Wednesday, January 4, 2017

Charlie Chaplin´s The Lion´s case and the Polytonality


The Lion's Case from 1928 The Circus (despite original was a silent movie a score of Gunter Kochan was added in 1969), here like in my older Charlie Chaplin scene Easy Street I use Polytonality or best said Bitonality to recreate a mood of hilarious humor beside a cartoon scoring style that point out several movements and actions. Like I said in my older post Polytonality or Bitonality have been used extensively by composers since Igor Stravinsky used it in his score for the Ballet Petrushka, but if we want to look for the origins of use of this technique to express feelings of humor, we have I think to look Mozart's musical joke where the genius of Salzburg use some wrong notes to generate laugh in the audience, the French composer Darius Milhaud was an important exponent of this technique, but with different approaches.

This is a topic that can generates many musicologist discussions and disagreements, but this is not the scope of this post but point out the marvelous potential of expressiveness that this compositional technique gives us to create not only funny cartoon moods, but an incredible amount of artistic possibilities like in the beginning of the third act of the Puccini's last opera Turandot where we can hear a very beautiful exotic sonority that moves so deeply . I hope you enjoy this score version of the scene of the lion's case from The Circus.



Monday, September 21, 2015

Charlie Chaplin Easy Street Film Score Practice



I want to share with you this short piece written as an exercise of film scoring. I picked some scenes from the marvelous silent short film Easy Street by Charlie Chaplin and wanted to handle it in a cartooning fashion in order to accentuate the humorous mood. In this work I used Polytonality , but in contrapuntal sense, more than in harmonic way. Since Mozart musical jokes, Polytonality has been used to express a variety of feelings and moods in ballet, opera, concert music and of course in films. Igor Stravinsky Petrushka is an important example, Giacomo Puccini uses it in Turandot and many others important composers too. In films this technique has been used to add a specific taste in a punctual situation rather than as a main method of composition for an entire score, there are exceptions to this rule of course.

I hope you like this short example and feel free to leave your comments.

 




Monday, August 31, 2015

A Classical Composer in Film Score-Aram Khachaturian



This is an arrangement of the marvelous Sabre Dance of Aram Khachaturian from his ballet Gayaneh .I wrote the adaptation in Double-Bass Quartet format.

                                                           

Aram Khachaturian was an Armenian (URSS) composer famous for his Cello and Violin concertos and especially for his Ballets  Spartacus and Gayaneh. To this last belongs the greatly famous Sabre Dance that has been widely used in popular culture around the world. Master Khachaturian used elements of armenian folk music to develop his language, highly rhythmic, and rich of color ,but at the same time with a strong European romantic period root, as in his aforementioned violin and cello concerts. But Aram Khachaturian also composed music to films alongside orchestral, chamber and incidental music Admiral Ushakov 1953, Pepo 1935,  Prisoner No.217, Undying Flame (Bonfire of Immortality), The Battle of Stalingrad (1949)  among others demonstrated  the versatility and genius of the Armenian composer and his enormous commitment with the music and culture of his land whose roots always was present in all his works.

 I leave you a link to the CD of the Khachaturian film music

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Technology vs Artistic Composition in Film Score II


A reflection about  musical composition  and technology in film and media



VST Instruments, DAWS, Music Editors and MIDI technology are terms commonly used today in the media production and composition fields, as I said in my last post these devices could help us  express our music ideas instead of get in the way of the artistic process. To accomplish that we have to be sure we are using the technology as a tool and not  getting carried away by it unconsciously though of course all these eases can help us get inspire in some way, but we must always have  the control. I think that use our musical imagination (harmonies, melodies,rhythms and specially in timbres and orchestration)  is  a way of improve the sensitiveness and inner aural that will carry us to achieve new levels of deep in the art.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

But all these software can help us when we collaborate in a low budget project.  Produce and record with Symphonic orchestras is expensive, the cost of  recording halls or studios, music editing and preparation, recording equipment, musicians, conductor and many others production details increase the budget at levels not all projects can afford. Then, VST Libraries, Daw software and music editors, are  invaluable tools that give us the opportunity  to provide producers and directors with music that fit not only their film or project but also their budget.

 

This is a cue from the soundtrack I composed for the play "The glorious manifestation of the children of God" which was performed during the 13th "Great Vigil all United for Venezuela" that took place on  April  17th in the UCV University stadium facilities in Caracas, and it is a good example I think of how we can use the technology together with human performance not only in the composition, but in the interpretation, of course all these techniques are commonly used in today media and film industry.

I used mainly  East west quantum leap symphonic orchestra, Hollywood strings  Hollywood brass and some others libraries mixed with  the interpretation of a violinist and a double bassist.

 

 

Composed and orchestrated by Abraham Maduro, violins played by Cecilia Gomez and double basses by Abraham Maduro.

 The images are from the event 13th "Great Vigil all United for Venezuela"

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