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In the 70s the fans who liked lalo schifrin also seemed to collect Roy Budd.
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It's a tough one, because I'd have predicted that anyone who likes Andre Previn and Jerry Goldsmith would also like Alex North ... but apparently it is not so.
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If you like franz waxman....you should also like vangelis!
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If you like Ennio Morricone you should also like Leo Nichols and Dan Savio.
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Posted: |
Jan 22, 2017 - 2:09 PM
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By: |
Graham Watt
(Member)
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I vaguely recall that I did a thread in which I bunched a lot of composers together who seemed to me to share a common denominator. I can't remember what I said now, but I'm sure I mentioned the following composers. Hugo Friedhofer, David Raksin and George Duning. Now, I know that there's a vast range of music encompassed in the entire output of those three, but I'd be quite surprised if anyone really adored (for example) half a dozen scores by Friedhofer and yet couldn't stand any by Raksin or Duning. But this is where you can prove me wrong! Without getting too convoluted, I find Friedhofer often touched on an almost jazz vocabulary, even in his "straight" symphonic scores. That would overlap with quite a lot of Raksin's work, and that in turn with Duning's (who is generally considered a bit more lightweight, but I still hear a lot in common with the other two). So that's that then. Now playing - FSM's amazing-sounding release of Duning's TOYS IN THE ATTIC, a truly wondrous score and one of my all-time favourites by anybody on this planet or any other. Hints of Raksin and touches of Friedhofer, and - oh, I think that's a nod to Alex North's brilliant THE SOUND AND THE FURY in Track 8. And yet it's all umistakeable great George Duning. I love this score.
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