Congrats on joining the 1000th post club! If I had something to give away I would do so.

As do I. Truthfully there are some excellent portions in SITH, but I feel THE PHANTOM MENACE was the last TRULY "great" Williams score for me anyway. His Potter scores are all exceptional but TPM was the last Williams "masterwork" for me personally.Edmund Kattak wrote:I don't know guys. I miss Williams serial writing of yester-year.
I totally agree that PHANTOM MENACE is a Williams classic -- for pure listening it is actually my favorite of all the Star Wars scores. That said, I consider the first HARRY POTTER score to be among John Williams' "masterworks". I felt he was expanding on some of the style heard in HOOK and HOME ALONE as well as the darker passages of the INDIANA JONES scores. I do admit that the HP CD has some dry stretches which ought to have been swapped for some of the fine cues which are only heard in the film, but it contains some of Williams' very finest music. "Hedwig's Theme" is possibly my favorite Williams piece ever.AndyDursin wrote: As do I. Truthfully there are some excellent portions in SITH, but I feel THE PHANTOM MENACE was the last TRULY "great" Williams score for me anyway. His Potter scores are all exceptional but TPM was the last Williams "masterwork" for me personally.
That tells me all I need to know.AndyDursin wrote: Speaking of that, I still can't believe we haven't seen any major reviews for it by this point. All the prior STAR WARS and INDY films were screened for critics WELL in advance -- I recall Siskel & Ebert reviewing them a week ahead of time -- but that definitely does not seem to be the case here.
I would clarify and say that the darker parts reminded me of outtakes of REVENGE OF THE SITH. I have to say that I liked the REVENGE OF THE SITH score much better because it seemd to have a better musical flow than the Crystal Skull album.AndyDursin wrote:I just finished listening to the Indy IV score also. I'm not blown out of the water and I guess I'm with Ed that it is not in the league of the earlier scores, especially on the thematic side. The new material is okay but it's nothing special and there are liberal doses of Marion's theme at the end...in other words, very well put together but no surprises.
Still it's more than serviceable and even "B" grade Williams at this point is preferrable to everything else out there. Hopefully I'll get a stronger read on it when I see the film, but it does not strike me as a classic. At first listen it is not on the level with REVENGE OF THE SITH, I would say.
Speaking of that, I still can't believe we haven't seen any major reviews for it by this point. All the prior STAR WARS and INDY films were screened for critics WELL in advance -- I recall Siskel & Ebert reviewing them a week ahead of time -- but that definitely does not seem to be the case here.
Do you think anyone in 20 years will be eagerly awaiting a 3000 copy limited edition box set of SUPERMAN RETURNS? Nah, didn't think so...Also, not to go on a complete rant here, but I'm getting really tired of these "kids" on FSM and other boards ranting and raving about how "great" some of these horrible scores by journeymen composers are. It's hard and unfair to criticize (and simultaneously take seriously) many of these efforts, but many of them could not approach the level of thought and ingenuity that went into the great scores of yester-year that we like.
You know, it's kind of sad that people now automatically assume secrecy = suckitude. Personally, I LOVE that Spielberg has managed to keep the film almost completely under wraps until now. Remember how awesome it was to see Jurassic Park "fresh" 15 years ago, and seeing those trend-setting CGI dinos for the first time on the big screen without getting spoiled for all the "good bits" in countless trailers, TV spots, and general internet chatter? I actually kind of miss the "good old days" when the ONLY way to get pre-release information about a genre film was to buy one of those glossy tie-in magazines or read articles in Starlog or simply hope to catch a lone trailer or TV spot (back in the days when there weren't 7 trailers and 50 different TV spots starting a good eight months before a movie's release). What plot surprises are left for The Dark Knight at this point? I'm sure I'll like the film (caveats about the running time aside), but how cool would it have been to have NO idea what Heath Ledger's Joker makeup looked like until opening day? Instead, we got the "Full Monty" back in December, when the trailer was released with I Am Legend. Same thing with Peter Jackson's King Kong. Pretty much every action sequence was heavilly plundered for the advertising campaign. I'm more than willing to give Spielberg/Ford/Lucas the benefit of the doubt on this. If we'd gotten trailers for the film beginning late last year, people would be complaining that they've already seen the movie!Eric W. wrote:That tells me all I need to know.AndyDursin wrote: Speaking of that, I still can't believe we haven't seen any major reviews for it by this point. All the prior STAR WARS and INDY films were screened for critics WELL in advance -- I recall Siskel & Ebert reviewing them a week ahead of time -- but that definitely does not seem to be the case here.
I find it interesting that John Williams, who used to write self-contained end titles, now creates end titles by editing together his "concert" versions of the primary themes. My suspicion is that this has more to do with his not receiving "locked" reels / knowing how long the actual end credits are going to run. I know it is a lot easier and cheaper to make last minute editorial changes since digital editing came along, and this has made it harder on composers.Edmund Kattak wrote:Even Goldsmith once commented in an interview from within the past ten years about how he rarely recorded any end title music any more - that it would essentially be "patch-jobs" from exisitng cues because there was this perception (from producers maybe?) that nobody cared about the end credits of a movie any more.
There's an interesting thread on FSM right now in which people are arguing this...Also, not to go on a complete rant here, but I'm getting really tired of these "kids" on FSM and other boards ranting and raving about how "great" some of these horrible scores by journeymen composers are. It's hard and unfair to criticize (and simultaneously take seriously) many of these efforts, but many of them could not approach the level of thought and ingenuity that went into the great scores of yester-year that we like.