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Klub James Horner [ŽP: 8 týdnů] (kategorie Hudba - V ODPADU) moderuje Lokutus.
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[ 625 ] <Novější  <<<Nejnovější  Nejstarší>>>  Starší>  
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 23.12.2014 22:21  1434
NP: Pas de Deux :-O
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 16.12.2014 18:41  1433
!!!https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JPVzkrjyGUU
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 9.12.2014 05:31  1432
škoda, že nikdo nechtěl...




Greatly expanded CD release of powerhouse James Horner soundtrack for Mikael Salomon outdoor adventure set in Africa, starring Reese Witherspoon, Jack Thompson, Maximilian Schell. Vivid landscapes, dramatic action inspire Horner to create expansive main theme plus thrilling action music. In between are colorful adventure set-pieces, gentle variants on theme plus exotic touches for wildlife encountered by trio of youngsters during long, challenging journey. Lengthy score has numerous highlights: strong opening "Main Title" sequence with dramatic chimes, austere chords as elephant slaughter reaches climax, jagged action of "The Slaughter" as parents are killed, beautiful development of main theme during "The Elephants", riveting action as trio is "Attacked From The Air", colorful suspense of "Scorpion", others. Special nods to heroic final chords of "The Swamp" as dog leaps to safety, surging fortissimo climax of "Epilogue/End Credits". Entire CD mastered from digital two-track session mixes made by Shawn Murphy, courtesy Walt Disney Pictures. Liner notes by John Takis, classy packaging by Joe Sikoryak complete fantastic album! James Horner fashioned several scores for Disney: Honey, I Shrunk The Kids, Something Wicked This Way Comes, The Journey Of Natty Gann, all previously released by Intrada. A Far Off Place is one of the best! James Horner conducts. Intrada Special Collection CD available while quantities and interest remain!
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 8.12.2014 18:10  1431
"kompletní" trailer s Hornerovou hudbou!

http://jameshorner-filmmusic.com/french-trailer-wolf-totem-online/
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 6.12.2014 12:36  1430
"Wolf Totem is actually a story about two Chinese students in 1960s, and what they learn about the Mongolians and about the wolves, and it's very touching, it's very Chinese. The producers are Chinese. We were going to record it in China, I did ethnic instruments in Mongolia, and then brought that back to London, but the players weren't good enough in Beijing. Shanghai, I wanted to record in, but the government of Beijing and the film company said no to working in Shanghai. They didn't care that it was still in China, it's like two worlds. A political issue. So we ended up just bringing everything back to London, but we started out there."

- James Horner


kompletní interview: http://jameshorner-filmmusic.com/conversation-james-horner/
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 6.12.2014 12:36  1429
takže nikdo? OK
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 4.12.2014 19:58  1428
zájemci?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDgnJGeuZF0
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 1.12.2014 22:52  1427
https://soundcloud.com/sortiescinema/le-dernier-loup-theme-james-horner
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 22.11.2014 08:33  1426
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 20.11.2014 19:50  1425
http://jameshorner-filmmusic.com/pas-de-deux-inside-look-part-2/
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 17.11.2014 20:16  1424
http://jameshorner-filmmusic.com/pas-de-deux-word-premiere-press-reviews/
aman Aman 13.11.2014 23:28  1423
To si dám radši Titanic (B-R) doma.
Za ten litr jsem si koupil už FMP 2015 a ještě ušetřil :-)
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 13.11.2014 23:21  1422
jde někdo?http://kultura.idnes.cz/titanic-live-v-praze-0lj-/filmvideo.aspx?c=A141113_125722_filmvideo_vdr
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 13.11.2014 19:56  1421
How I wrote… Pas de Deux – James HornerOn Thursday 13 November 2014, Classic FM’s Orchestra in the Northwest – the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic – under Vasily Petrenko performs the world premiere of Pas de Deux, the first concert piece that Oscar-winning composer James Horner has written in three decades.

It’s a double concerto commissioned by violinist Mari Samuelson and her brother, cellist Hakon Samuelson.

Here, Horner himself guides you through his latest work.

Date written: 2011-2014

How would you describe the music to someone who’s never heard it before?
It’s far from being a traditional concerto, more a duet for cello and violin with orchestral accompaniment. I saw it as a piece in motion, as a traditional dance piece – a pas de deux – where the lines that the two soloists play embrace each other. I’ve always wanted to write a ballet.

You haven’t written anything ‘classical’ since the 1980s. What was the biggest challenge in composing Pas de Deux?
No double concerto for the violin and cello with orchestra has been written since Brahms. So that was always in the back of my mind – not in an intimidating way but in a ‘How do I solve this puzzle?’ sort of way.

The biggest challenge was deciding the musical language I wanted to speak – whether it was going to be something more adventurous tonally or something slightly less adventurous tonally, but perhaps more accessible. I wanted the piece to be very accessible yet push the soloists and the orchestra – but not crazy challenging, there’s no point in that.

So you aimed primarily for an accessible sound world?
There are only so many patterns of melodies and rhythms and I think at a certain point the language has to be expanded a little bit. But audiences aren’t comfortable with music that is atonal – or what they perceive as atonal – so we are locked into this relatively tonal structure.

Did you have a musical ‘EUREKA!’ moment where everything fell into place?
I don’t have eureka moments – I don’t write like that. It just wrote itself in a way. I usually get an idea for something and it’s a 30-minute idea. With film, I have to tame it down to being 12 minutes or 8 minutes or whatever the film’s needs are. So it was easy to generate a 30-minute piece in that respect.

Is there a moment in the piece that you’re most proud of?
The whole piece of music is very impressionistic, so there is no one part that I’m proud of. It is very vaporous in its nature and the colours I chose. The orchestration I did is very typical of my sense of colour. It is a lot like painting for me when I talk about orchestration. It’s brush strokes and colours and all about that sort of magic that happens. It’s less about long melodic lines and sonata form and those things – it’s more about expressing an idea in a gesture and having it performed.

Are there any particular composers who have influenced you?
I am sure in my early work there were influences of tons of people. Having studied all the ‘lads’ for so long, how do you get all of that stuff out of your head completely? There are so many people I admire, particularly how certain composers solved problems – all the way from Richard Strauss and Mahler to Arvo Part, Prokofiev and Benjamin Britten. His War Requiem is one of my absolute favourite pieces. It’s just a stunning piece.

I also love the music of Ligeti. I studied with him for almost a year in Hamburg. I took time off from school and left London and worked with him and we studied Thomas Tallis, of all things, because Ligeti was very influenced by that era of music even though you wouldn’t know it from his own compositions.

Why have you decided to return to composing for the concert hall?
I guess I’ve come full circle in a way. I have sort of achieved what I wanted to achieve in the film world and felt I needed to develop a new skill set to be able to write a successful concert piece or ballet.

So I will be writing serious music, trying to still make a living in film in between, and seeing how that develops. I’ve been commissioned to write a concerto for four french horns for the London Philharmonic Orchestra. I know the horn players very well and I always ask for them to play on my films.
lokutus Lokutus watch?v=teBV0EoJJY8&t=232 - prodej OST 10.11.2014 12:39  1420
Hollywood composer James Horner whose Double Concerto for Violin, Cello and Orchestra will be premiered in LiverpoolCredit: Sylvia Wells

He's worked on some of the biggest movies to come out of Hollywood in the last three decades – from Deep Impact and The Mask of Zorro to Avatar and a little film called Titanic.

So it’s a bit of a surprise when composer James Horner admits: “I’ve always wanted to write a ballet.”

And, while he may not have yet fulfilled that specific ambition, he’s come closer to it than ever before with his latest commission, a rare classical composition being premiered in Liverpool this week.

Pas de Deux – the clue is in the title – will be performed by brother and sister Hakon and Mari Samuelsen, appearing with the RLPO and Vasily Petrenko.

“It was written really as two soloists or two dancers, with orchestral accompaniment,” the 61-year-old explains. “I’m thinking sort of visually. It really is a very intimate piece with orchestra.”

It was the Samuelsens, who proved a hit with Liverpool audiences when they performed at last year’s Spirit of Christmas concerts, who went to James with the idea for a new piece.

It’s many years since he wrote anything purely classical – a work called Spectral Shimmers in the 1980s.

“Having come up the academia and classical music (route), when I moved away, I got to a point where I didn’t want to deal with the classical world any longer,” he admits. “I just wanted to be in film.

“So this is the first thing I’ve written after vowing never to return to the classical world.”

It won’t be the last, however, as he’s been asked to create a concerto for four horns for the London Symphony Orchestra.

The American trained at the Royal College of Music before moving LA in the 1970s where he gained a PhD in composition and theory. His film breakthrough came in 1982 when he was asked to write the music for Star Trek II.

Since then, he’s scored something like 100 soundtracks, everything from Aliens and Apollo 13 to Iris, A Beautiful Mind and The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas. He’s the owner of two Oscars (for My Heart Will Go On) and has been nominated another eight times.

Still, it appears it was the right time to turn his composing hand to something different.

He muses: “I think time has gone by and I’ve realised the pros and cons of the film world. I’ve sort of been there and done that.

“Mari and Hakon asked me about writing a piece for them, and I thought it would be a big challenge. Especially as nothing’s been specifically written for that ensemble (violin, cello and orchestra) since Brahms.” Despite working in the hi-tech world of films, James composes not on a computer, or even at a piano, but on a big architect’s table, and in the past has likened composing to painting.

“If I want a certain colour or certain timbre – I think very much in terms of how I’d paint that,” he says.

So what colours does Pas de Deux put him in mind of?

“There’s no specific colour,” he answers. “But it goes through a lot of different textures. It’s a piece that basically goes to all 12 keys. But it won’t necessarily sound like that.

“It does a lot of modulating. I don’t think it’s a particularly hard piece, but the whole blend, the balancing, is going to be key to make it come alive.”

He’s been sitting in on rehearsals, and will be at the Phil to hear the concerto performed in the opening concert of the RLPO’s 175th anniversary season.

“And, in grand tradition, the hall’s not quite finished,” James laughs.

“The paint will be drying as the piece is performed. I love it!”

Pas de Deux is premiered at the RLPO’s Season Opening concert on Thursday.

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