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[Closed] Now Playing XLV
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- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
NP: Pacific Rim - Ramin Djawadi
Having a more focused listen to this now. I am enjoying what I am hearing - though it probably doesn't make for traditional film scoring with it's transferable repeating rhythms and very little musical progression.
I like the mix between the strong electric guitar presence and the orchestra - though I am hoping that the guitar doesn't get too gimmicky or overstay its welcome. The usual tell-tale "power scoring" is all there including the Zimmer/Inception/Dark Knight horn blaring (whatever it actually is, is it a D?)
I don't think that this is the turd that I am sure a lot of people will suggest (and are already hinting at.)The views expressed in this post are entirely my own and do not reflect the opinions of maintitles.net, or for that matter, anyone else. http://www.racksandtags.com/falkirkbairn -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
I was listening to the expanded release of Clear and Present Danger the other day. It's great to hear all the previously-unavailable James Horner action scoring but, goodness, there's such a lot of uninteresting tension bottle-blowing going on.The views expressed in this post are entirely my own and do not reflect the opinions of maintitles.net, or for that matter, anyone else. http://www.racksandtags.com/falkirkbairn -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
Captain Future wrote
NP: Supergirl - by Jerry Goldsmith
Will they reboot this franchise, too? If so, who would you like to see in Faye Dunaway's dress?
Angelina Jolie!
Sans doute!'no passion nor excitement here, despite all the notes and musicians' ~ Falkirkbairn -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
Ralph Kruhm wrote
Thanks for the list, Atham. Beside the (correct) point Thomas made, it looks very reasonable to me; how did you get it without seeing the movie?
I came across the list in a thread at hans-zimmer.com. So I went with that.
And seeing that the Kent track is hard to place I'm happy to tack it at the end for now. -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
Captain Future wrote
NP: Supergirl - by Jerry Goldsmith
Will they reboot this franchise, too? If so, who would you like to see in Faye Dunaway's dress?
Russell Crowe. Singing.
Supergirl: The MusicalThe views expressed in this post are entirely my own and do not reflect the opinions of maintitles.net, or for that matter, anyone else. http://www.racksandtags.com/falkirkbairn -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
"The Windmills Of Your Beautiful Mind"
"I'm So Gladiator"
"High School L.A. Confidential"
"The Kick Insider"
Yeah, I can see it.'no passion nor excitement here, despite all the notes and musicians' ~ Falkirkbairn -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
Martijn wrote
"The Windmills Of Your Beautiful Mind"
"I'm So Gladiator"
"High School L.A. Confidential"
"The Kick Insider"
Yeah, I can see it.
The views expressed in this post are entirely my own and do not reflect the opinions of maintitles.net, or for that matter, anyone else. http://www.racksandtags.com/falkirkbairn -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
NP: SimCity - Chris Tilton
If you're looking for some quality listening I can very much recommend Tilton's score for this EA game. Running to 140 minutes in length, there's two versions of most tracks. The original and a "Night Mix" version - though I haven't sat down and worked out the difference.The views expressed in this post are entirely my own and do not reflect the opinions of maintitles.net, or for that matter, anyone else. http://www.racksandtags.com/falkirkbairn -
- CommentAuthorEdmund Meinerts
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
The original cues tend to emphasize the orchestra, especially woodwinds, whereas the night mixes have a lot more percussion and reverby background synths. Generally the meat of the cue is found in the originals, but what I did was layer them on top of each other to make a nice 80-minute album without losing any elements from either "mix". Worked a charm! -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
What a good idea!
Are you by any chance sharing that some place?'no passion nor excitement here, despite all the notes and musicians' ~ Falkirkbairn -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
Edmund Meinerts wrote
The original cues tend to emphasize the orchestra, especially woodwinds, whereas the night mixes have a lot more percussion and reverby background synths. Generally the meat of the cue is found in the originals, but what I did was layer them on top of each other to make a nice 80-minute album without losing any elements from either "mix". Worked a charm!
Good idea indeed. Thanks for explaining the difference between the two versions. I am so keen on just listening to the music that I have never got round to analysing it too closely. It is a very good album.The views expressed in this post are entirely my own and do not reflect the opinions of maintitles.net, or for that matter, anyone else. http://www.racksandtags.com/falkirkbairn -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
And now iTunes has thrown up Roque Baños' Evil Dead right before bed.
The views expressed in this post are entirely my own and do not reflect the opinions of maintitles.net, or for that matter, anyone else. http://www.racksandtags.com/falkirkbairn -
- CommentAuthorEdmund Meinerts
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013 edited
Martijn wrote
What a good idea!
Are you by any chance sharing that some place?
Unfortunately no, mostly because I'm not really sure how exactly I'd go about doing that. I guess I could upload it to YouTube or something but it's 2 A.M. in Berlin so I can't be bothered tonight. I could do it tomorrow morning if people are interested. Or else let me know an easier way to do it.
I can also tell you what program I used for it though: Audacity, which absolutely no film score fan should be without. It's invaluable for rearranging albums into a shape you like, separating the good/bad bits in long cues, merging cues that run into each other, etc. And it's dead easy to use. And no, they're not paying me to say this. -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
Edmund Meinerts wrote
I can also tell you what program I used for it though: Audacity, which absolutely no film score fan should be without. It's invaluable for rearranging albums into a shape you like, separating the good/bad bits in long cues, merging cues that run into each other, etc. And it's dead easy to use. And no, they're not paying me to say this.
So you can use Audacity to overlay two separate tracks into one?
I have Audacity but have never really used it for anything for editing mp3 tracks to suit my needs. But even with that I have tended to use something called mp3DirectCut.The views expressed in this post are entirely my own and do not reflect the opinions of maintitles.net, or for that matter, anyone else. http://www.racksandtags.com/falkirkbairn -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013 edited
Citizen Kane: The essential Bernard Herrmann collection
I know Herrmann is the one everyone is supposed to adore, but there's little music on this album that I actually enjoy. Besides the prelude to Psycho and the theme from Taxi driver, his themes rarely get to me.
I think the only score of his I actually enjoy is The three worlds of Gulliver, which contains some nice classical pastiche and a decent love theme. Perhaps I like it more because it's different from the gloomy, tense scores the Herrmster is most famous for.
Comparing this album to Ben-hur: The essential Miklos Rozsa, where every track is an exquisite work of art, there's just no contest between these composers. Rozsa will always be my no.1 golden ager.
Peter -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
NOW YOU SEE ME - Brian Tyler.
First listen. That thing Erik posted was very cool. -
- CommentAuthorKevin Scarlet
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
plindboe wrote
Citizen Kane: The essential Bernard Herrmann collection
I know Herrmann is the one everyone is supposed to adore, but there's little music on this album that I actually enjoy. Besides the prelude to Psycho and the theme from Taxi driver, his themes rarely get to me.
I think the only score of his I actually enjoy is The three worlds of Gulliver, which contains some nice classical pastiche and a decent love theme. Perhaps I like it more because it's different from the gloomy, tense scores the Herrmster is most famous for.
Comparing this album to Ben-hur: The essential Miklos Rozsa, where every track is an exquisite work of art, there's just no contest between these composers. Rozsa will always be my no.1 golden ager.
Peter
His score to Fahrenheit 451 is underrated. And Vertigo...yeah. -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
Atham wrote
Ralph Kruhm wrote
Thanks for the list, Atham. Beside the (correct) point Thomas made, it looks very reasonable to me; how did you get it without seeing the movie?
I came across the list in a thread at hans-zimmer.com. So I went with that.
And seeing that the Kent track is hard to place I'm happy to tack it at the end for now.
I see. Thank you again. -
- CommentAuthorAnthony
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
FalkirkBairn wrote
The usual tell-tale "power scoring" is all there including the Zimmer/Inception/Dark Knight horn blaring (whatever it actually is, is it a D?)
I believe the professional name is a BLAAAARGH. -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
Ah, a 'BLAAAARGH!. I do remember seeing that before now it has been mentioned.
I would not have used it probably if I had remembered at the time: this terminology suggests that it is rubbish. And I would not have wanted to give that impression.The views expressed in this post are entirely my own and do not reflect the opinions of maintitles.net, or for that matter, anyone else. http://www.racksandtags.com/falkirkbairn -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
Actually, it's more like "BHAAAAAM!".I am extremely serious. -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013 edited
But who invented it?
I love that sound and wish I had it as a ringtone. There's something about that deep, powerful brass sound that gets to me. Of course anything can be overused, but I haven't heard it enough yet to tire of it.
Anyway, it's BWAAAHHHH!
Peter -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
I love the BWAAHHH!"Class is having lunch with the homeless and dinner with the Queen." -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013 edited
I'm currently listening to an " instrumental ' i thinks thats what it's called, even though to me is a song.
Cells by The Servants. Repetitive but catchy"Class is having lunch with the homeless and dinner with the Queen." -
- CommentAuthorEdmund Meinerts
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
FalkirkBairn wrote
So you can use Audacity to overlay two separate tracks into one?
I have Audacity but have never really used it for anything for editing mp3 tracks to suit my needs. But even with that I have tended to use something called mp3DirectCut.
Yeah. You just drag both tracks in and they'll appear right on top of each other, then you go to Tracks --> Mix and Render. You might first need to jiggle around the tracks, cut out or add tiny amounts to one of them to make sure they sync up just right. Audacity only exports wav files but you can easily convert those to mp3 with iTunes, or else get some other converter if you use different audio files. -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013 edited
I press a lot of the wrong buttoms and then cant delete. sorry"Class is having lunch with the homeless and dinner with the Queen." -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
FalkirkBairn wrote
So you can use Audacity to overlay two separate tracks into one?
The feature you will want to use the most is fade in/fade out, and then open two separate stereo tracks to overlay the two pieces together (rather than having just one stereo tracks and essentially causing a train crash of audio). -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
Cheers Audacity people.The views expressed in this post are entirely my own and do not reflect the opinions of maintitles.net, or for that matter, anyone else. http://www.racksandtags.com/falkirkbairn -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013 edited
What Sarah said. I use Audacity for my webcasts in that fashion.I am extremely serious. -
- CommentTimeJun 26th 2013
Thor wrote
What Sarah said.
That she's pressing bottoms?'no passion nor excitement here, despite all the notes and musicians' ~ Falkirkbairn