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To Quite Armageddon " He the Man" ^:)^ He'll never be replaced and will always be greatly missed.
I realized lately why that is. Someone on this forum with more musical knowledge than me mentioned 'melody'. I looked it up and now I get it. Wikipedia definition follows:
"...is a linear succession of musical tones that the listener perceives as a single entity. In its most literal sense, a melody is a combination of pitch and rhythm, while more figuratively, the term can include successions of other musical elements such as tonal color. It may be considered the foreground to the background accompaniment. A line or part need not be a foreground melody.........Melodies often consist of one or more musical phrases or motifs, and are usually repeated throughout a composition in various forms"
Relistening to his compositions, even the smallest ones in the most inconsequential scenes, I now notice that there is melody. There is some discernable 'sense, structure or coherence' to it in my ears that is essentially hummable. It does not come across as 'random jumbled noise' which a lot of other composer's work does. He was able to retain finessed compositional clarity even in the most action oriented scenes without resorting to excess. Most other composer's action oriented work just descends into 'loud unstructured noise' for me. Arnold in particular was guilty of this most of the time for me, but not always.... Barry's action scores were almost delicate to my ears, like a fine scalpel to the eardrum rather than a mallet. There is a definite subtlety to it.
I believe his genius was the sheer number of different melodies he created. Even the much touted Hans Zimmer only has a few similar sounding melodies that he tends to reuse in many of his movies (Inception is very similar to Da Vinci Code which is similar to Batman).
Barry just came up with intricate, new, hummable melodies everywhere.
Additionally, I loved how he brought elements, or themes of the movie to his compositions. Goldfinger's score is similar to 'gold bars' being clanged together in some action parts. Thunderball's score does sound like 'streaming water' in some bits, which matches the many subterranean scenes. Diamonds are Forever sounds sharp, like a 'sparkly, shiny diamond.' The Cotton Club sounds 'jazzy/breezy'. Zulu sounds 'African'. Moonraker sounds 'grand, spacious & open', like space itself..
As I've said before. Simply a genius. The only composer who I'd mention in the same breadth (and he's still not a patch on Barry to me) is Jerry Goldsmith or maybe Howard Shore for his original Lord of the Rings trilogy.
Just kidding :p
It's quite depressing to think that we will quite possibly never have another Bond score that really measures up to Barry.
Personally I still think OHMSS and MR are his best 2 scores.
I don't rate his DAF score as highly as others.
I love the theme song and think it has some brilliant tracks.
Here are my ratings- you'll find them very uneven I think:
FRWL 9.7
GF 10
TB 9.9
YOLT 10
OHMSS 10
DAF 9.9
TMWTGG 9.3
MR 10
OP 10
AVTAK 9.7
TLD 10
It was quite brassy, if that's the correct word, and some of its motifs were used again in OP, almost as if Barry felt his ideas needed to be completed.
I don't like saying that about the Master but I suppose everyone does weaker stuff once and a while.
^This just about sums it up!! Listen to a few notes and you'll instantly identify the movie. They are very hummable indeed and give each film its own identity. The score alone elevates a few movies rankings for me (eg AVTAK). I don't think Barry was given enough credit for these incredible masterpieces
I could listen to this for ages on repeat.
There's something very nostalgic about this particular track.
Truly wonderful. Like George Martin as the fifth Beatle, Barry was the invisible, almost indispensable member of the team. Whenever he was involved the films gain an extra, incredibly rich dimension. He elevates what might sometimes have been rather ordinary to the extraordinary.
The AVTAK theme is beautiful and very evocative.
Top Gear fans will hear loads of snippets of his and other Bond films on many
of their filming reports. :)
That explains why Top Gear feels so classy ;)
When they had an airship coming out of the big shed they played the
" Space Capsule " music from YOLT.
But then again I defend the GE soundtrack (or at least parts of it) so what do I know ;)
Of music.