Posts Tagged ‘Score’

NarniaFans Mailbag #42: Harry Gregson Williams’ Complete Narnia Scores, and Harry Potter 6

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Welcome to the mailbag, where we answer fanmail that you send in, over the course of the week.  For those that don’t know, we’ll take your questions, and if we don’t know the answers, we’ll try to get the answers from people that would know.  We might even make something up!  I have a very broad sense of humor, on top of a vast knowledge of film, music and comics with a wide range in taste and a great memory that serves to bring great comparisons or answers to your questions.

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Prince Caspian Score, Narnia Songwriters Win Dove Awards

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

The Dove Awards are currently happening, and I’m going to be updating this as the awards are given to Narnia related music artists.

The score for The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian wins the award for Instrumental Project of the Year!  Congratulations, Harry Gregson-Williams, Lisbeth Scott & Company!

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Harry Gregson-Williams composes X-Men Origins: Wolverine

Friday, April 10th, 2009

If the music of Narnia has captured your attention, and you enjoy symphonic music, or have become a fan of Harry Gregson-Williams, you’ll want to check out the score for X-Men Origins: Wolverine.  Harry Gregson-Williams was the composer for both The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and Prince Caspian.  He won’t be working on The Voyage of the Dawn Treader, though, as that is going to be composed by David Arnold.

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Composer Harry Gregson-Williams on Prince Caspian, Wolverine

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

Harry Gregson-WilliamsJust after the release of THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA: PRINCE CASPIAN, composer Harry Gregson-Williams shares about his return to Narnia, his feelings about moving on from the franchise, what he’s doing with up-and-coming-composers like David Buckley and Stephen Barton at his Wavecrest Studios, and his upcoming projects which include X-Men Origins: Wolverine.

CC: Outside of the relocation, what would say your biggest challenge was musically on PRINCE CASPIAN?

HARRY GREGSON-WILLIAMS: My biggest challenge was to embrace Andrew (Adamson’s) notion that I should bring forward themes from the first movie. Of course, there are a number of new themes that I had to write, but the real conundrum for me was figuring out just how much of the thematic content I was going to bring with me from the last movie. It’s strange not starting from square-one. I actually worried about this quite a bit, so what I ended up doing was to push all of that to one side and write Prince Caspian’s theme and the cue for the first 8-minutes of the film. I knew this piece would have no reference to the previous movie, so this was good for me because it made me feel as though I was on a fresh musical journey.

CC: Would you say that, at least in some ways, it is more difficult in doing a sequel?

HARRY GREGSON-WILLIAMS: Yes. I would say that. I don’t know what David Arnold would say when one does Bond movie after Bond movie. Perhaps intellectually it’s not so difficult for him because what would a Bond movie be without ((hums James Bond theme)) – because you just need those John Barry moments. But somehow he is able to make the scores feel fresh. So for me, once I could see the arc of the story that I’d be able to follow, it all became much clearer.

CC: David Arnold is the composer taking the reigns, as it were, for the franchise…..How does it feel? Is it easy to cut the chord and say, “I’ve done my part and so whatever he does, great!”

HARRY GREGSON-WILLIAMS: I think if Andrew Adamson was directing the next movie and I hadn’t been asked to do it, then I don’t think I could help myself from feeling extremely disappointed.

Check out the full interview here!

Harry Gregson-Williams: Scoring the Return to Narnia!

Monday, July 7th, 2008

Harry Gregson-WilliamsAnimated Views’ Jeremie Noyer e-mailed us to tell us that his newest Caspian article is online: an interview with Narnia composer Harry Gregson-Williams. Here’s the summary from the top of the article, followed by a link to the rest!

For any film music buff, Harry Gregson-Williams is no stranger. We owe him such notable scores for all three Shreks, Gone Baby Gone, Chicken Run, Man on Fire, Flushed Away, Domino, Phone Booth, Bridget Jones: The Age of Reason, Enemy of the State, Antz and Kingdom of Heaven, among others. Such impressive credits that prove his being as comfortable in live action as in animation to provide elegant, smooth and at the same time strong scores.

Born December 13 1961, Gregson-Williams began his career as a music teacher at the Amesbury School in Hindhead, Surrey, England, then at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama, where he had been a pupil, and also for a short period in both Egypt and Africa, thus experimenting music as a universal language, before stepping into film music.

Prince Caspian is his fifth collaboration with director Andrew Adamson after composing the scores for his Academy Award-winning Shrek (co-composed with John Powell), the hit sequels Shrek 2 and Shrek the Third, and The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, for which he collected Golden Globe and Grammy nominations for his score. From the delicate and otherworldly notes of an electric violin to the stabs of a furious, full orchestra, let him be your guide through the sounds of Narnia…

Harry Gregson-Williams: Scoring the Return to Narnia!

Prince Caspian Video Game Scoring Session

Wednesday, April 23rd, 2008

Mark Griskey is fast becoming one of the premier composers that video game companies call when they require original music for movie-based titles. Take last year, for example. In addition to completing the co-written / co-produced score for The Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End and recording with the Skywalker Symphony Orchestra for his original score to LucasArts’ first next-gen title, Star Wars: The Force Unleashed, Griskey also composed and recorded his original score for Disney/Walden Media’s The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian video game to coincide with the movie.

Scheduled for release on May 15th, The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian video game is the sequel to The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, which are both developed by Traveller’s Tales and scored by Mark Griskey. A long time fan of the C.S. Lewis novels which the games and movies are based on, he is clearly delighted to be associated with the franchise. “I am a huge fan of fantasy literature in general, and the Narnia series has always been one of my favorites,” he affirms.

”The music style for this game was similar to what I did for The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, but darker and less whimsical. Disney asked for a darker score from the beginning and it made perfect sense to me because the Caspian story was definitely darker than The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe.”

See pictures and read more at Music4games.net

Thanks to Music4games for the link!

Harry Gregson-Williams returns to Narnia with PRINCE CASPIAN

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

ScoringSessions.com travels across the globe to bring you an exclusive in-depth look at the scoring sessions for Harry Gregson-Williams’ highly anticipated score to The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian. Recorded at the world-famous Abbey Road Studios, they’ve got a lot of photos for you, so come check it out!

Since last December, composer Harry Gregson-Williams has been hard at work in London, writing his score to the upcoming Walt Disney Pictures/Walden Media’s feature film The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian. The film adaptation is the next chapter in the saga by C.S. Lewis, and takes place after the events in 2005’s The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Directed by Andrew Adamson (who directed the first film), with a screenplay by Adamson, Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely, the movie follows the four Pevensie children as they are called back to Narnia to help Prince Caspian (Ben Barnes) defeat the forces that are plotting against him.

Gregson-Williams began recording his score in late January, where a cycle of writing/recording/mixing took place. This approach allowed him to work with the filmmakers as the edits in the film changed. At the beginning of March there were three days of scoring, and ScoringSessions.com had an opportunity to travel across the globe to attend them at the world-famous Abbey Road Studios, in London, England.

The music for Prince Caspian follows the style that Gregson-Williams established for the first film, but due to the nature of this sequel, it’s a bit darker and more aggressive. New themes have been written, and some old familiar themes from the first film also make appearances.

Visit ScoringSessions.com for all the awesome pictures and the rest of the story!

Thanks to Dan Goldwasser for the report!

David Arnold to Compose Score for Voyage of the Dawn Treader

Tuesday, October 9th, 2007

In an announcement for the composer of Bond 22, the James Bond fan site MI6 has revealed that film composer David Arnold will be composing the score for The Voyage of the Dawn Treader:

David will also be scoring the third Narnia film, “The Voyage of the Dawn Treader” for Disney/Walden and directed by Michael Apted, with whom David has scored three films (”The World is Not Enough“, “Enough” and “Amazing Grace“)

It is pretty typical for a composer and director to team up on movies as they have already established their relationship. They tend to work together quickly and efficiently as they’ve got a short-hand in which they can communicate more effectively than a new composer coming in. This is the type of relationship held by Steven Spielberg and John Williams, M. Night Shyamalan and James Newton Howard, and Andrew Adamson and Harry Gregson-Williams.

You can visit David Arnold’s official website for more!

Harry Gregson-Williams reflects on his career as a composer

Thursday, May 3rd, 2007

Tarva2Alambil sent us a great article about the career of composer Harry Gregson-Williams. He’s a phenominal composer, and will be returning to write the music for Prince Caspian. He mentioned that he’s really looking forward to it and that he hopes to be able to hold on to a theme or two from the first film. The Hollywood Reporter:

My first impression of Harry was a small bundle of energy,” director Andrew Adamson says of his composer collaborator on 2005’s “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe” and Buena Vista’s planned 2008 release “The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian.”

He might be on to something.

Since Harry Gregson-Williams first burst onto Hollywood’s film music scene a decade ago with his score for 1998’s “The Borrowers,” he has managed to turn his naturally kinetic state of mind, strong classical background and rock ‘n’ roll mentality into an eclectic slate and high-profile collaborations with some of the biggest names in the industry.

Adamson, too, praises Gregson-Williams for his creative flexibility. The pair first joined forces for 2001’s “Shrek,” which the New Zealand-born filmmaker co-directed with Vicky Jenson, and subsequently partnered for 2004’s “Shrek 2″ and the “Narnia” films.

While both franchises appeal to family audiences, they couldn’t be more different in tone. But Adamson says he didn’t hesitate to bring Gregson-Williams onboard for the live-action fantasy films, noting that Gregson-Williams is just plain fun to work with.

“On ‘Shrek,’ Harry developed a really beautiful fairy tale theme. He called me and said, ‘Let me play you the “Shrek” theme — I’m very happy with it.’ He played it for me and then got back on the phone very excited. And I said, ‘Harry, you know, it’s a very beautiful piece of music, but it’s very traditional, and I think Shrek’s theme should sound very different because he’s not your typical fairy tale character.’ He got very depressed and literally 15 minutes later called me back and said, ‘Let me play you Fiona’s theme,’ and he played me the same piece of music! It was perfect because everything about Fiona in the movie was about the cliches of that genre, so that became Fiona’s theme.

“To him, the music comes first, and then he almost finds the application,” Adamson continues. “On the ‘Narnia’ series, when we started with that — before he’d even seen anything — he said, ‘I’ve got this big heroic theme that I’m imagining at a coronation or something,’ and he sat down and played it for me on piano. It was beautiful, and it became one of the strongest themes in the film. He seems to have a very intuitive approach to film music.”

The composer will debut a concert suite of his “Narnia” music with the Colorado Symphony Orchestra on May 19, and he already has begun thinking about the second film in the series, “Prince Caspian.” “I’ve read the script, and there are a couple areas that I’m researching, but really it’s a very different story,” Gregson-Williams says. “Hopefully, we’ll be able to hang on to one or two of the cues and develop them, but it’s quite dark, actually. I’m really looking forward to it.”

So, what’s changed since Gregson-William’s early assistant days? A lot, the composer says. “Certainly from a technological point of view, I wouldn’t have thought — if I’d have looked forward 11 years ago — that I would spend so much time in front of a computer,” he offers. “I didn’t even own a computer 11 years ago, let alone use it for music. I found a happy medium between pen and paper and utilizing the technology that’s available. It’s pretty thrilling because it’s changed so much since Hans first locked me in a room with a computer and said, ‘Work it out.’”

Narnia Fans Mailbag #3

Thursday, August 17th, 2006

We’ve just posted the third edition of the NarniaFans Mailbag. We’ve answered nine letters this week, including such topics as the lyrics, casting, the Extended score, how they may film The Last Battle, and more!

Click here for the third NarniaFans Mailbag!