It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
^ Back to Top
The MI6 Community is unofficial and in no way associated or linked with EON Productions, MGM, Sony Pictures, Activision or Ian Fleming Publications. Any views expressed on this website are of the individual members and do not necessarily reflect those of the Community owners. Any video or images displayed in topics on MI6 Community are embedded by users from third party sites and as such MI6 Community and its owners take no responsibility for this material.
James Bond News • James Bond Articles • James Bond Magazine
Comments
Now on to our number 16:
THE SPY WHO LOVED ME
Music composed by
MARVIN HAMLISCH
Spy received five bottom 5's, out of which one 25th place was the lowest.
One 7th, one 8th and three 10th places were noted, giving it five top 10's. Another two 12th places, three 13th places and two 15th places were giving to Hamlisch's only 007 score.
The original music of TSWLM scored 102 points, edging out LTK with one point.
This was a very popular score among critics. It was nominated for an Oscar, a Golden Globe, a BAFTA and a Grammy. All the big ones, indeed. It, however, didn't win any of those.
Surely QOS is next.
Score is #10 here
Thanks for sharing this!!
And most of that isn’t on the album. Hopefully next year we might get an expanded release.
Something I realized just now is that the main Ride to Atlantis theme sounds like a reworked version of part of the song Solace, which Hamlisch did for The Sting, where the notes go up and down (I know, all songs do that! but I guess I would say it goes up and down in semitones (half notes). That was written by Scott Joplin, so maybe Hamlisch did a little nicking there. If you want to hear that the part starts at about 48 seconds in.
The thought had occurred to me that perhaps some of Barry's scores were snubbed outright because the Academy wouldn't deign to award anything to the films they were attached to (Moonraker? A View to a Kill?). But a case like Goldfinger is a pretty big oversight. On Her Majesty's Secret Service too, but that's looking at it from a 21st century perspective. I know the film was pretty unfairly overlooked at the time, likely due to Connery's absence.
Here are the Bee Gees up against Marvin.
THE MAN WITH THE GOLDEN GUN
Music composed by
JOHN BARRY
So here we are, looking at the least popular of the Barry scores. However, 'least popular' is a bit of an exaggerated term, since it only received three bottom 5's, with 24th being the lowest rating.
Now, this score has quite a few fans as well. It reached the 5th place on one occasion. It also received one 6th place, one 7th place, three 8th places and one 9th place. Five more top 15's were noted.
In total TMWTGG's original music received 114 points.
I think we're in a very interesting place now whereby most of the scores are generally adored by a majority (and universally in Barry's case). This is going to be fun.
Indeed "Journey" is a wonderful piece of music. So tense and, erm, climatic.
I did a transcript of this track for the sheer pleasure of it.
I also enjoy all the variations of the title song, romantic or action-oriented. I especially like the version heard in the first part of Let's Go Get 'Em, with the woodwind-heavy melody and the descending runs at the end of each phrase. Kick-ass version of the Bond theme there, too. I like how it doesn't rhythmically sync to perfection with every single moment of the onscreen action-- it's perfectly in sync with the dramatic cut from "you goofed boy" to the car flying past the camera, but it feels more energetic than the action of the car stopping, turning and starting to move in the opposite direction. There's a looseness and freshness to that, I've always felt.
I also find both funhouse track to be among Barry's best. The scenes they accompany are quite varied and full of surprises, so the music has to follow suit, and it does so very well, whether in the creepier, more suspenseful moments, or the comparatively lighter ones, such as the reveal of the cowboy and the mobsters. The deranged version of the Bond theme at the end of the second funhouse track, with that echoey piano in the background, is something else.
These are four of my favorite unreleased cues. Gkgyver did wonderful work recreating the whole score.
In this next one, I love how the music begins as merely mysterious, but halfway through, a layer of sensuality is added on top, to the point the mood it conveys is a bit eerie and unnerving. That's what a good film composer does: taking the emotional beats of a scene and magnifying them --even potentially revealing hidden aspects of them-- through imagination, sensitivity and skill.
Edit: I forgot to say I like the reverb-heavy sound of the album.