Film Score Monthly
FSM HOME MESSAGE BOARD FSM CDs FSM ONLINE RESOURCES FUN STUFF ABOUT US  SEARCH FSM   
Search Terms: 
Search Within:   search tips 
You must log in or register to post.
  Go to page:    
 
 Posted:   Jul 9, 2013 - 3:22 AM   
 By:   Graham S. Watt   (Member)

80cionado - I'm not used to the Tarantula site either, so I had a bit of trouble finding it. Their "main" composers are listed down the left hand side. To find BORDERLINE, I had to click on the letter "M", then go through 11 pages or so of releases by other composers whose surname begins with M. I found their stock of Mellé titles on about Page 5, I think.

It's a very cumbersome process, so I imagine I'm also somehow missing a really obvious Search function. James' offer sounds so much simpler.

 
 
 Posted:   Jul 9, 2013 - 3:46 AM   
 By:   Rollin Hand   (Member)



James Phillips



What's the next Mellé title on the pipe, professor?

 
 
 Posted:   Jul 9, 2013 - 3:51 AM   
 By:   Ag^Janus   (Member)



James Phillips



What's the next Mellé title on the pipe, professor?


What would you like?

 
 
 Posted:   Jul 9, 2013 - 6:54 PM   
 By:   jpteacher568   (Member)



James Phillips



What's the next Mellé title on the pipe, professor?



I wouldn't want to lose my head over it.

 
 
 Posted:   Mar 14, 2020 - 12:11 PM   
 By:   Hurdy Gurdy   (Member)

Listened to this today.
Now this isn't a diss,* so don't read it as such, but to me, this sounded more like a 70s TV score by someone like Jerry Fielding or Lalo Schifrin or David Shire (maybe even Jerry Goldsmith and Bruce Broughton at times too) than a 80s feature action score.
I can't say I'm overly familiar with the music of Gil Melleeeeeee, so those other composers' styles popped into mind quite often, cos their music is more familiar to me.
There's a jazz-like through line to all of their respective scoring techniques, I guess.
But as someone said above, it's always interesting to listen to and full of inventive sounds and phrasings.

*I would say most TV scores from the 70s offer more invention and technique than most anything heard this century in Feature AND TV scoring.

 
You must log in or register to post.
  Go to page:    
© 2024 Film Score Monthly. All Rights Reserved.
Website maintained and powered by Veraprise and Matrimont.