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Interview
with Robert Urban
by Gregg Shapiro, January 18, 2005
Robert Urban: I have no one favorite, but top contenders would include Aaron Copeland's haunting scores for The Heiress and Our Town, Max Steiner's Wagnerian-styled melodramatic music for the 1933 King Kong, Alex North's ultra modern and complex orchestral score for Dragonslayer, Alfred Newman's touching score for the 1939 Hunchback Of Notre Dame, Vangelis's "brave-new-world" synth soundtrack for Blade Runner, and David Lynch's rumbling sonic landscapes for Eraserhead, to name a few. AE:
Do you have a favorite horror movie soundtrack? AE:
What is the first movie score or soundtrack that you remember making an
impression on you? Thus, for example, I would watch something like the Marlene Dietrich's Shanghai Express or the original King Kong up to eight times in a week. Naturally, with so much repetition, both the films' images AND their music really burned into my child(hood) consciousness. Again, the score to the 1933 King Kong sticks out as one of my earliest film score memories--it was, and still remains, a special favorite of mine. As for going to movie theaters as a little boy, the classical score to Walt Disney's Fantasia will forever be with me. And I must mention, seeing and hearing the Beatles' Hard Days Night as a kid changed me forever. Having spent my whole life as a rock musician, it was probably the closest thing to a true religious experience I've ever had, the effect was that profound. Even today when I watch that film, it seems as fresh as the first time I saw it. Such wonderful songs. AE:
Are there other film score composers whose work you admire?
AE: Tell us something about the process of composing music for films. There is great satisfaction when the composed music is placed exactly right in a scene, and when seen and heard together for the first time, it makes what's up on the screen "ring true." Music has the power to change anything and everything in a film. It can convey important things to the audience faster, and often better, than spoken dialogue, and is key to any type of non-speaking scene. Producers and I have noted (often amusingly) how when we first screen a film without the music, some performances might seem weak, stilted, fake. Then we'll notice how those same performances can come alive and become genuine once the music is behind it. Music in film can actually change our own perception of the quality of acting, turning what we thought was a lousy actor into a brilliant star. |
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