Showing posts with label Star Wars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Star Wars. Show all posts

Celebrating February Birthdays: John Williams

John Williams
John Williams (Photo credit: NAPARAZZI)
If you are on Face Book and have spent some time online, then you know about wishing friends "Happy Birthday!" You may not be aware of some artists whose birthdays are this month. Here's just a few great musicians who have contributed much to the music world. All of them are no longer with us with the exception of John Williams.

February Birthdays


1 - Victor Hugo (Operetta composer)

2 - Jascha Heifetz (Russian/American violinist)

2 - Fritz Kreisler (Austrian violinist)

3 - Felix Mendelssohn (German composer)

7 -  Eubie Blake (American jazz pianist, and song writer)

8 - John Williams (American movie score composer, and conductor of the Boston Pops between 1980-1995)

11 - Rudolf Firkusny (Czech pianist)

18 - Andre Segovia (Spanish guitarist)

20 - Carl Czerny (American composer and pianist)

23 - George Frideric Handel (German/English composer)

24 - Rudolph Ganz (Swiss/American pianist)

25 - Enrico Caruso (Italian tenor)

26 - Lazar Berman (Russian Pianist)

29 - Gioacchino Rossini (Italian composer)



John Williams

John Williams at 82. American composer and conductor John Williams has scored more than 75 films, including Jaws, the Star Wars trilogy, E.T. and Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. It seemed appropriate to me in honoring Mr. Williams, especially at this time with the Winter Olympics. Listen to his Olympic Fanfare with free download.

How To Play Star Wars Theme Song

Download Free Sheet Music and Scores

Easy and Beginner Free John Williams Music

R.H. Notes to Olympic Fanfare Download

Want to play instant shark music (Jaws)?? Play low B to low C over and over.

The Spielberg/Williams Collaboration: John Williams Conducts His Classic Scores For the Films of Steven Spielberg

I'm really enjoying the Winter Olympics... How about you?

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Warmly,


"The beautiful thing about learning is that no one can take it away from you." B.B.King
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Monday Mail: Talk About Film Music

Moulin Rouge
Moulin Rouge (Photo credit: Pep_Parés)


Q: Watching late-night TV movies has made me aware of the background music written for each film. Can you tell me something about film music?

A: My mother and grandmother told me that in the old silent-film days the screen action was accompanied by a "live" pianist who improvised suitable sounds to match the action, or by a small orchestra that played popular tunes and operatic music.

Few people realize that the first original film music dates back to 1908, when composer Camille Saint-Saens (who wrote, "The Carnival of Animals") penned a film score for "The Assassination of the Duc de Guise."

By the 1920s, film companies began to provide pit orchestras with short mix-match descriptive pieces suitable for the screen action, with such helpful titles as "Help, Help" and "Love's Response," and by the late 20s some music was composed just for certain silent films. Well-known composers such as Erik Satie, Richard Strauss, and Arthur Honneger got into the act as well.

With the arrival of the "talkie," about 1929, an original soundtrack became possible for a whole generation of films, some rather routine, but many with genuine musical interest, written by "serious" composers willing to venture into the new (and well paid!) medium.

The list is long and wonderful but here are a few I've highlighted:

Sergei Prokofiev, "Alexander Nevsky" (1938)

Aaron Copland, "Our Town" (1940)

William Walton, "Hamlet" (1948)

George Auric, "Moulin Rouge" (1953)

Leonard Bernstein, "On the Waterfront" (1954)

By the 1950s and 60s, film composing became a distinct profession in itself, with a whole fleet of specialists providing music for all of the Hollywood and New York studios: Dmitri Tiomkin, Elmer Berstein, Miklos Rosza, and Bernard Herrmann (the chief composer for the Hitchcock films), naming a few here.

Today film music has expanded into new dimensions, combining electronic sounds with instrumental and vocal music (such as in the scores for "2001: A Space Odyssey" and the "Star Wars" series) becoming very much an art form in its own right. This fascinating subject is worth investigating at your local library because film making has indeed gone to a whole new level with 3D and all.



All the best,






"The beautiful thing about learning is that no one can take it away from you." B.B.King
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