主页--->m-comment-000--->mb-comment-012-119
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布罗克斯顿评说莫里康内 MB-012-119 |
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CINEMA PARADISO – Ennio Morricone |
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FA8802 CINEMA PARADISO (新天堂影院 / 星光伴我心) |
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作者 乔纳森·布罗克斯顿 (Jonathan Broxton) |
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ENNIO MORRICONE 评论,第12部分 012-119 |
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2018.11.26
二十世纪最伟大的谱曲 Craig Lysy 的原始评论 作为一个年轻的西西里小镇男孩,导演朱塞佩·托纳托雷(Giuseppe Tornatore)爱上了电影院,在那里他每天都会花几个小时贪得无厌地观看电影。随着电视和录像机的出现,许多人认为城镇电影院的日子屈指可数。这部电影充满了怀旧之情,因为 Tornatore 探索了他的电影记忆以及它们如何影响他的生活。根据自己的生活经历,他创作了一个剧本,获得了法国制作公司Les Films Ariane的财务支持。组装了一个精美的铸件,其中包括;菲利普·诺瓦雷(Philippe Noiret)饰演阿尔弗雷多(Alfredo),萨尔瓦多·卡西奥(Salvatore Cascio)饰演萨尔瓦多·迪·维塔(Salvatore Di Vita)(儿童),马可·莱昂纳多(Marco Leonardo)饰演萨尔瓦多·迪维塔(Salvatore Di Vita)(青少年),雅克·佩兰(Jacques Perrin)饰演萨尔瓦多·迪·维塔(成人),阿格尼斯·纳米诺(Agnese Nano)饰演埃琳娜·门多拉(Elena Mendola)(年轻),莱奥波尔多·里雅斯特(Leopoldo Trieste)饰演阿德尔菲奥神父,安东内拉·阿提利(Antonella Attili)饰演玛丽亚(年轻),普佩拉·马吉奥(Pupella Maggio)饰演玛丽亚(成人),伊萨·达涅利(Isa Danieli)饰演安娜。Salvatore Di Vita,又名 Toto,是一个早熟的孩子,他爱上了在他镇上的剧院 Cinema Paradiso 放映的电影。最终,他进入了放映员阿尔弗雷多的心中,阿尔弗雷多与他成为朋友,并收他为徒。随着时间的流逝,Salvatore 掌握了投影仪,并经常自己操作它。他对电影的热爱如此之大,以至于他买了一台电影摄影机,开始制作自己的家庭电影。一天晚上,悲剧发生了,天堂电影院着火并被烧毁,在他被严重烧伤和失明之前,萨尔瓦多救了阿尔弗雷多的命。 天堂电影院重建后,正在上高中的萨尔瓦多经营着放映机,并爱上了来自富裕家庭的美丽女孩埃琳娜。她爱他,但她的父亲不允许她嫁人,为了确保这一点,他把家人搬到了城外。阿尔弗雷多劝告萨尔瓦多在罗马寻求财富,因为他永远无法在吉安卡尔多实现自己的梦想。他离开了他的小镇,繁荣昌盛; 在电影业取得成功,但从未从失去埃琳娜中恢复过来。多年后,他悲伤地回到家中参加阿尔弗雷多的葬礼。他看到了阿尔弗雷多的忠告,在其他地方寻求财富是明智的,因为这个小镇一直很小,没有变化。阿尔弗雷多的遗孀送给他一份临别礼物,一个由阿尔弗雷多创作的电影卷轴,他很珍惜。当他在罗马播放这首歌时,他流下了眼泪,因为它包含了人们接吻的所有剪裁场景,镇上的牧师要求阿尔弗雷多删除这些场景以确保公共礼仪。这部电影取得了商业上的成功,并获得了普遍的好评,获得了奥斯卡最佳外语片提名,并赢得了该奖项。今天,它被认为是一部经典电影,在 2010 年《帝国》杂志的“世界电影 100 部最佳电影”中排名第 27 位。 埃尼奥·莫里康内(Ennio Morricone)在欧洲电影界享有盛誉,他是托纳托雷的首选。莫里康内明白,这部电影在很多方面都是托纳托雷一生的传记片,最好由一个小合奏团来提供亲密感。独奏管乐器、钢琴、钢片琴、弦乐和中音萨克斯管将承载大部分乐谱,这将讲述电影的三种生动情感;怀旧、爱情和忧郁。该谱曲将得到三个主要主题的支持;充满怀念的主旋律充满了怀旧之情,并提供了由弦乐四重奏、钢琴和中音萨克斯管诞生的浪漫十音旋律,让我们屈服于眼泪。对我来说,莫里康内完美地抓住了这部电影的情感核心,一个男人苦乐参半的回忆。托托的主题是他的身份。它由钢片琴、长笛和弦乐诞生,以 valzer giocoso 的形式表达,完美地捕捉了他的青春精神。它俏皮,由各种独奏木管乐器或中音萨克斯管演奏。这部电影最引人注目的主题是爱情主题,由莫里康内最小的儿子安德里亚创作。它讲述了萨尔瓦多和埃琳娜的爱情,并由中音萨克斯管、钢琴外邦人和浪漫弦乐所表达。此外,还有当时必要的源音乐,以及电影在天堂电影院放映的实际电影配乐。评论正确地对电影序列中的提示进行了排序。 这部电影以“天堂电影院”开场,这是一个崇高的配乐亮点,莫里康内以他经典中最好的电影开场之一为我们增光添彩。我们从萨尔瓦多位于西西里岛吉安卡尔多的家中向外望去,穿过在微风中飘动的窗帘,看到一片波光粼粼的大海。随着片头字幕的滚动,莫里康内为电影定下了基调,并通过对他的主题的奇妙完整呈现抓住了其情感核心。旋律令人憧憬,在我们身上流淌,充满怀旧之情。太棒了。我们无缝地进入了“成熟”,萨尔瓦多的母亲和姐姐试图在罗马给他打电话。我们得知她的悲伤,因为他已经三十年没有回家探望了。莫里康内用吉他独奏、长笛和弦乐多洛罗索让我们沐浴在忧郁中。电影中只使用了提示的前 48 秒。提示的其余部分揭示了吉他的紧张感,当萨尔瓦多从他的女朋友那里得知他母亲的劝告阿尔弗雷多已经去世时,这种紧张感从未解决。阿尔弗雷多去世的消息让萨尔瓦多在《第一青年》中感到悲伤,我们看到他闪回了自己的青春。他是一个祭坛男孩,当他在弥撒中努力保持清醒时,他受到了阿德尔菲奥神父的训斥。莫里康内(Morricone)通过温柔地演绎由钢片琴、长笛和弦乐诞生的托托主题来支持我们对年轻萨尔瓦多的介绍。他的主题表现为Valzer giocoso,完美地捕捉了他无法抑制的青春精神。 “童年与男子气概”提供了配乐亮点。托托在放映室拜访阿尔弗雷多,他拼接了阿德尔菲奥神父要求的所有吻戏。他们开始建立联系,当托托离开时,他偷走了一些被删减的电影场景。当他借着烛光看着家里的场景时,他的母亲困惑地看着。当他问爸爸为什么没有从战争中回家时,他的母亲向他保证,他总有一天会回来的。莫里康内用托托主题的优美扩展渲染来支持场景,它为我们带来了从小提琴独奏到长笛三角笛、中音萨克斯管,最后到木管乐器和钢琴的旋律线的转移。“再次想起她”揭示了托托走出剧院,却发现他的母亲在等他。当他告诉她他花了牛奶钱买票时,她开始打他。阿尔弗雷多前来救他,并给了她“他在座位下找到的钱”。莫里康内用与主旋律相似的悲伤旋律来支持这个场景,但主题从未解决,从而告诉我们玛丽亚理解托托对电影的热爱。在《托托和阿尔弗雷多》中,托托在与阿德尔菲奥神父的葬礼上走回家时假装脚受伤。阿尔弗雷多把他吊在自行车上,带他回家。小提琴和长笛独奏对托托主题的温柔演绎承载了他们的进步。我们可以看到托托和阿尔弗雷多正在建立联系。 专辑中未包含的托托主题的扩展渲染支持阿尔弗雷多在放映室完成托托训练的场景蒙太奇。在随后的场景中,玛丽亚收到丈夫被宣布死亡的悲惨消息,她悲痛欲绝地走回家,与托托一起哭泣。莫里康内用主旋律的重演来支持她的痛苦,这承载了他们的进步。这张专辑中也没有找到这个提示。“Cinema On Fire”提供了配乐中最具戏剧性的提示。放映室里发生了火灾,阿尔弗雷多无法控制它,因为一卷爆炸的胶卷使他失明。可怕的弦乐在他们的音域中升起,并在大火吞噬放映室时发出可怕的小号爆炸声。1 分 24 秒,奥斯蒂纳托重置并带着托托向上营救阿尔弗雷多。他把他拉下楼梯到安全地带,并大声呼救。2 点 15 分,一阵冷酷的弦乐延音和厄运的鼓声支持着疲惫不堪的托托的呼救声。在“毁灭之后”中,我们得到了另一个精美的弦乐诞生的主旋律阐述。阿德尔菲奥神父想知道这个没有娱乐活动的小镇会如何发展,因为他们太穷了,无法重建它。莫里康内通过对主旋律的哀怨渲染来支持这一刻的悲伤。然而,命运以一个中了彩票的人为幌子,他同意重新开放天堂电影院。当我们将场景转移到新剧院的祝福中时,主旋律继续有增无减。然后,托托在母亲的认可和阿德尔菲奥神父的祝福下被委以放映员的工作。 “Projection For Two”提供了另一个配乐亮点。命运让托托和阿尔弗雷多重逢,他的妻子把他带到了放映室。当他们热情地拥抱时,莫里康内用充满感伤的华丽弦乐段落,以极大的抒情性支持这个温柔的时刻。在1:23,当阿尔弗雷多抚摸着托托的脸,劝告他去别处寻求更大的财富时,我们快进到阿尔弗雷多继续与托托的对话,托托现在是萨尔瓦多,一个年轻人。 托托的主题承载着过渡,但主题,就像托托一样,已经成熟了,现在变得不那么孩子气了,取而代之的是高贵的角色,更加直率。“从《美国性感到第一个费里尼》”揭示了萨尔瓦多正在向下面的观众放映的各种电影的蒙太奇。时代变了,观众现在可以在屏幕上看到人们接吻。我们以主旋律的浪漫渲染开场,旨在支持与一个赤身裸体躺在床上的女人的浪漫。取而代之的是,托纳托雷删去了莫里康内的主题,并注入了一首闷热的蓝调作品,这与观看这部电影的年轻人的视觉唤醒有关。在1:27,莫里康内的主旋律以一种爵士乐、摇摆般的感性回归,这支持了正在观看的黑帮电影。我们在 1 分 57 秒结束,通过拨奏弦乐对主旋律进行跳跃渲染。 “爱情主题”提供了一个崇高的配乐亮点,其中介绍了安德里亚·莫里康内永恒的爱情主题。萨尔瓦多告诉埃琳娜,一个月来,他每天晚上都会站在她家门口,希望她能打开卧室的百叶窗,以表达她的爱意。我们看到他夜以继日地等待,但无济于事。12月31日结束后,他惆怅地走在回家的路上,因为镇上正在庆祝新年。莫里康内用长笛独奏多洛罗索的爱情主题的激动人心的演绎来支持他的离开和心痛。在00:39,我们将场景切换到放映室,在那里我们看到萨尔瓦多撕毁了她记录他徒劳的爱情尝试的日历。长笛在它的音域中上升,承载着他无法安慰的心痛。当埃琳娜进入时,他们的目光在爱中相遇,他们拥抱着爱情主题在浪漫的华丽弦乐上绽放。随着卷轴的结束和人群的尖叫,我们的恋人忽略了这个世界,迷失在亲吻的狂喜中。小提琴独奏对他们的主题的结束再现是精致的,令人叹为观止。电影场景和音乐在这里的融合是崇高的。《为了埃琳娜》透露,埃琳娜已经搬到巴勒莫上大学。萨尔瓦多深深地想念她,渴望她回来。在一个晚上,他在城里看电影,开始下雨时,他躺下来看星星。不知从哪里冒出来的埃琳娜热情地吻了他。他喜出望外,弦乐四重奏对爱情主题的激动人心的演绎完美地支持了这一刻。 在军队服役一段时间后,萨尔瓦多与埃琳娜失去了联系,再也没有找到她,这深深地伤害了他,他永远无法愈合的伤口。在“参观电影院”中,萨尔瓦多回到了家中参加阿尔弗雷多的葬礼。之后,他参观了关闭的天堂电影院,该电影院计划在几天内拆除。当他走进剧院时,莫里康内用钢琴和弦乐带来的主旋律的精彩延伸渲染让我们沐浴在怀旧之中。我们以配乐高光结束这部电影。在“娜塔的爱情主题”中,萨尔瓦多演奏了阿尔弗雷多给他的卷轴。令他惊讶的是,它包含了阿德尔菲奥神父下令删除的所有吻戏。当他怀着苦乐参半的怀旧之情观看时,莫里康内为我们带来了对主旋律的精致扩展渲染,其旋律在管弦乐之间转移,带来令人心旷神怡的表演。片尾字幕以 Toto 的主题为特色,提示不包含在专辑中。 “四个插曲”提供了一个奇怪的线索,因为电影中的四个场景插曲被连接在一个线索中。插曲一以环境木管乐器和弦乐短语开场。插曲二从0:29开始,作为主旋律的片段进行表情。第三段插曲从0:54开始,以舒缓的弦乐为特色,第四段从1:38开始,提供简短的弦乐短语。鉴于它们的简洁性,我没有选择完整地重看这部电影来放置它们。对于“失控,搜索和返回”,我无法辨别电影中的场景,因此它必须附加到电影中拨出的场景。我们以钢琴奥斯蒂纳托(ostinato)充满活力地开场,随着它慢慢逐渐增强,它播下了悬念,但它从未达到高潮,而是在1:29处将其能量转移到主旋律的慷慨激昂的渲染中,主题以小提琴独奏结束。最后,“天堂电影院”提供了一个额外的提示,它展示了弦乐团主旋律的美感。 我要感谢恩里科·德·梅利斯(Enrico de Melis)和DRG唱片公司为埃尼奥·莫里康内(Ennio Morricone)的杰作《天堂电影院》(Cinema Paradiso)的新发行。音频质量非常好,提供了美妙的聆听体验。莫里康内和他的儿子安德里亚(Andrea)出色地为托纳托雷的愿景提供了它所需要的心灵、苦乐参半的怀旧和爱。在一个又一个场景中,音乐和电影叙事的融合堪称典范。莫里康内明白,这个故事探讨了一个受伤的男人,他失去了一生的挚爱,再也没有康复,从一个女孩搬到另一个女孩,他心爱的导师阿尔弗雷多去世的消息引发了他在吉安卡尔多的青年时代之旅。莫里康内以天才之笔构思了一段旋律,抓住了电影的情感核心;事实上,他的主旋律是他经典中最好的主题之一。对于Salvatore来说,Toto's Theme的构思非常出色,充分体现了他俏皮、挑衅和不可抑制的精神。而安德里亚对永恒爱情主题的贡献为这部电影赋予了故事所需的核心和浪漫。伙计们,莫里康内再次展示了音乐在增强和提升电影方面的力量。这首乐谱是他经典中最好的乐谱之一,也是青铜时代的瑰宝,我强烈推荐它作为您收藏的必备品。 对于那些不熟悉乐谱的人,我嵌入了一个九分钟组曲的 Youtube 链接,其中以乐谱为主要主题:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLe9gTKQ4LU 从Movie Music UK商店购买Cinema Paradiso原声带 曲目列表:
片长:40分12秒 DRG 记录 99501 (1988/2001) 音乐由埃尼奥·莫里康内(Ennio Morricone)作曲和指挥。由Orchestra Unione Musicisti de Roma演出。埃尼奥·莫里康内(Ennio Morricone)的编排。安德里亚·莫里康内(Andrea Morricone)的附加音乐。音乐独奏家佛朗哥·坦波尼、巴尔多·马斯特里、玛丽安·埃克斯坦、弗朗切斯科·罗马诺和恩里科·皮耶拉农齐。乐谱由埃尼奥·莫里康内(Ennio Morricone)制作。专辑由Enrico de Melis制作。 |
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2018.11.26 |
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以下是原文
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ENNIO MORRICONE REVIEWS, Part 12-119 |
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CINEMA PARADISO – Ennio MorriconeNovember 26, 2018
GREATEST SCORES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY Original Review by Craig Lysy As a young small town Sicilian boy, director Giuseppe Tornatore fell in love with the cinema where he would spend hours every day insatiably viewing films. With the advent of television and the VCR, many believed that the days of the town cinema were numbered. This film abounds with nostalgia as Tornatore explores his movie going memories and how they affected his life. Drawing from his own life experiences, he crafted a screenplay, which secured the financial backing of the French production company Les Films Ariane. A fine cast was assembled, which included; Philippe Noiret as Alfredo, Salvatore Cascio as Salvatore Di Vita (child), Marco Leonardo as Salvatore Di Vita (adolescent), Jacques Perrin as Salvatore Di Vita (adult), Agnese Nano as Elena Mendola (young), Leopoldo Trieste as Father Adelfio, Antonella Attili as Maria (young), Pupella Maggio as Maria (adult) and Isa Danieli as Ana. Salvatore Di Vita, aka Toto, is a precocious kid who falls in love with movies shown at his town’s theater, Cinema Paradiso. It comes to pass that he worms his way into the heart of projectionist Alfredo, who befriends him and takes him on as his apprentice. Over time Salvatore masters the projector and often runs it himself. So great is his love of movies that he buys a movie camera and begins making his own home movies. Tragedy strikes one night when the Cinema Paradiso catches fire and burns down, with Salvatore saving Alfredo’s life, but not before he is badly burned and blinded. After the Cinema Paradiso is rebuilt, Salvatore, now in high school runs the projector and falls in love with Elena a beautiful girl from a wealthy family. She loves him, but her father will not allow her to marry down, moving his family out of town to ensure this. Alfredo counsels Salvatore to seek his fortunes in Rome, as he will never realize his dreams in Giancaldo. He leaves his small town and prospers; achieving success in the film industry, but never recovers from losing Elena. Years later he sadly returns home to attend Alfredo’s funeral. He sees the wisdom of Alfredo’s counsel to seek his fortunes elsewhere as the town has remained small and unchanged. Alfredo’s widow gives him a parting gift, a movie reel created by Alfredo, which he treasures. When he plays it back in Rome he is brought to tears as it contains all the cut-out scenes of people kissing, which the town priest had demanded Alfredo remove to ensure public decency. The film was a commercial success, and received universal critical acclaim, securing a single Academy Award nomination for Best Foreign Film, which it won. Today it is considered a classic film, achieving a ranking of 27 in Empire Magazine’s “The 100 Best Films of World Cinema” in 2010. Ennio Morricone was renown in the European film industry and he was Tornatore’s first choice. Morricone understood that the film was in many ways, a biopic of Tornatore’s life, which would be best served by a small ensemble so as to provide intimacy. Solo wind instruments, piano, celeste, strings, and alto saxophone would carry the bulk of the score, which would speak to the film’s three animating emotions; nostalgia, love, and melancholia. The score would be supported by three primary themes; the wistful Main Theme abounds with nostalgia and offers a romantic ten-note melody born by string quartet, piano, and alto saxophone, which cause us to succumb to tears. For me, Morricone perfectly captures the film’s emotional core, a man’s bittersweet reminiscence. Toto’s Theme serves as his identity. Born by celeste, flute, and strings, it emotes as a valzer giocoso, which perfectly captures his youthful spirit. It is playful, carried by a variety of solo woodwinds or alto saxophone. The film’s most notable theme is the Love Theme, composed by Morricone’s youngest son Andrea. It speaks to the love of Salvatore and Elena, and is emoted by an alto saxophone, piano gentile and strings romantico. Rounding out the score would be the requisite source music of the time as well as the actual film scores of the film’s showing at the Cinema Paradiso. The review properly sequences the cues in film sequence. The film opens with “Cinema Paradiso”, a sublime score highlight where Morricone graces us with one of the finest film openings in his canon. We look out from Salvatore’s home in Giancaldo Sicily past a drape fluttering in the breeze to behold a vast shimmering sea. As the opening credits roll, Morricone sets the tone of the film and captures its emotional core with a wondrous full rendering of his Main Theme. The melody is wistful and flows over us so full of nostalgia. Bravo. We flow seamlessly into “Maturity” where Salvatore’s mother and sister try to telephone him in Rome. We are informed of her sadness, as he has not been home to visit for thirty years. Morricone bathes us with melancholia with solo guitar, flute and strings doloroso. Only the first 48 seconds of the cue were used in the film. The remaining part of the cue reveals tension in the guitar, which never resolves as Salvatore is informed by his girl friend of his mother’s advisory that Alfredo has died. The news of Alfredo’s death saddens Salvatore in “First Youth” where we see him flash back to his youth. He is an altar boy, earning a reprimand from Father Adelfio as he struggles to stay awake during mass. Morricone supports our introduction to young Salvatore with a tender rendering of Toto’s Theme born by celeste, flute, and strings. His theme emotes as a valzer giocoso, which perfectly captures his irrepressible youthful spirit. “Childhood And Manhood” offers a score highlight. Toto visits Alfredo in the projection room as he splices out all the kissing scenes demanded by Father Adelfio. They begin to forge a bond and as Toto departs, he steals some of the excised film scenes. As he views the scenes at home by candlelight, his mother looks on with bemusement. When he asks why papa has not come home from the war, his mother reassures him that he will some day. Morricone supports the scenes with a beautiful extended rendering of Toto’s Theme, which graces us with a transfer of the melodic line from solo violin, to flute delicato, to alto saxophone, and lastly to kindred woodwinds and piano. “While Thinking About Her Again” reveals Toto exiting the theater only to discover his mother waiting for him. When he tells her he spent the milk money to buy a ticket she begins slapping him. Alfredo comes to his rescue and offers her ‘money he found under the seats’. Morricone supports the scene with sad melody kindred to the Main Theme, which never resolves, thus informing us that Maria understands Toto’s love for the cinema. In “Toto And Alfredo” Toto feigns hurting his foot as he walks home from a funeral with Father Adelfio. Alfredo’s hoist him up on his bike and takes him home. A tender rendering of Toto’s Theme emoted by solo violin and flute carries their progress. We can see that Toto and Alfredo are bonding. An extended rendering of Toto’s Theme, not included on the album, supports a montage of scenes where Alfredo completes Toto’s training in the projection room. In a subsequent scene where Maria receives the tragic news that her husband has been declared dead, she walks home devastated and weeping with Toto. Morricone supports her anguish with a reprise of the Main Theme, which carries their progress. This cue is also not found on the album. “Cinema On Fire” offers the score’s most dramatic cue. Fire breaks out in the projection room and Alfredo is unable to contain it, as an exploding reel of film blinds him. Dire strings rise in their register and launch a horrific ostinato with trumpet blasts as the conflagration consumes the projection room. At 1:24 the ostinato resets and carries Toto upwards in his rescue of Alfredo. He pulls him down the stairs to safety and cries for help. At 2:15 a diminuendo upon a grim string sustain and drums of doom supports an exhausted Toto’s cries for help. In “After The Destruction” we are graced with another fine string born exposition of the Main Theme. Father Adelfio wonders how the town will fare with no entertainment, as they are too poor to rebuild it. Morricone supports the sadness of the moment with a plaintive rendering of the Main Theme. Yet fortune comes in the guise of a man who won the lottery, who agrees to reopen the Cinema Paradiso. The Main Theme continues unabated as we shift scenes to the blessing of the new theater. Toto is then entrusted with the job of projectionist with his mother’s approval and Father Adelfio’s blessing. “Projection For Two” offers another score highlight. Fate reunites Toto and Alfredo when his wife brings him up to the projection room. As they warmly embrace, Morricone supports the tender moment with great lyricism using a passage by sumptuous strings full of sentimentality. At 1:23, as Alfredo caresses Toto’s face and counsels him to seek greater fortune elsewhere, we flash forward to Alfredo continuing the conversation with Toto, now Salvatore, a young man. Toto’s Theme carries the transition, but the theme, like Toto has matured and is now rendered less child-like and instead more forthrightly by horns nobile. “From American Sex Appeal to The First Fellini” reveals a montage of various movies Salvatore is projecting to the audience below. Times have changed and the audience can now see people kissing on screen. We open with a romantic rendering of the Main Theme, which was intended to support a romance with a woman lying naked on a bed. Instead Tornatore excised Morricone’s theme and infused a sultry blues piece, which spoke to the visual arousal of the young men viewing the film. At 1:27 Morricone’s Main Theme returns with a jazzy, swing like sensibility, which supports the gangster film being viewed. We close at 1:57 with a segue into a prancing rendering of the Main Theme by pizzicato strings. “Love Theme” offers a sublime score highlight where Andrea Morricone’s timeless love theme is introduced. Salvatore has informed Elena that each night for a month he will stand outside her house in hope that she will open her bedroom shutters as a sign of her love. We see him waiting night after night to no avail. When December 31st ends he walks home forlorn as the town celebrates the New Year. Morricone supports his departure and heartache with stirring rendering of the Love Theme by solo flute doloroso. At 0:39 we change scenes to the projection room where we see Salvatore tearing up the calendar where her recorded his futile attempts for love. The flute has ascended in its register and carries his inconsolable heartache. As Elena enters, their eyes meet in love, and they embrace as the Love Theme blossoms on sumptuous strings romantico. As the reel ends and the crowd screams, our lovers ignore the world, lost in the rapture of a kiss. The closing reprise of their theme by solo violin is exquisite, and breathtaking. The confluence of film scene and music here was sublime. “For Elena” reveals that Elena has moved to Palermo to go to university. Salvatore misses her deeply and longs for her return. On a night where he is watching a movie in town outdoors, he lays back to look at the stars as it begins to rain. From out of nowhere comes Elena who kisses him passionately. He is overjoyed and the moment is supported beautifully by a stirring rendering of the Love Theme by string quartet. After a stint in the military, Salvatore has lost touch with Elena and never again finds her, which wounds him deeply, a wound from which he never heals. In “Visit To The Cinema” Salvatore has returned home for Alfredo’s Funeral. Afterwards he visits the shuttered Cinema Paradiso, which is scheduled to be torn down in a few days. As he walks within the theater, Morricone bathes us in nostalgia with wonderful extended rendering of the Main Theme where piano and strings bring a quiver and a tear. We close the film with a score highlight. In “Love Theme For Nata” Salvatore plays the reel given to him by Alfredo. To his amazement it contains all the kissing scenes ordered excised by Father Adelfio. As he watches with bittersweet nostalgia, Morricone graces us with an exquisite extended rendering of the Main Theme, whose melody is transferred among the orchestral for a heart-warming performance. The End Credits featured Toto’s Theme and the cue is not included on the album. “Four Interludes” offers a curious cue in that four scene interludes in the film are joined in a single cue. Interlude one opens with ambient woodwind and string phrases. Interlude two begins at 0:29 and emotes as a fragment of the Main Theme. Interlude three begins at 0:54 and features soothing strings, and Interlude four begins at 1:38 and offers short string phrases. Given their brevity, I did not choose to rewatch the film in its entirety to place them. For “Runaway, Search And Return” I was not able to discern a scene in the film for which this was intended, as such it must be attached to a scene which was dialed out of the film. We open energetically with a piano ostinato, which sows suspense as it slowly builds to crescendo, yet it never culminates, instead it transfers its energy at 1:29 to an impassioned rendering of the Main Theme, which closes on a solo violin. Lastly, “Cinema Paradiso” offers a bonus cue, which showcases the beauty of the Main Theme by string orchestra. I would like to thank Enrico de Melis and DRG records for the new release of Ennio Morricone’s masterpiece, Cinema Paradiso. The audio quality is excellent and provides a wonderful listening experience. Morricone and his son Andrea excelled in providing Tornatore’s vision with the heart, bittersweet nostalgia and love it demanded. In scene after scene the confluence of music and film narrative was exemplary. Morricone understood that this tale explored a wounded man who had lost the love of his life and never recovered, moving unfulfilled from one girl to another, News that his beloved mentor Alfredo had died triggered a journey back to his youth in Giancaldo. In a stroke of genius, Morricone conceived a melody, which captured the film’s emotional core; indeed his Main Theme stands as one of the finest of his canon. For Salvatore, Toto’s Theme was brilliantly conceived and full captured his playful, defiant and irrepressible spirit. While Andrea’s contribution of the timeless Love Theme gave the film the heart and romance the story demanded. Folks, Morricone again demonstrate the power of music in enhancing and elevating a film. This score is one of the finest in his canon, and a gem of the Bronze Age, one that I highly recommend as essential for your collection. For those of you unfamiliar with the score, I have embedded a Youtube link to a nine-minute suite, which features the scores primary themes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hLe9gTKQ4LU Buy the Cinema Paradiso soundtrack from the Movie Music UK Store Track Listing:
Running Time: 40 minutes 12 seconds DRG Records 99501 (1988/2001) Music composed and conducted by Ennio Morricone. Performed by Orchestra Unione Musicisti de Roma. Orchestrations by Ennio Morricone. Additional music by Andrea Morricone. Featured musical soloists Franco Tamponi, Baldo Maestri, Marianne Eckstein, Francesco Romano and Enrico Pierannunzi. Score produced by Ennio Morricone. Album produced by Enrico de Melis. |
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Nov. 26, 2018 |
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Jon 是一位电影音乐评论家和记者,自 1997 年以来一直担任全球最受欢迎的英语电影音乐网站之一 Movie Music UK 的编辑和首席评论员,并且是国际电影音乐评论家协会 (IFMCA) 的主席。在过去的 20多 年中,Jon 撰写了 3,000 多篇评论和文章,并进行了多次作曲家采访。在杂志刊物方面,乔恩曾为《电影配乐月刊》、《原声带杂志》和《电影音乐》等出版物撰写评论和文章,并为普罗米修斯唱片公司的两张经典 Basil Poledouris 配乐专辑《Amanda》和《Flyers / Fire on the Mountain》撰写了衬垫注释。他还为汤姆·胡佛 (Tom Hoover) 于 2011 年出版的《Soundtrack Nation: Interviews with Today's Top Professionals in Film, Videogame, and Television Scorering》一书撰写了一章。在1990年代后期,乔恩是伦敦皇家爱乐乐团的电影音乐顾问,并与他们合作拍摄了约翰·德布尼(John Debney)的音乐电影《相对价值》(Relative Values)和奥利弗·海斯(Oliver Heise)的音乐《佛陀的指环》(The Ring of the Buddha),以及与兰迪·纽曼(Randy Newman)合作的一系列音乐会。2012年,乔恩在波兰克拉科夫举行的第五届年度电影音乐节上担任“电影节学院”主席。他是作曲家和作词家协会的成员,该协会是作曲家、作词家和词曲作者从事电影、电视和多媒体工作的首要非营利组织。 |
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2023.12.20 |
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