phil_l wrote: ↑Wed 2 May 2018 10:19
Sorry guys for destroying your idols but Alan Silvestri does not orchestrate anything ... look before back to the future what he was doing? Cheap synth scores.
He said in an interview before doing an orchestral score for BTTF, that he read a book on how to make a filmscore. yeah he read a book and can orchestrate in a few weeks a freakin' incredible soundtrack like Back to The Future ?
Silvestri had a strong jazz background, he was composing for and conducting a live orchestra during his early years. I had the opportunity to ask him about his Berklee days and was told he did a ridiculously amount of transcriptions. His ears were sharp. By the time he got the BTTF phone call, all he needed was Hagen's book and a lot of confidence. And of course having a guy like Jim Campbell will make the process less traumatizing. God bless that man. ;) But you can clearly hear his jazz training all over BTTF's harmonies. It wasn't random.
phil_l wrote: ↑Wed 2 May 2018 10:19
James Horner can orchestrate, but I heard from very close orchestrators that on a big amount of scores
he just delivers a piano cue and ask the orchestrators to do everything behind.
WRONG! You are talking about a guy who used to walk around the corridors of UCLA with Strauss' Alpine Symphony under his arms, at a time where post-romantic music was considered dismally tacky. James was ridiculously gifted. By the time he got his big break with ST2, he had scored a ton of dog-shit films for next to nothing. Producers couldn't believe what he could achieve with so little. He had laser-like focus on his goals. The only reason he would use an orchestrator was due to time constraints, and I quote:
"I write about 2.5 to three minutes of music a day when I orchestrate, when I don't orchestrate, it goes up. I don't for instance write a piano line on one or two lines and then ship if off to an orchestrator and let the orchestrator make it into what you hear. I tend to do most of the colouring myself, I decide what instruments play what, what the voicings are. Obviously if I had a lot of music to write and a short amount of time, I'm not getting much done and I will run out of time before I finish the score. So in cases like that I will do as much of the orchestrations as I can, and I will make copious notes as to what I want on the score paper with arrows, "please double this to this," I'll put in as much as I can and it will then go off to an orchestrator who will finish it off for me and send it to the copyist."
He didn't "just deliver a piano cue". Some of you feel like throwing random stuff just to make a point. Let's not start spreading misinformation. If you are still not convinced, grab a copy of the manuscripts of any of his concert work (warning, not cheap) or his UCLA thesis (Conversations), and you will see that Jamie was as complete as he was praised to be.
He had great admiration for Zimmer btw. Not that mockery which Hollywood became.
Anyway, what we are discussing here is the simple fact Hans said he wrote and orchestrated every single note of that Big Band cue. When Samy questioned him, instead of giving a honest straight answer, he went for cheap blows and self-pity tactics. And the fanboys took the bait like they usually do. They attacked Samy like a pack of rabid dogs, like they usually do. What went down at VIC was really unfair and dishonest. I'd be pissed too!