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Music is often spoken
of as forming the soundtrack of our
lives. Movie score music compounds the effect,
marrying melody with image, the exponential power of
24 frames per second combined with soaring tunes and
magical counterpoint to provide all of us who love
the movies a powerful emotional and cultural
reference point, time and again. And who doesn't
love a good movie or song?
These songs are standards in both the jazz and
cinematic sense.
Compiling any sort of list, however, risks sinning
by omission. Nowhere does this seem more evident
than in a collection of music from movies. Please
forgive these sins. Each musician was invited to
bring in a tune or two for the project. We played
the music in concert the evening before the
recording, and were encouraged by the audience's
delight in reliving these timeless melodies as told
by the jazz quartet. We're already looking forward
to the next volume.
The
KMF Audio Stereo Tube Microphone figures heavily in
Standards 2, Movie Music, as it did in
the making of the Grammy-nominated Standards CD. We
hope you'll enjoy listening to the sounds on this
album as much as we enjoyed making them. The tunes
and the films from whence they come deserve mention:
The 1939 film Gone With The Wind is widely
considered to be one of the greatest movies ever
made. Max Steiner's score for this epic is a
masterpiece unto itself. Over 2½ hours of music are
heard throughout the film, and "no other film score
has found such a warm and lasting place in the
affections of so many people," according to film
music historian Rudy Behlmer. "Steiner's theme for
Tara is the most recognizable melody from the film.
I can grasp that feeling for Tara," said Steiner in
1939, "which moved Scarlett's father and which is
one of the finest instincts in her, that love for
the soil where she had been born, love of the life
before her own which had been founded so strongly.
That is why the Tara theme begins and ends the
picture and permeates the entire score."¯ My
arrangement here treats the first 3 notes of the
melody as a pickup to the tune. This was the first
track recorded for the album, and we got the
performance in a single take. The blowing changes
come from "I Fall in Love Too Easily"¯ ~ how
appropriate for Scarlett! ~ written by Jule Styne
and Sammy Cahn for the 1945 film Anchors Aweigh.
West Side Story opened on Broadway in 1957,
became a Hollywood blockbuster in 1961, and its
music
can be considered the signature work of Leonard
Bernstein and librettist Stephen Sondheim.
Biographer Humphrey Burton writes: "Bernstein had
originally intended his song "Somewhere"¯ to serve
(with a different lyric) as the love music for the
balcony scene between Tony and Maria played on a
tenement fire escape. (Book author Arthur) Laurents
and (director-choreographer Jerome) Robbins were not
convinced, so Bernstein and Sondheim created a new
love duet, using the "Tonight"¯ music from the
quintet heard later in the act. "Somewhere"¯ found
its ideal position in the second act as the
introduction to the dream ballet. The tune finds an
ideal position here as track #2, While this musical
has inspired many jazz album versions, Alan Pasqua's
arrangement of "Somewhere"¯ is an evocative and
swinging retelling, and Bob Mintzer's classical tone
perfectly suits Bernstein's ode to the two young
lovers. The film starred Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer as Maria and Tony; the voices heard singing
in the movie belong to vocalists Marni Nixon and
Jimmy Bryant.
While
the character Dr. Kildare appears in many films
(including Young Dr. Kildare (1938),
Calling Dr. Kildare (1939), The Secret of Dr.
Kildare (1939), Dr. Kildare's Strange Case
(1940), Dr. Kildare Goes Home (1940), Dr.
Kildare's Crisis (1940), The People vs. Dr.
Kildare (1941), Dr. Kildare's Wedding Day
(1941), Dr. Kildare's Victory (1942), and so
on), the theme song heard here comes from the
medical drama television series which ran from
September 27, 1961 until April 5, 1966, for a total
of 190 episodes. Kildare told the story of young
intern Dr. James Kildare (Richard Chamberlain),
working in a fictional large metropolitan hospital
(Blair General) whilst trying to learn his
profession, dealing with the problems of the
patients and winning the respect of senior doctor
Dr. Leonard Gillespie (Raymond Massey). In the
series' first episode, Gillespie tells the earnest
Kildare, "Our job is to keep people alive, not to
tell them how to live." Kildare ignores the advice,
which provides the basis for stories over the next
four seasons. The main theme by Jerry Goldsmith is
one of the finest and most memorable to come out of
Hollywood, and the song "Three Stars Will Shine
Tonight,"¯ crafted from the title music, became a hit
single in 1962. Vardan Ovsepian wrote the
arrangement.
The Gay Divorcee is a 1934 American film
based on the musical play Gay Divorce.
Censorship guardians
of the time, The Hays Office, insisted on the name
change, believing that while a divorcee could be gay
or lighthearted, it would be unseemly to allow a
divorce to appear so. The movie stars Fred Astaire
and Ginger Rogers, and is a screwball musical comedy
with a slim plot. While this was the second of the
Rogers and Astaire musicals (Flying Down to Rio
(1933) being the first), it is the first of the
series to feature Ginger and Fred as the main
attraction. The stage version included many songs by
Cole Porter, most of which were cut from the film,
"Night and Day" being a notable exception. Bob
Mintzer's arrangement allows for the band to really
open up and stretch out. While doing so we all
shared a collective realization of how great the
tune is. Fred sings it in the film on a beach at
night; we played it during an afternoon in the
Neurosciences Institute's lecture hall. The song
works wherever and whenever you play it. Maybe that's why Cole Porter called it Night and Day.
Rosemary's
Baby is a 1968 American horror/thriller film
written and directed by Roman Polanski, based on the
bestselling 1967 novel of the same name by Ira
Levin. Krzysztof Komeda (born Krzysztof Trzciński 27
April 1931 in Poznań, 23 April 1969 in Warsaw) was
a Polish physician, composer and jazz pianist.
Perhaps best-known for his work in film, Komeda
wrote the scores for Polański's Rosemary's Baby,
The Fearless Vampire Killers, Knife in the
Water and Cul-de-sac. Komeda's 1966 album
Astigmatic is widely regarded as one of the
most important European jazz albums, described by
one critic as "marking a shift away from the
dominant American approach with the emergence of a
specific European aesthetic." The Komeda Sextet
became the first Polish jazz group playing modern
jazz, and its pioneering performances opened the way
for jazz in Poland. Komeda came to Los Angeles in
1968 to compose the music for Rosemary's Baby. In
December 1968, Komeda had a tragic accident there as
a result of friendly but drunken rough & tumble with
writer Marek Hłasko; Komeda fell down and suffered
head injuries that would later prove fatal. The
Komeda Jazz Festival has been held on a regular
basis in Poland since its inception in 1995. We are
grateful to bassist Darek Oles¯ Oleszkiewicz for
bringing this haunting melody to the project.
Cinema Paradiso is a love letter to the
movies, and Ennio Morricone's melody is as
unforgettable as the
film (Morricone's son Andrea is also credited).
Originally titled Nuovo cinema Paradiso and
released in 1988, it won an Academy Award for Best
Foreign Film. Told largely in flashback to childhood
years, it tells the story of the return of
successful film director Salvatore to his native
Sicilian village for the funeral of old friend
Alfredo who was the projectionist at the local
"Cinema Paradiso". Young Salvatore (Totò) develops
the passion for films that shapes his life's path.
In several scenes of movies being shown at the
cinema, there is frequent booing from the audience
during the censored sections. The films suddenly
jump, missing a critical kiss or embrace. The local
priest has order these sections be cut. Alfredo's
widow tells Salvatore that the old man left him
something: an unlabeled reel of film. Salvatore
returns to Rome and watches Alfredo's reel and
discovers that it is a very special montage. It
contains all of the kiss scenes that the priest
ordered to be cut out of the reels. The powerful
magic of music fusing with imagery can best be
appreciated watching this scene. Apropos of these
kisses, I employ the chord changes of You Or
No One¯ (from another movie, 1948's Romance On The
High Seas, song written by Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn
and sung by Doris Day) to provide us with an
improvisational grid.
Broadway
Melody of 1940 is an MGM movie musical starring
Fred Astaire, Eleanor Powell and George Murphy. It
was directed by Norman Taurog and features music by
Cole Porter, including "Begin the Beguine" in what
is considered to be one of MGM's finer set pieces
for dance (and acknowledged as being the longest
popular song ever written), and I Concentrate On
You, a dance routine credited by at least one
critic as being a cinematic low point. The song is
good, however. The film was the fourth and final
entry in MGM's loosely connected "Broadway Melody"
series, and is notable for being the only on-screen
pairing of Astaire and Powell, who were considered
the finest movie musical dancers of their time. Fred
Astaire had just left RKO, and Broadway Melody...
was his first leading-role film for MGM. Astaire was
reportedly slightly intimidated by Powell, as she
was considered one of the few female dancers capable
of out-performing Astaire. According to Powell in
her introduction to the book The MGM Story, the
feeling was somewhat mutual.
Powell recalled finally saying to Astaire, "Look, we
can't go on like this. I'm Ellie; you're Fred. We're
just two hoofers," after which, they got along well,
and rehearsed so much they wore out their pianist.
The trailer for the movie proclaims: "big as
Broadway and twice as gay!" That's saying something.
Bob Mintzer arranged this Porter tune as well.
"For All We Know"¯ is a popular song published in
1934, the music written by J. Fred Coots with lyrics
by Sam M. Lewis. The Rosemary Clooney version is
heard over the closing credits of Dan Ireland's 2005
British film, Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont. Alan Pasqua created this album's brooding arrangement.
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Planning is already underway for Volume 2 of Movie
Music. I guess that would make the CD Standards 3.
Hoping to include music from the pens of John
Williams, Henry Mancini, Alfred Newman, Dmitri
Tiomkin and Erich Wolfgang Korngold. If there's a
song you'd like to hear, feel free to write us at:
info@fuzzymusic.com .This band plays
requests.
~ Peter Erskine
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