Ok, don't wanta' be hogging the board, but an all-night binge on B. has me going -- I'll probably hibernate after this...
Here's my gripe/question --
Why does Hollywood bother to score original soundtracks for movies when there's a near endlesss supply of incredible music already existing? A' la Beethoven and other greats? After all, you look at some of the more famous soundtracks and they're really nothing more than rip-offs of what has come before, ex. -- Star Wars theme and Imperial March are either collages or taken almost straight from Holst's "The Planets" and you hear any ominous choral track and it's basically a slight variation on "Carmina Burana" by Orff. And let's not forget all the tear-jerking Hollywood "love/sad" music which is just watered down versions of Adagios from the Masters. It doesn't make any sense. Why not save your dough and just use the music by the Great Composers? Music that's infinitely more profound? Lifted out of context or taken in bites, any Great Composer's music can be made to fit a movie. Is it just because guys in Hollywood are so ignorant of Classical Music? What a costly mistake! To pay someone millions just to copy Beethoven!
Personally I'd rather hear the Greats played in a movie than somebody's pirated version of it. I'm sick of people leaving a movie and saying "Oh, that soundtrack was great!" As if it's something so original! Don't they know about TRULY great music; music that was created way, way before any Mel Gibson movie?
I suppose I'm a purist in that regard; would rather hear Beethoven's Adagio or Allegro rather than Hollywood's hatchet-job take on it. If you're gonna listen to it, listen to the REAL DEAL. Accept no substitutes!
And forgive my naivete but does copyright infringement somehow come into play in all this? Is that why even directors who know a thing or too about Classical don't want to use it? But that's still bizarre to me. I mean -- who you would you have to pay to use Beethoven's music? All his descendents have passed away, right?
All I know is that if I were a film-director I would be using TONS of Classical for the soundtrack -- for the full gamut of human emotions there's nothing better.
[This message has been edited by euphony131 (edited 02-17-2001).]
Here's my gripe/question --
Why does Hollywood bother to score original soundtracks for movies when there's a near endlesss supply of incredible music already existing? A' la Beethoven and other greats? After all, you look at some of the more famous soundtracks and they're really nothing more than rip-offs of what has come before, ex. -- Star Wars theme and Imperial March are either collages or taken almost straight from Holst's "The Planets" and you hear any ominous choral track and it's basically a slight variation on "Carmina Burana" by Orff. And let's not forget all the tear-jerking Hollywood "love/sad" music which is just watered down versions of Adagios from the Masters. It doesn't make any sense. Why not save your dough and just use the music by the Great Composers? Music that's infinitely more profound? Lifted out of context or taken in bites, any Great Composer's music can be made to fit a movie. Is it just because guys in Hollywood are so ignorant of Classical Music? What a costly mistake! To pay someone millions just to copy Beethoven!
Personally I'd rather hear the Greats played in a movie than somebody's pirated version of it. I'm sick of people leaving a movie and saying "Oh, that soundtrack was great!" As if it's something so original! Don't they know about TRULY great music; music that was created way, way before any Mel Gibson movie?
I suppose I'm a purist in that regard; would rather hear Beethoven's Adagio or Allegro rather than Hollywood's hatchet-job take on it. If you're gonna listen to it, listen to the REAL DEAL. Accept no substitutes!
And forgive my naivete but does copyright infringement somehow come into play in all this? Is that why even directors who know a thing or too about Classical don't want to use it? But that's still bizarre to me. I mean -- who you would you have to pay to use Beethoven's music? All his descendents have passed away, right?
All I know is that if I were a film-director I would be using TONS of Classical for the soundtrack -- for the full gamut of human emotions there's nothing better.
[This message has been edited by euphony131 (edited 02-17-2001).]
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