
Remembering The Barry
#1
Posted 03 February 2011 - 10:15 AM
I have re-discovered some beautiful and rousing gems and heard some cracking pieces for the first time. I have been oddly very impressed by the scores for INDECENT PROPOSAL and THE SCARLET LETTER and reminded of the brilliance of the sound of Swinging London that John Barry was such an integral force of.
I thought it fitting to start a thread where folk can post their favourite Barry pieces, new and old, Bond or not Bond. Not everyone knows the full palette of his musical canvas and I thought a sort of memorial wall of Barry's music is as fitting a tribute as any.
I will start the (thunder)ball rolling....
RIP The Barry.... who else will now make hair shampoo sound so lush....
RIP The Barry .... who else will score characters arriving as well as this....
#2
Posted 03 February 2011 - 10:23 AM
RIP The Barry... who else will give such regal elegance to the epics...
RIP The Barry... who else makes TV themes sound like standards....
#3
Posted 03 February 2011 - 02:49 PM
A rather forgotten mid 60s Barry score. (Hints of Arnold's opening to QUANTUM OF SOLACE here)
And Bryan Forbes's SEANCE ON A WET AFTERNOON. Barry's score starts at the 2:14 mark, though I'd very recommend watching the prelude to it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RhJXNhwJhZ0&playnext=1&list=PLB6E6F3AC11AA3D03
Attached Files
#4
Posted 03 February 2011 - 04:43 PM
This is a clip of him at the Tribute to Elizabeth Taylor:
That said, anything he did was wonderful.
A great loss and it is a pity he was never Knighted, unlike his contemporaries.
Edited by FLEMINGFAN, 03 February 2011 - 05:34 PM.
#5
Posted 03 February 2011 - 05:07 PM
I have always liked 'Explosion' from Barry's Masquerade score. Not the best movie that he added his talents to but nonetheless a tense clever piece of composing that is 100% Barry.
#6
Posted 03 February 2011 - 05:24 PM
I always enjoyed watching him conduct the orchestra and the fluidity in which he did it.
This is a clip of him at the Tribute to Elizabeth Taylor.
Do you have the clip, FLEMINGFAN?
#7
Posted 03 February 2011 - 05:36 PM
Yes, just attached it (I am a bit of a moron regarding that sort of thing....along with everything else)
I always enjoyed watching him conduct the orchestra and the fluidity in which he did it.
This is a clip of him at the Tribute to Elizabeth Taylor.
Do you have the clip, FLEMINGFAN?
#8
Posted 03 February 2011 - 07:03 PM
and many more...
#9
Posted 03 February 2011 - 07:40 PM
#10
Posted 03 February 2011 - 08:06 PM
The whole theme is wonderful, but 0:53 - 1:02 is my favorite part. Such a blissful high can be experienced by listening to Barry's music.
#11
Posted 03 February 2011 - 08:45 PM
#12
Posted 03 February 2011 - 10:39 PM
People tend to focus on Barry's romantic side but his music could be very sensual.
#13
Posted 03 February 2011 - 11:15 PM
#14
Posted 03 February 2011 - 11:20 PM
After the somewhat euphemistic obituary in the Telegraph I'm tempted to post a track from Barry's musical Lolita, My Love. Here's Body Heat instead:
People tend to focus on Barry's romantic side but his music could be very sensual.
Barry could record sex like no other film composer, (in the studio, of course). Though I think that's one of the many rerecordings of the BODY HEAT theme. This the film version, which essentially uses synthesiser instead of flutes for the countermelody. Slightly more dated perhaps, but I think it produces a very different effect. Not only the eroticism of the moment, but the psychopathy beneath. The somewhat tackiness of the synth chimes working well.
There's another cue (called 'Something's Up') that I think captures sex pretty well. It's from THE KNACK, scoring (IIRC) one of its more infamous scenes. Alan Haven works the Hammond Organ, and I think it's King Errisson (from the Original Neil Diamond Band) on the bongos (who can also be heard (and seen playing) on THUNDERBALL, FROM RUSSIA WITH LVOE and a number of other Barry recordings at the time).
I can't presently find it on Youtube, so I've uploaded it to 4shared here:
Something's Up.
Also, here's a great radio interview with Barry from 1999, lasting 2 hours.
http://www.wqxr.org/...-david-garland/
#15
Posted 04 February 2011 - 02:24 AM
#16
Posted 04 February 2011 - 03:39 AM
struggling with embedding here so will come back to this later
Edited by jrcjohnny99, 04 February 2011 - 03:46 AM.
#17
Posted 04 February 2011 - 10:28 AM
#18
Posted 12 February 2011 - 01:30 AM
An obvious choice perhaps, but i'll post Flying over Africa just because it represents the zenith of great cinematic music.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XlK3yE65qS8
Who would score films like that nowadays?
Who would even be allowed to?
Such a loss ...
#19
Posted 18 February 2011 - 05:07 AM
#20
Posted 23 February 2011 - 04:23 PM
Check it out at 5:30 approximately
#21
Posted 27 February 2011 - 12:32 AM
#22
Posted 27 February 2011 - 01:43 AM
#23
Posted 27 February 2011 - 02:22 PM