Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Chicken-lovin' Terrorist

Just released- a complete scene from At Best Derivative:



Do you have your tickets yet?

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Boomin'

I made a short film last weekend as part of the Almost Famous Film Festival 48-hr challenge. Our PIFMG team already had a composer- Bogdan Rygalski- so I signed on as boom boy (which meant I held the microphone), and I ended up helping out with the lighting too (I guess that means I was an "assistant grip"?) It was the first time I'd been on a movie set, and I learned a ton. It was interesting and boring and fun and hard work all at once. I guess only the top twenty teams even get their films screened, so I don't know if ours will make it or not. It's a goofy 5-minute middle-class-economic-fear comedy about a guy who can't pay his mortgage and ends up in a sort of alternate horror universe of the poor.

Anyway, if you want to come see it- don't! Come see At Best Derivative on March 6 instead. I'm sure this one will be posted on YouTube in a week or so, and I'll put it up here for all to see.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Looking for Music Samples?

The streaming flash players I had installed on the left suddenly got really buggy, so I had to remove them. If you've come here looking for samples of my music (hi, 48-hr folks!), check out my the tracks on my myspace page for now. Hopefully they'll be back here shortly.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Favorite film scores

Now that I've done a film score, and am thinking of doing some more, I'm trying to become a more organized fan of film composers. Anyway, in my first step of getting more organized, here's a list of my favorite film scores- which is really a list of my favorite movies in which I've been really struck by how the music gives life to the movie:

Mirrormask- This is probably my favorite film score to date. It's by a British saxophonist named Iain Ballamy. The music has a hundred colors, and it's largely played by six guys, who also appear in the movie as an integral part of the plot. It's a fantasy film, and the way the music changes to transport the viewer from the real world to the fantasy world is just awesome.

Brazil- Probably my favorite movie ever, and not least because Michael Kamen's score makes me laugh out loud. Tremendously creative use of a single song.

Brick- This movie came out in 2008, and I'm totally cheering for and following this brilliant young director Rian Johnson, and his brother Nathan Johnson, who did the music. Nathan runs a band in Boston called the Cinematic Underground that performs on homemade instruments- it sounds like an indie punk vaudeville thing, I can't quite tell- and his score for Brick is both perfect and very unconventional- very spare and eerie, lots of weird sounds. They have a new movie coming out this summer, The Brothers Bloom, that I'm looking forward to.

Batman- This is probably my favorite "big fat superhero" score. It was Danny Elfman's first "big fat big-budget hero" movie- he'd mostly done goofy movies up to this point: Pee Wee's Big Adventure, Edward Scissorhands, etc.- and I think he really created a new masterpiece in the genre. Of course since then he's done a ton of these- I also love his recent score for Ang Lee's Hulk, but then I sort of identify with the main character, so...

Twin Peaks- I know- it was a TV show- but Angelo Badalamenti's music is SO iconic and mysterious that it makes the list.

Hero- How many modern classical composers can you recognize from a few notes? I love Tan Dun for that reason- he's got such a personal style. His score for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon was a huge hit, and I think this one is just as great- it just wasn't as well received because the movie was too philosophical for most martial arts fans. Itzhak Perlman is the featured violin soloist.

The Matrix- Don Davis did a brilliant job with this. I've watched a bunch of these fight scenes on YouTube recently, and the music and sfx are brilliant at uniting and pacing these scenes, and making them look cool. It's no accident everybody wants to sound like the Matrix now.

Star Wars- Kids today grow up knowing John Williams' score for Jurassic Park, but for me, it's still all about the Star Wars movies. I just love his orchestral writing- it's so emotional. Sure it's cliche if you've seen it a hundred times- but you wouldn't see it a hundred times if it wasn't good. And as long as we're on John Williams, his score to the first Indiana Jones movie was pretty iconic as well.

Hmm... what else...

James Horner is a composer I want to listen to more. I remember being very moved by the music to Glory when I saw it as a kid- picking it out on the piano afterwards and reliving the movie. And he also wrote the music to Sneakers, one of my most-times-watched movies, which features saxophonist Branford Marsalis in a sort of cool-jazz chill-out vibe.

Probably my oldest favorite movie is Spartacus (which isn't even that old, I guess- it's from 1960). I used to see it on TV all the time, and Alex North's music is awesome. His "Love Theme from Spartacus" has been recorded as a ballad by lots of jazz musicians, but I think North's original scoring is still the best version.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Done!

Okay- I'm pretty much done with my work on At Best Derivative!!!!! I celebrated a few weeks ago, when I finished all the writing, but then I had another week or two of mixing and dubbing. I can't believe how hard I worked at it, and I'm very proud of the score, and excited to show people the movie. The sound guy has another day or two of post-production work, and then it's being sent off to be duplicated.

I'm always carrying paper tickets to the premiere with me, to sell to anyone who wants to come, so those of you who are local, hit me up- they're $11. The premiere, as I wrote below, is at 7:00 PM, Friday March 6, at the Tempe Center for the Arts. See you there?

 

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