Var Cantina-musiken avsiktligt avstängd eller bara en artefakt av billig produktion?

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Jag diskuterade Star Wars: Ett nytt hopp med flera av mina musikervänner och det verkar som om de alla är överens om att Cantina-musiken var lite otrolig. Jag är inte en professionell musiker men jag har ett ganska bra öra, så jag är ganska säker på att det också är fallet.

Var det bara för att Episode IV gjordes på en liten budget (jag tittade på originalversionen), eller var det för att Lucas ville det på så sätt att skapa en "bikupa av skum och skurk" effekt? Eller är det bara ett felaktigt intryck? Gick Lucas någonsin till detta?

                            
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uppsättning user17807 07.10.2013 04:45

1 svar

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Din musikervänner har rätt - det är lite avstängt. Genom design.

John Williams tog upp detta i en intervju , och det var verkligen gjort med ändamål - att imitera hur live musik skulle låta på 1930-talet. Se den fetstilte texten speciellt:

JW: The cantina music is an anomaly, it sticks out entirely as an unrelated rib to the score. There's a nice little story if you haven't heard this, I'll tell you briefly: When I looked at that scene there wasn't any music in it and these little creatures were jumping up and down playing instruments and I didn't have any idea what the sound should be. It could have been anything: electronic music, futuristic music, tribal music, whatever you like.

And I said to George, "What do you think we should do?" And George said, "I don't know" and sort of scratched his head. He said, "Well I have an idea. What if these little creatures on this planet way out someplace, came upon a rock and they lifted up the rock and underneath was sheet music from Benny Goodman's great swing band of the 1930s on planet Earth? And they looked at this music and they kind of deciphered it, but they didn't know quite how it should go, but they tried. And, uh, why don't you try doing that? What would these space creatures, what would their imitation of Benny Goodman sound like?"

So, I kind of giggled and I went to the piano and began writing the silliest little series of old-time swing band licks, kind of a little off and a little wrong and not quite matching. We recorded that and everyone seemed to love it. We didn't have electronic instruments exactly in that period very much. They're all little Trinidad steel drums and out-of-tuned kazoos and little reed instruments, you know. It was all done acoustically - it wasn't an electronic preparation as it probably would have been done today.

I think that may be also part of its success, because being acoustic it meant people had to blow the notes and make all the sounds, a little out of tune and a little behind there, a little ahead there: it had all the foibles of a not-very-good human performance.

    
svaret ges 07.10.2013 04:58