11/2/2023 0 Comments John william composerKings Row, ironically, is a hard-edged drama about dark secrets in a small town. Whether you'd go so far as to call this a "cinematic swipe," it's no shocker that Williams looked to channel Korngold, whose music for classic films like The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938) and The Sea Hawk (1940) is clearly the immediate template from which Williams was working with Star Wars and his other best-known film scores. As many listeners have noted, the main Star Wars theme (technically, Luke Skywalker's theme) bears more than a passing resemblance to Korngold's theme for Kings Row (1942). Of all Williams's borrowings, there's none more notorious than his nod to Erich Korngold-right out of the gate, no less. The Planets has been mined for any number of sci-fi spectaculars, and Mars in particular has been a favorite of film composers including Williams, whose stormtroopers march to a distinctly Martian beat. Other than the composers shot into orbit by Stanley Kubrick in 2001 (Ligeti, Khachaturian, both of the Strausses)-and the composers literally shot into orbit on Voyager II (Bach, Mozart, Beethoven)-there's no composer in the classical repertoire who's more closely associated with outer space than Gustav Holst. Whether or not Williams was explicitly thinking about a dying swan as he penned this elegiac music, he was certainly going for that feeling that a curtain (of stars?) is about to fall. The grandly Romantic theme from Swan Lake is also echoed in Williams's love theme for Han and Leia, from The Empire Strikes Back. Tchaikovsky was a master of orchestral color, and when you listen to his score for the "coffee" interlude next to Williams's Jawa theme, you're reminded that Clara's magical sojourn was the original trip to a galaxy far, far away. You don't necessarily think Nutcracker Suite when you think Star Wars-but it's more appropriate than you might realize that The Force Awakens was released during the Christmas season. Where the ordinary filmgoer most conspicuously hears Wagner in Star Wars, is in the brass-laden theme for Darth Vader and his evil Empire-which is distinctively reminiscent of Wagner's music for his majestic Valkyries. The idea Williams is best-known for copping from Wagner-via many other opera and film composers-is the device of the leitmotif: a distinctive musical "voice" for each major character, a melody and arrangement that can be adapted in various ways to complement the evolving story. Daringly dissonant and boldly dramatic for its time, Wagner's four-opera cycle was the original "cinematic" composition, its lurid Romantic vocabulary providing the basic toolbox for a century's worth of film composers. The ultimate influence on Williams's vision for Star Wars was Richard Wagner, whose Ring cycle combines a wealth of musical ideas that would inform Williams's work. His triumph, with Star Wars, was to deploy that musical vocabulary with an unprecedented power and sweep-a sweep that grew with each of the film's two sequels, and then with the three prequels Lucas directed 20 years later. In fact, it was precisely in the nature of his assignment that he produce a score harking back to the swashbuckling classics Lucas grew up with. It wasn't Williams's job, then, to break new aesthetic ground. Juilliard-trained, he'd worked with such legends as Bernard Herrmann and won two Academy Awards-including one for his still-iconic score for Steven Spielberg's Jaws, the movie that's credited for establishing the summer blockbuster genre. In his mid-40s, Williams was already an experienced film composer. Part and parcel of Lucas's approach was to commission a grand symphonic score, rather than an experimental electronic soundtrack. One of the reasons Star Wars made such an impact was that in a decade marked by stark, intellectually ambitious science fiction films-including George Lucas's own THX-1138 (1971)- Star Wars was a shamelessly sweeping throwback to space operas in the Buck Rogers mode. In this exploration of the musical world of Star Wars, we're tracing Williams' classical influences. The familiarity and resonance of the score has grown with each new installment of the series, and Williams has continued to develop new themes for the expanding cast of characters having adventures a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away. While movie music buffs can debate whether John Williams' Star Wars score is truly the greatest film score of all time, the composer has certainly created the most recognizable musical universe ever to accompany a motion picture.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |