I've been meaning to pop in the TFF score CD, but while I have no inside information, I got a feeling the complete score will be released later this year, so I've been holding out.
It's entirely possible Horner forgot what he had done before, and recycled it because the tonal progression sounded good to him. I'm not saying this is the case, but remember, he's said in interviews that he would never do Star Trek again because he's "Moved beyond that, now."
Horner can produce great music. He just doesn't do so consistently. And the reuse again and again of theme after theme back in the '80's was because so many directors just had to have his music in their movie.
All contemporary film composers have their motifs or borrow from other composers, to varying degrees, depending on their individual predilections; older composers did as well, but the better ones, like Dimitri Tiomkin and Miklos Rosza just seemed better at it.It ain't a matter of timing; ALL of Horner's stuff sounds the same. COMMANDO and 48HRS and GORKYPARK are all the same basic rip-off-TUBULAR BELLS-number; action in KHAN and WOLFEN and ALIENS are the same prettymuch; he steals the same classical piece used in 2001 for the end of ALIENS, a remote assassination in PATRIOT GAMES, and a few other flicks.
And in identifying the Goldsmith stuff, it is all his TMP theme; different and worse orchestration, but it is the same piece.
If you listen to the music that occurs between the first two shots by the Reliant when Spock and Kirk were discussing the damage from the first shot, it is the same as a the middle section of Shad's Pursuit from Battle Beyond the Stars (Horner's first movie.) It is also similar to something he then did in Cocoon.
Horner gets picked on so much because he's not as nimble about recycling, but compare Goldsmith's Klingon theme to the first few notes in the earlier "The Wind and the Lion."
Good points as usual, trevanian . . . I hear a lot of recycling in Jerry Goldsmith, who is still a favorite film and TV composer of mine as far back as his The Man from U.N.C.L.E. days, but you're right that Horner's more likely to use large sections in his efforts.All contemporary film composers have their motifs or borrow from other composers, to varying degrees, depending on their individual predilections; older composers did as well, but the better ones, like Dimitri Tiomkin and Miklos Rosza just seemed better at it.If you listen to the music that occurs between the first two shots by the Reliant when Spock and Kirk were discussing the damage from the first shot, it is the same as a the middle section of Shad's Pursuit from Battle Beyond the Stars (Horner's first movie.) It is also similar to something he then did in Cocoon.
Horner gets picked on so much because he's not as nimble about recycling, but compare Goldsmith's Klingon theme to the first few notes in the earlier "The Wind and the Lion."
You could compare it to the Indian music in BREAKHEART PASS and get a lot closer, but still Goldsmith is often just cycling bits, not whole passages, and using them in different ways.
Why Horner didn't get massacred for all of his first dozen scores still stuns me ... all those quotes from Goldsmith and Williams saying they are honored to be stolen from are hard enough to accept, but why didn't the studios go after him? The classical stuff -- gayne ballet suite I think -- he trots out from 2001 in every second or third pic seems really note-for-note, so that isn't even creative typing.
Hahaha, STI. How apt.I know they reuse most of their music in nearly all nine of the star trek films. They seem to play the music in a different beat or tune. The end credits theme for STTMP, STTFF, STFC, and STI all have different beats or tunes.
All contemporary film composers have their motifs or borrow from other composers, to varying degrees, depending on their individual predilections; older composers did as well, but the better ones, like Dimitri Tiomkin and Miklos Rosza just seemed better at it.
The classical stuff -- gayne ballet suite I think -- he trots out from 2001 in every second or third pic seems really note-for-note, so that isn't even creative typing.
The classical stuff -- gayne ballet suite I think -- he trots out from 2001 in every second or third pic seems really note-for-note, so that isn't even creative typing.
LOL? If it is a classical music piece, then he isn't ripping it off from 2001. That would be like saying everyone who uses Ode to Joy in his score is ripping off the Die Hard soundtrack.
Are the film directors and producers specifically asking for a "Horner-esque" score when he is hired, in somewhat the same way they were drawn to Cliff Eidelman for a Holst-esque TUC?
When you've got somebody sleeping in a spaceship and you use it -- which is the case in 2001 -- as Poole jogs around while Bowman and the hibernauts sleep -- and then again for the end of ALIENS -- that's pretty much ripping intent as well as exact sound.
When you've got somebody sleeping in a spaceship and you use it -- which is the case in 2001 -- as Poole jogs around while Bowman and the hibernauts sleep -- and then again for the end of ALIENS -- that's pretty much ripping intent as well as exact sound.
And you don't think that the director James Cameron consciously wanted that scene in Aliens to be reminiscent of 2001?
Horner borrows from his own library extensively for Avatar as well. Glory and Titanic themese are lifted quite generously...
I know they reuse most of their music in nearly all nine of the star trek films. They seem to play the music in a different beat or tune. The end credits theme for STTMP, STTFF, STFC, and STI all have different beats or tunes.
No. That view is based on Cameron's serious stated dissatisfaction with Horner's score for ALIENS
No. That view is based on Cameron's serious stated dissatisfaction with Horner's score for ALIENS
Which doesn't exclude the possibility that the score for exactly that scene was as intended.
Do you have a source for that? Might be an interesting read.
The classical stuff -- gayne ballet suite I think -- he trots out from 2001 in every second or third pic seems really note-for-note, so that isn't even creative typing.
LOL? If it is a classical music piece, then he isn't ripping it off from 2001. That would be like saying everyone who uses Ode to Joy in his score is ripping off the Die Hard soundtrack.
When you've got somebody sleeping in a spaceship and you use it -- which is the case in 2001 -- as Poole jogs around while Bowman and the hibernauts sleep -- and then again for the end of ALIENS -- that's pretty much ripping intent as well as exact sound. EDIT ADDON: plus when you 'quote' from 2001, you're relying on something that is pretty iconic.
Than he uses it as a contrast to the imagery in PATRIOT GAMES, but it is the same music, whether you're considering 2001 as the first film use of it or not.
I generally agree, though I have to mention Dennis McCarthy, as well. There are individual scores that stand out to me (Ron Jones' work on "The Best of Both Worlds"), or sometimes even individual tracks from a score (overall, I thought Eidelman's TUC score was good, not great, except for that opening theme, which was fantastic), but in terms of consistently excellent work, those two are the best IMO.Goldsmith is by far the best composer Trek ever managed to employ.
Uh... Presuming that "NEM" = "Nemesis", that WAS Goldsmith.That's because all those movies used Jerry Goldsmith's music, and Jerry Goldsmith could never do anything original. It was always the same template, the "Enterprise theme" followed by a sample of the film's main title theme, followed by the "Enterprise theme" again... nothing was ever original with his scores. I'm so glad that GEN and NEM got away from using Goldsmith's stuff.
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