Eh Elfman, Williams, and Horner all suck compared to this guy's orchestral score:Fox12 said:I despise Zimmer. I don't think I could recall a single piece of music he ever composed. Compare this to Elfman, Williams, and Horner, who all composed multiple memorable soundtracks.
Not to put you on your heels, but I don't believe it's fair to attribute the triviality of modern cinema up to any one person; if anything fault the emulators who oversaturate what was once a new, fresh and brilliant idea. I'd challenge that most of these "blockbusters" couldn't have been helped by a hundred musical geniuses working around the clock for a hundred years anyway; I can't think of a truly brilliant movie I've seen in the past 10 years. Yes, Zimmer's sounds is distinct, but it is as much a character in the films he creates them for as the faces on screen. I thought Interstellar was a horrible movie, but I paid to see it twice in the theaters for Zimmer's score alone on those huge theater speakers. Death of melody? I think not; listen below. To each his/her own and opinions are most certainly like assholes in that we each (likely) posses at least one, but I find that as scores go, Zimmer's are most engrossing. If it's loud, it's because the scene calls for it; if it's melodic, it's because he wants you to feel it.Casual Shinji said:Zimmer heralded the death of melody in movie scores. Now we're all stuck with loud, "epic" paste in our blockbusters, all thanks to old Hans.
I saw a video somewhere that talked about how a lot of directors feel like music shouldn't distract from the cinema itself. I think this explains why someone like Zimmer was able to become as big as he did. What I don't understand is the directors who feel like music should just be mindless noise droning in the background. At that point you may as well just remove the music altogether, since you aren't using it for anything.Casual Shinji said:Zimmer heralded the death of melody in movie scores. Now we're all stuck with loud, "epic" paste in our blockbusters, all thanks to old Hans.
NoSamtemdo8 said:Eh Elfman, Williams, and Horner all suck compared to this guy's orchestral score:Fox12 said:I despise Zimmer. I don't think I could recall a single piece of music he ever composed. Compare this to Elfman, Williams, and Horner, who all composed multiple memorable soundtracks.
Did you even hear the music? And the other tracks it contains in its soundtrack?Fox12 said:I saw a video somewhere that talked about how a lot of directors feel like music shouldn't distract from the cinema itself. I think this explains why someone like Zimmer was able to become as big as he did. What I don't understand is the directors who feel like music should just be mindless noise droning in the background. At that point you may as well just remove the music altogether, since you aren't using it for anything.Casual Shinji said:Zimmer heralded the death of melody in movie scores. Now we're all stuck with loud, "epic" paste in our blockbusters, all thanks to old Hans.
NoSamtemdo8 said:Eh Elfman, Williams, and Horner all suck compared to this guy's orchestral score:Fox12 said:I despise Zimmer. I don't think I could recall a single piece of music he ever composed. Compare this to Elfman, Williams, and Horner, who all composed multiple memorable soundtracks.
YesSamtemdo8 said:Did you even hear the music? And the other tracks it contains in its soundtrack?Fox12 said:I saw a video somewhere that talked about how a lot of directors feel like music shouldn't distract from the cinema itself. I think this explains why someone like Zimmer was able to become as big as he did. What I don't understand is the directors who feel like music should just be mindless noise droning in the background. At that point you may as well just remove the music altogether, since you aren't using it for anything.Casual Shinji said:Zimmer heralded the death of melody in movie scores. Now we're all stuck with loud, "epic" paste in our blockbusters, all thanks to old Hans.
NoSamtemdo8 said:Eh Elfman, Williams, and Horner all suck compared to this guy's orchestral score:Fox12 said:I despise Zimmer. I don't think I could recall a single piece of music he ever composed. Compare this to Elfman, Williams, and Horner, who all composed multiple memorable soundtracks.
But back on topic, to be fair Zimmer did made great music before the "Nolan era" of his Music:Fox12 said:YesSamtemdo8 said:Did you even hear the music? And the other tracks it contains in its soundtrack?Fox12 said:I saw a video somewhere that talked about how a lot of directors feel like music shouldn't distract from the cinema itself. I think this explains why someone like Zimmer was able to become as big as he did. What I don't understand is the directors who feel like music should just be mindless noise droning in the background. At that point you may as well just remove the music altogether, since you aren't using it for anything.Casual Shinji said:Zimmer heralded the death of melody in movie scores. Now we're all stuck with loud, "epic" paste in our blockbusters, all thanks to old Hans.
NoSamtemdo8 said:Eh Elfman, Williams, and Horner all suck compared to this guy's orchestral score:Fox12 said:I despise Zimmer. I don't think I could recall a single piece of music he ever composed. Compare this to Elfman, Williams, and Horner, who all composed multiple memorable soundtracks.
I'm sorry, but I don't consider that much of a melody. Apart from the volume increasing (unnecessarily loud) I'm listening to the same three or four notes over and over, resulting in just a mash of noise.Xprimentyl said:Death of melody? I think not; listen below. To each his/her own and opinions are most certainly like assholes in that we each (likely) posses at least one, but I find that as scores go, Zimmer's are most engrossing. If it's loud, it's because the scene calls for it; if it's melodic, it's because he wants you to feel it.
I actually looked that up once. Old Hans gets a lot of credit for working on Prince of Egypt and The Lion King. In actuality he didn't work on any of the songs for either film. He worked on some of the backgrounds music, but that's it. Background music that was mostly based on the melodies that the other musicians had already created. In this case those songs were written by a gentlemen named Stephen Schwartz and Tim Rice respectively. Hans himself had nothing to do with it.Samtemdo8 said:But back on topic, to be fair Zimmer did made great music before the "Nolan era" of his Music:Fox12 said:YesSamtemdo8 said:Did you even hear the music? And the other tracks it contains in its soundtrack?Fox12 said:I saw a video somewhere that talked about how a lot of directors feel like music shouldn't distract from the cinema itself. I think this explains why someone like Zimmer was able to become as big as he did. What I don't understand is the directors who feel like music should just be mindless noise droning in the background. At that point you may as well just remove the music altogether, since you aren't using it for anything.Casual Shinji said:Zimmer heralded the death of melody in movie scores. Now we're all stuck with loud, "epic" paste in our blockbusters, all thanks to old Hans.
NoSamtemdo8 said:Eh Elfman, Williams, and Horner all suck compared to this guy's orchestral score:Fox12 said:I despise Zimmer. I don't think I could recall a single piece of music he ever composed. Compare this to Elfman, Williams, and Horner, who all composed multiple memorable soundtracks.
And this gem from Pirates 3 At Worlds End:
I think you might be confusing melody with leitmotif (an easily identifiable tune that is associated with a person or place). While it's true that you don't see the latter in films nearly as often anymore, melody is simply a sequence of satisfying notes. Music is, of course, inherently subjective, so I suppose you could just decide that no series of notes in modern film is satisfying, but I think you'd be in the incredibly small minority on that. A melody doesn't need to be a tune that you can whistle or associate with a character/place to be effective.Casual Shinji said:Zimmer heralded the death of melody in movie scores. Now we're all stuck with loud, "epic" paste in our blockbusters, all thanks to old Hans.