All right ... in order:To David Mack: I was re-reading Lost Souls recently, and there were three scenes that stuck out to me as being incredibly moving. Since you've described writing to specific soundtracks, I would wondering if you could shed some light on what soundtracks -- or even what specific songs -- you were listening to when you wrote...
The sequence in Chapter 13 when the Borg are exterminating all life on Deneva, the sequence later on when they're simultaneously devastating Vulcan, Andor, etc.... and the sequence in the finale, where Erika and the Caeliar destroy the Queen and the Collective and transform the Borg.
1. the middle of "Woad to Ruin," from King Arthur, by Hans Zimmer
1. the middle of "Woad to Ruin," from King Arthur, by Hans Zimmer
Haven't heard that, and never got round to seeing the movie (even though I've had the DVD for about four years) - how does the score compare to Zimmer's other recent stuff?
^ My feeling exactly. Couldn't sit through more than a few minutes of the film on cable, but I really enjoy Zimmer's score for it.
All right ... in order:To David Mack: I was re-reading Lost Souls recently, and there were three scenes that stuck out to me as being incredibly moving. Since you've described writing to specific soundtracks, I would wondering if you could shed some light on what soundtracks -- or even what specific songs -- you were listening to when you wrote...
The sequence in Chapter 13 when the Borg are exterminating all life on Deneva, the sequence later on when they're simultaneously devastating Vulcan, Andor, etc.... and the sequence in the finale, where Erika and the Caeliar destroy the Queen and the Collective and transform the Borg.
1. the middle of "Woad to Ruin," from King Arthur, by Hans Zimmer
2. "I Don't Think Now Is the Best Time," from Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, by Hans Zimmer
3. "Evey Reborn," from V for Vendetta, by Dario Marianelli
Just to show that it takes all sorts, I absolutely love Antoine Fuqua's King Arthur. (Which is a remake of sorts of Fuqua's earlier Tears of the Sun.)^The movie isn't that good, but the score is great.
Trek writers, a question in two parts...(1) what do you listen to, if anything, when you are writing, and (2) do you have recommendations of what we readers should listen to when reading a particular book, or a particular portion of a book?
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