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Posted: |
Oct 16, 2014 - 5:18 PM
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By: |
OnyaBirri
(Member)
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With all respect to the OP, shouldn't most music, especially instrumental music, ideally present a "journey" of sorts? You start out in one location, go through various shifts, and end up at "home," or someplace else? I ask because I think that most OSTs, as well as most jazz albums, electronica albums, and most "classical" works/albums, can be interpreted or experienced as journeys. Just curious...
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"... Philippe Sarde's 'TESS'. I cannot elaborate further here in words, but I include two samples from the score: The first with imagery courtesy of Geoffrey Unsworth" On an interesting note, Unsworth died just three weeks into the filming of TESS and the cinematographer Ghislain Cloquet took over for him. Both shared the Oscar for their work on TESS which I consider to be one of the most beautifully photographed movies that I have ever seen. I saw it when it was released in a theatre with great projection and sound and it deserves to be seen in such a setting. TESS deserves a full restoration and a full score release. Don Norman, I also viewed this film upon it's initial release (I think) at The Metro Theater in San Francisco. Whichever theater I did see it at, it was a huge screen. I purchased a Blu ray player several months ago for the first time. One of the titles of films I got in my initial shipment from Amazon on Blue was 'TESS'. Seek it out because you have never seen the film as it's presented in it Criterion Blu ray release - it will take your breath away! Criterion even made the sound so impressive too - the title ranks among the 2 or 3 best Blu rays I own up with 'Lawrence of Arabia', 'It's a Mad, Mad World', and 'The Innocents'. And, yes, a complete score would be nice.
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"... Philippe Sarde's 'TESS'. I cannot elaborate further here in words, but I include two samples from the score: The first with imagery courtesy of Geoffrey Unsworth" On an interesting note, Unsworth died just three weeks into the filming of TESS and the cinematographer Ghislain Cloquet took over for him. Both shared the Oscar for their work on TESS which I consider to be one of the most beautifully photographed movies that I have ever seen. I saw it when it was released in a theatre with great projection and sound and it deserves to be seen in such a setting. TESS deserves a full restoration and a full score release. double post
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