I think it might be more a case of composers thinking along the same lines.
Consider the similarities in the soundtracks for "The Doomsday Machine" and "Jaws".
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I think it might be more a case of composers thinking along the same lines.
Consider the similarities in the soundtracks for "The Doomsday Machine" and "Jaws".
Just dropping in pre-existing music from your record collection is a lame way to score a film
Mind you, "2001" was my introduction to the Blue Danube waltz music used in that film, and it was perfect.
Leonard Rosenman wrote the score for "Voyage Home" as well as "Lord of the Rings".
Loved, loved, loved both. I was so excited when I realised the connection the day we got to see the work print of ST IV, about a month before that movie's Australian release.
Funny thing is, when the film was released in 1968, Strauss’ Blue Danube was considered something of a cliché. People in their 40s and older associated it with Palm Court orchestras and old fat Viennese folks waltzing around. Many critics assumed Kubrick had chosen that piece of music to illustrate how mundane and routine, even boring, travel between the Earth and the Moon would be by the next century.Mind you, "2001" was my introduction to the Blue Danube waltz music used in that film, and it was perfect.
Well, not necessarily. RKO’s The Last Days of Pompeii (1935) re-used cues from Max Steiner’s King Kong score. The only reason the music is a bit jarring to modern viewers is that it’s become so familiar.. . . it's one thing to leverage a well known musical piece or song that was authored independently, and a very different thing to borrow a musical score that was written specifically for another movie. The former has been done successfully many times. The latter just feels (and sounds) wrong...
Like the great Horner, he liked to copy from himself, didn't he?
Like the great Horner, he liked to copy from himself, didn't he?
Well, I guess when a director says, "I loved the music in your other movie. I need something like that for mine..."![]()
Just dropping in pre-existing music from your record collection is a lame way to score a film (and yes, I'm looking at you, Stanley Kubrick).
Why? Alex Raymond's score for 2001 is quite good, but the use of classical music was a good choice.
I'm still annoyed at Bryan Singer and John Ottman for so blatantly copying the ending of TWOK in the closing scene of X2: X-Men United, right down to the two bars of music immediately preceding the end titles.
You really have to wonder if Cameron said something like that to Horner, because of the nearly note-by-note re-use of the Klingon-themed music from TSFS in Aliens.
You really have to wonder if Cameron said something like that to Horner, because of the nearly note-by-note re-use of the Klingon-themed music from TSFS in Aliens.
I doubt that was said.
To be honest, I've always thought Horner was lazy by reusing his music all the time.
Alex Raymond was the creator of Flash Gordon. I assume you mean Alex North?. . . Alex Raymond's score for 2001 is quite good, but the use of classical music was a good choice.
It's interesting to note that no recorded music is in the public domain in the US. Anything composed before 1922 is however, which I guess means written music. So any classical music being used as Public Doman would still need to be performed for Cosmos, unless they licensed library cues.
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