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Fifloe, is the rest of the score to that video game as good as that cue?
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There is some in Occhio Alla Penna and Il Ladrone played by Marianne Eckstein
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Also Il Prato uses the recorder quite extensively.
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Like Thor, I was taught to play recorder in primary school. But I liked it. The last three classes learned it and therefore music. The headmaster (a dead ringer for actor Walter Pidgeon), was a massive music fan and got our little on national TV. BBC 1, the post 6pm news magazine show 'Nationwide'. I blinked and missed myself. Sadly I don't remember us playing any film music. Blowing in the Wind and Kum By Yar were favourites, as well as playing the hymns for the rest of the classes to sing to very morning...
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So it took a long time until I got around on the instrument, because in and of itself - and when played and used properly - it can be quite beautiful. It was John Williams' JANE EYRE that did it, which surprisingly hasn't been mentioned so far. Jane Eyre was literally the main thing that came to mind for me, and the one reason I clicked onto this thread to participate, but good to see it's already been covered by my fellow Williams fan(s). Prisoner of Azkaban is very much an offshoot of that (an excellent one). And Room 222 was a good reminder! Yavar
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Not a film, but one of the re-occurring themes in Jerrold Immel's scoring from the western series "Guns of Paradise", was a beautiful little theme handed off to various instruments, but perhaps shining best when played on the recorder. There's only short tastes of that in the second suite I have up (though it's used a little in other pieces) currently, but one of the upcoming additional suites will have quite a bit of it playing said theme.
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