NO TIME TO DIE (2021) - Discuss Hans Zimmer's Score

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  • TripAcesTripAces Universal Exports
    edited September 2019 Posts: 4,582
    Univex wrote: »
    Roadphill wrote: »
    I think we are all crying out for something Barry-esque.

    Well, true Bond fans are.

    Cmon guys, shoot me for saying "true Bond fans". You know who you are, and you know you want to. Some people just want a different Bond, with no Bondian traits, no womaniser Bond, no Bond sound, no DB5, no ppk, no Bondian lines, nothing. Just a hardcore spy with a scooby gang-crew and a falsetto-singing song, and some socially shocking stuff you can get behind of.

    True Bond fans want the Barry sound, true escapism, a womaniser stylish Bond with his car and signature gun, some blaring horns in the background and him going alone against a changing world and a psychotic fatherly figure. Oh, and some babes with strong thoughts and angles (pun intended) along the way.

    I'm getting shot now ;)

    I do hope Romer does his own thing. But the thing is, he should do his own thing with the "Bond sound". And we know who came up with it. It's the same principle with Fleming's writing of the Bond character. Dan does his stuff with what Fleming created. But it is Fleming's creation. And the sound is Barry's. IMO, of course.

    Still getting shot, probably.

    I stepped aside from this thread for a bit. Then, over the weekend, it occurred to me, while watching the 1977 film The Deep, what all this "Barry-esque" stuff really means and why there is this deep division among Bond fans, regarding Arnold and Newman. Here is my take.

    John Barry is a visceral composer. This means his music really gives you something to feel, more than something to think. It hits at the heart. This why it seems anthemic. David Arnold is a similar composer, and so when Bond fans talk about Arnold "getting Bond" or being "Barry-esque," it's really about this visceral means of composition.

    Newman is a cerebral composer. His music hits at the brain. His music gives you something to think about more than to feel. In other words, Newman's music mostly makes you to SEE things; Arnold's music mostly makes me FEEL things. Both work in their own ways. Some other examples: the Trent Reznor/Atticus Ross scores are cerebral; Alexandre Desplat is visceral. Howard Shore is cerebral; John Williams is visceral. Hans Zimmer...well, he is in between most of the time and why his stuff is really divisive.

    A preference for one or the other (Arnold vs Newman) really comes down to this preference of music to feel or to ponder. One is no better than the other. But the distinction is important.

    What kind of musician will Romer be? I am thinking, based on his score for Maniac, that it wll be of the cerebral variety.
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    Posts: 8,205
    TripAces wrote: »
    Univex wrote: »
    Roadphill wrote: »
    I think we are all crying out for something Barry-esque.

    Well, true Bond fans are.

    Cmon guys, shoot me for saying "true Bond fans". You know who you are, and you know you want to. Some people just want a different Bond, with no Bondian traits, no womaniser Bond, no Bond sound, no DB5, no ppk, no Bondian lines, nothing. Just a hardcore spy with a scooby gang-crew and a falsetto-singing song, and some socially shocking stuff you can get behind of.

    True Bond fans want the Barry sound, true escapism, a womaniser stylish Bond with his car and signature gun, some blaring horns in the background and him going alone against a changing world and a psychotic fatherly figure. Oh, and some babes with strong thoughts and angles (pun intended) along the way.

    I'm getting shot now ;)

    I do hope Romer does his own thing. But the thing is, he should do his own thing with the "Bond sound". And we know who came up with it. It's the same principle with Fleming's writing of the Bond character. Dan does his stuff with what Fleming created. But it is Fleming's creation. And the sound is Barry's. IMO, of course.

    Still getting shot, probably.

    I stepped aside from this thread for a bit. Then, over the weekend, it occurred to me, while watching the 1977 film The Deep, what all this "Barry-esque" stuff really means and why there is this deep division among Bond fans, regarding Arnold and Newman. Here is my take.

    John Barry is a visceral composer. This means his music really gives you something to feel, more than something to think. It hits at the heart. This why it seems anthemic. David Arnold is a similar composer, and so when Bond fans talk about Arnold "getting Bond" or being "Barry-esque," it's really about this visceral means of composition.

    Newman is a cerebral composer. His music hits at the brain. His music gives you something to think about more than to feel. In other words, Newman's music mostly makes you to SEE things; Arnold's music mostly makes me FEEL things. Both work in their own ways. Some other examples: the Trent Reznor/Atticus Ross scores are cerebral; Alexandre Desplat is visceral. Howard Shore is cerebral; John Williams is visceral. Hans Zimmer...well, he is in between most of the time and why his stuff is really divisive.

    A preference for one or the other (Arnold vs Newman) really comes down to this preference of music to feel or to ponder. One is no better than the other. But the distinction is important.

    What kind of musician will Romer be? I am thinking, based on his score for Maniac, that it wll be of the cerebral variety.

    This is a sound assessment; I 100% agree with you @TripAces

    I think you're also correct about Romer, however I'm hoping - to use your examples as a guide - that he will be the Hans Zimmer of Bond composers. Not in style or orchestration, but in terms of the line he will tread between cerebral and emotive.
  • Posts: 5,767
    Interesting thoughts, @TripAces.
  • DoctorNoDoctorNo USA-Maryland
    Posts: 755
    Well a lot of Newman’s work made me feel... depressed because it’s dour. So it’s not all cerebral. And one can be better than the other, Newman Vs Arnold because it has to suit Bond. Fleming is intelligent and insightful in his work but it’s not the driver, he’s always breezy, never pondering, slow, depressing, etc. That’s not to say all Newman’s work is depressing or ill suited to Bond. A lot of his work does move and at times is brassy Barryesque, opening SF as example.
  • Posts: 6,709
    Yes, very good post and thoughts, @TripAces.
  • TripAcesTripAces Universal Exports
    Posts: 4,582
    DoctorNo wrote: »
    Well a lot of Newman’s work made me feel... depressed because it’s dour. So it’s not all cerebral. And one can be better than the other, Newman Vs Arnold because it has to suit Bond. Fleming is intelligent and insightful in his work but it’s not the driver, he’s always breezy, never pondering, slow, depressing, etc. That’s not to say all Newman’s work is depressing or ill suited to Bond. A lot of his work does move and at times is brassy Barryesque, opening SF as example.

    I am not saying it is all cerebral. BUT...it's possible that Newman's music making you feel that way is actually through the brain--what you are thinking about.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,179
    Newman's music in the PTS of SF really gave me a sense of the walls closing in on Bond in a way that made the sequence more riveting, especially once Moneypenny has Bond and Patrice in her sights, and it's incredibly effective when the music immediately cuts off the moment Moneypenny pulls the trigger.
  • Posts: 4
    Newman could have done better or taken the legacy approach more seriously. I am no enemy of taking musical risks, but in his work for Bond, I did not "sense" much commitment to the projects. It was Newman and his templates adjusted for the purposes of 007. Nothing extremely memorable anyway.
  • WalecsWalecs On Her Majesty's Secret Service
    Posts: 3,157
    Agreed. The fact that he refused to weave the song in the score TWICE is rather telling.
  • GertGettlerGertGettler Laptop Barcelona
    Posts: 431
    Newman's music in the PTS of SF really gave me a sense of the walls closing in on Bond in a way that made the sequence more riveting, especially once Moneypenny has Bond and Patrice in her sights, and it's incredibly effective when the music immediately cuts off the moment Moneypenny pulls the trigger.

    I fully agree. That action music……...I didn't hear it better in CR and QOS. It's gripping, chillingly effective.
  • MinionMinion Don't Hassle the Bond
    Posts: 1,165
    Walecs wrote: »
    Agreed. The fact that he refused to weave the song in the score TWICE is rather telling.
    Isn’t that just hearsay, though? I’ve never seen proof he outright refused to do so, and SF and SP both incorporate the theme (albeit very briefly).
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    edited September 2019 Posts: 8,205
    Minion wrote: »
    Walecs wrote: »
    Agreed. The fact that he refused to weave the song in the score TWICE is rather telling.
    Isn’t that just hearsay, though? I’ve never seen proof he outright refused to do so, and SF and SP both incorporate the theme (albeit very briefly).

    Two of the best tracks in both scores, too.

    Though, admittedly, I'm not quite sure how much of an incorporation of the song that the Skyfall score could have had, considering so much of the track uses bass/brass lines from the James Bond theme itself. The chorus could have been used during scene transitions for sure, but I don't think the song (as good as it is) is flexible enough to be woven into action cues where it would have been distinguishable from any hints of the James Bond theme.

    But I could be way off on that one.
  • Posts: 4,044
    I think the melody line of the verse - “this is the end” - could have been used too. But the Bond theme runs underneath that so it would sound a bit sparse on its own.
  • Posts: 5,767
    Newman's music in the PTS of SF really gave me a sense of the walls closing in on Bond in a way that made the sequence more riveting, especially once Moneypenny has Bond and Patrice in her sights, and it's incredibly effective when the music immediately cuts off the moment Moneypenny pulls the trigger.
    And then Newman goes in the opposite direction and rips the whole section of Bond going after Patrice in Macao into tiny little pieces, instead of gelling the different scenes into one big sequence. And when Bond fights the goons in the Macao casino, the music couldn´t have been more unmusical if Hans Zimmer himself had produced it.
    Newman undoubtedly has some really good tracks on SF as well as SP, but he is incredibly uneven.
    It would be wonderful if Romer would produce something that is not just a few good tracks, but a good soundtrack of the whole film.

  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,179
    boldfinger wrote: »
    Newman's music in the PTS of SF really gave me a sense of the walls closing in on Bond in a way that made the sequence more riveting, especially once Moneypenny has Bond and Patrice in her sights, and it's incredibly effective when the music immediately cuts off the moment Moneypenny pulls the trigger.
    And then Newman goes in the opposite direction and rips the whole section of Bond going after Patrice in Macao into tiny little pieces, instead of gelling the different scenes into one big sequence. And when Bond fights the goons in the Macao casino, the music couldn´t have been more unmusical if Hans Zimmer himself had produced it.
    Newman undoubtedly has some really good tracks on SF as well as SP, but he is incredibly uneven.
    It would be wonderful if Romer would produce something that is not just a few good tracks, but a good soundtrack of the whole film.

    You mean where Bond follows Patrice in Shanghai? He’s is never in Macao. And I’ll upfront in that I think “Shanghai Drive” is a brilliant piece. This is the kind of style I wish Arnold had indulged more in during his run (“Hamburg Break In” is a favorite of mine). Composers should never feel shy of using rhythmic electronics in their scores for a Bond film.
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    Posts: 8,205
    vzok wrote: »
    I think the melody line of the verse - “this is the end” - could have been used too. But the Bond theme runs underneath that so it would sound a bit sparse on its own.

    This is true. So I'm willing to cut Newman slack on SF, the same way I cut Arnold slack on DAD. Sometimes, the songs just don't work.

    However, this lends itself to a point that I think @RC7 has made a few times - it's incredibly important that the composer work with whoever is doing the song.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,179
    I think we have to accept the reality that EON has not really valued the concept of having the composer and singer collaborate since LTK broke away from that tradition. At this point I no longer expect such a collaboration anymore. Even when David Arnold tried to collaborate with the chosen singer, he only ended up doing three songs out of five scores he worked on, two of them which ended up as the actual title song. It makes me wonder if the fallout between A-ha and Barry influenced this change in direction, that they now allow the singers to pick how they want to produce the song: either with their own producers (as we saw with Adele and Sam Smith) or with the composers (Garbage and Chris Cornell)

    I don’t like it, but until there’s a change in management among EON I’m no longer expecting to see such a collaboration actually be pushed for. They seem only content to let the music artists do their own thing.
  • RC7RC7
    Posts: 10,512
    I think we have to accept the reality that EON has not really valued the concept of having the composer and singer collaborate since LTK broke away from that tradition. At this point I no longer expect such a collaboration anymore. Even when David Arnold tried to collaborate with the chosen singer, he only ended up doing three songs out of five scores he worked on, two of them which ended up as the actual title song. It makes me wonder if the fallout between A-ha and Barry influenced this change in direction, that they now allow the singers to pick how they want to produce the song: either with their own producers (as we saw with Adele and Sam Smith) or with the composers (Garbage and Chris Cornell)

    I don’t like it, but until there’s a change in management among EON I’m no longer expecting to see such a collaboration actually be pushed for. They seem only content to let the music artists do their own thing.

    What changed is that it shifted towards being a marketing opportunity first and tradition second. If Romer puts forward the idea of collaboration, he’ll shoot up in my estimation. The tricky thing is that the bigger the star the more creative control they want. On the one hand I wish EON would put their foot down, but I also respect that they want/need to use these channels to get in new audience members.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    edited September 2019 Posts: 8,179
    To focus more on Romer, one of his scores has just been released.


    danromer The score for Brimstone & Glory, me and Benh’s first orchestral score since Beasts of the Southern Wild, is out today! It’s all strings, horns, pianos, marimbas and dance beats. On all platforms, link in bio. Go listen!! @giantsfan2929 All percussion by @adamchristgau
  • Posts: 6,709
    Horns! Strings! Yei!!

    Guy will surprise us, I’m sure.
  • RyanRyan Canada
    Posts: 692
    Whatever approach Romer takes with the score, I do hope he arranges his own version of the Bond theme. Don't get me wrong, I love Arnold's arrangement but it's been used to death now. One of my favorite things about getting a new composer is hearing a new take on the Bond theme. I was always somewhat disappointed that Newman just opted to use Arnold's version instead of putting his own stamp on it.
  • jake24jake24 Sitting at your desk, kissing your lover, eating supper with your familyModerator
    edited September 2019 Posts: 10,591
    To focus more on Romer, one of his scores has just been released.


    danromer The score for Brimstone & Glory, me and Benh’s first orchestral score since Beasts of the Southern Wild, is out today! It’s all strings, horns, pianos, marimbas and dance beats. On all platforms, link in bio. Go listen!! @giantsfan2929 All percussion by @adamchristgau
    I'm less worried about Romer now. That's a good orchestral piece.
  • MakeshiftPythonMakeshiftPython “Baja?!”
    Posts: 8,179
    Ryan wrote: »
    Whatever approach Romer takes with the score, I do hope he arranges his own version of the Bond theme. Don't get me wrong, I love Arnold's arrangement but it's been used to death now. One of my favorite things about getting a new composer is hearing a new take on the Bond theme. I was always somewhat disappointed that Newman just opted to use Arnold's version instead of putting his own stamp on it.

    Though I like Newman's scores, I agree with this. I was ready for a new take on the theme much like what we got from Martin, Hamlisch, Conti, Kamen, and Serra. I don't know if the decision to use Arnold's arrangement was either EON's or Newman's, but it was underwhelming when first finding out about it with SF.

    Though I will say I actually like Newman's handling of the arrangement better than Arnold's, specifically the different guitar sound.
  • WalecsWalecs On Her Majesty's Secret Service
    Posts: 3,157
    Minion wrote: »
    Walecs wrote: »
    Agreed. The fact that he refused to weave the song in the score TWICE is rather telling.
    Isn’t that just hearsay, though? I’ve never seen proof he outright refused to do so, and SF and SP both incorporate the theme (albeit very briefly).

    Two of the best tracks in both scores, too.

    Though, admittedly, I'm not quite sure how much of an incorporation of the song that the Skyfall score could have had, considering so much of the track uses bass/brass lines from the James Bond theme itself. The chorus could have been used during scene transitions for sure, but I don't think the song (as good as it is) is flexible enough to be woven into action cues where it would have been distinguishable from any hints of the James Bond theme.

    But I could be way off on that one.

    From 0:43 to 1:06, as @vzok said. But you're right, it doesn't sound like an easy song to weave in the score because of the abundance of the Bond theme.

  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    Posts: 8,205
    Univex wrote: »
    Horns! Strings! Yei!!

    Guy will surprise us, I’m sure.

    Agreed. This sounds quite decent. I am hopeful.
  • Posts: 4
    boldfinger wrote: »
    Newman's music in the PTS of SF really gave me a sense of the walls closing in on Bond in a way that made the sequence more riveting, especially once Moneypenny has Bond and Patrice in her sights, and it's incredibly effective when the music immediately cuts off the moment Moneypenny pulls the trigger.
    And then Newman goes in the opposite direction and rips the whole section of Bond going after Patrice in Macao into tiny little pieces, instead of gelling the different scenes into one big sequence. And when Bond fights the goons in the Macao casino, the music couldn´t have been more unmusical if Hans Zimmer himself had produced it.
    Newman undoubtedly has some really good tracks on SF as well as SP, but he is incredibly uneven.
    It would be wonderful if Romer would produce something that is not just a few good tracks, but a good soundtrack of the whole film.

    True.

    Of course, one can miss Barry's lyricism. I do. One can say that it is no longer a modern approach. Well, if it is true then it does not work. For me, anyway.
  • Posts: 4
    First thing that comes to mind, when listening to Romer, is folk. Not just because of the use of accordion, or any other traditional instruments. It is a general feeling. I only hope he can go bigger, meaning, he will be able to use a whole potential of the orchestra. I wish him well. However, he is not my type of a composer.
  • edited September 2019 Posts: 5,767
    .
    boldfinger wrote: »
    Newman's music in the PTS of SF really gave me a sense of the walls closing in on Bond in a way that made the sequence more riveting, especially once Moneypenny has Bond and Patrice in her sights, and it's incredibly effective when the music immediately cuts off the moment Moneypenny pulls the trigger.
    And then Newman goes in the opposite direction and rips the whole section of Bond going after Patrice in Macao into tiny little pieces, instead of gelling the different scenes into one big sequence. And when Bond fights the goons in the Macao casino, the music couldn´t have been more unmusical if Hans Zimmer himself had produced it.
    Newman undoubtedly has some really good tracks on SF as well as SP, but he is incredibly uneven.
    It would be wonderful if Romer would produce something that is not just a few good tracks, but a good soundtrack of the whole film.

    You mean where Bond follows Patrice in Shanghai? He’s is never in Macao. And I’ll upfront in that I think “Shanghai Drive” is a brilliant piece. This is the kind of style I wish Arnold had indulged more in during his run (“Hamburg Break In” is a favorite of mine). Composers should never feel shy of using rhythmic electronics in their scores for a Bond film.
    Yes, I mean Shanghai. And I never said that the individual tracks are not good. The individual tracks are very good. But they don´t gel with each other at all. They bring confusion to the whole sequence. The way the different pieces of music (which are mostly very good as standalone tracks) are put one after the other is exhausting and does not compliment the building of tension from the moment Bond watches Patrice at the airport until Bond fights Patrice up in the highrise building. A film score has the wonderful power to add to a story through development of one single piece of music. For example, the track Miami Airport from CR, as bland as it might be, kind of does this.



    To focus more on Romer, one of his scores has just been released.


    danromer The score for Brimstone & Glory, me and Benh’s first orchestral score since Beasts of the Southern Wild, is out today! It’s all strings, horns, pianos, marimbas and dance beats. On all platforms, link in bio. Go listen!! @giantsfan2929 All percussion by @adamchristgau
    Hm. Not sure what to make of this. Today´s composers are pretty much all trained to emulate all kinds of styles, I´m not surprised in the least that this features orchestra. But it doesn´t do very much with me.
    Anyhow, I have kind of a positive memory of his BonN soundtrack. If he doesn´t try too much to be mainstream on NTTD, I´m sure it will turn out well.

  • RoadphillRoadphill United Kingdom
    Posts: 984
    I would compare Bond with a Barry-esque sound, to Star Wars with a John Williams one. Would Star Wars even sound remotely the same, with a generic, ambient or experimental soundtrack?

    The answer is, of course, no. And why should Bond be any different to Star Wars.
    The series has a musical history and legacy that will always be associated with it, and any composer coming in, needs to reflect and respect that. I'm all for moving with the times, but there simply has to be some measure of distinctive, Bond-ish sound to it.
  • LeonardPineLeonardPine The Bar on the Beach
    Posts: 3,996
    Roadphill wrote: »
    I would compare Bond with a Barry-esque sound, to Star Wars with a John Williams one. Would Star Wars even sound remotely the same, with a generic, ambient or experimental soundtrack?

    The answer is, of course, no. And why should Bond be any different to Star Wars.
    The series has a musical history and legacy that will always be associated with it, and any composer coming in, needs to reflect and respect that. I'm all for moving with the times, but there simply has to be some measure of distinctive, Bond-ish sound to it.

    Damn straight.
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