the soundtrack to "Risky Business", there is no way I would
call him a thief.  The Star Wars soundtracks were done in a way to recall
the adventure soundtracks of the 30's and 40's... Max Steiner and Erich
Korngold's beautiful, bouncing adventure themes.  This type of movie has
caught on, and Williams is adept at putting together the rousing marches
which seem to fit these movies.  Does this make the aforementioned composers
thieves... does this make John Phillip Sousa a thief, with his great many
marches?  Also, while most of his scores HAVE sounded a bit like one another
lately, check out some of his earlier stuff... "The Cowboys" and some
earlier musicals.
 
And while I think it can be valid to say that William's music has, of late,
sounded much the same (I don't believe it, but there are different
definitions for variety for each person), there is NO POSSIBLE WAY one could
consider Jerry Goldsmith unoriginal!  My God, look at his career!  Twilight
Zone (TV show & movie), Patton, L'Idyllic, and so many others I can't even
begin to recall all of them!  If this man doesn't have variety in this
field, I don't know who does.
 
As a sop, I miss Bernard Herrman, too; there are enough Lalo Schifferns out
in the soundtrack industry to make the return of a great score composer a
vast improvement for the industry.
 
		"...in an iron coffin, with spikes on the inside!"
 
			Moriarty, aka Jeff Meyer
 
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