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Michelle Glazer's List: Documentary Script

    • I approached each  film as a separate entity. The first one completely out of the blue, but the second one of course connected to the first  one; we referred back to characters and extended them and referred back to themes and extended and developed  those.
    • I suppose it was a natural but unconscious metamorphoses of musical themes that created something that may  seem to have more architectural and conscious interrelatedness than I actually intended to put there.

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    • The way HOWARD constructed this score was to translate TOLKIEN's   cultures of Middle-Earth into a population of musical ideas.
    • Present the themes as cultural elements, and from there,   put them back into the story and show how this thematic material   essentially tells the story of the LORD OF THE RINGS
    • He extended the Wagnerian operatic approach and, in the process, added several new themes and motifs including a new love theme for Han and Leia, a motif for the droids, a bassoon  motif for Boba Fett, a cosmopolitan march for Lando Calrissian, Yoda's benevolent theme, and, of course, the immortal Imperial march.
    • All of the major themes and motifs from the first film return and are mercifully toned down (no more Luke's theme or Force theme playing continually - see review for  Star Wars )  Although he employs dissonant orchestration at some points, it never overtakes the entire score, and adds new meaning to the uncertain future of the plot. 

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    • Why do composers use leitmotifs? Because they lend unity and coherence and richness to scores. A skilled composer can use his motifs to play off one another, musically, as characters do; and the recurrence of themes and motifs as a score progresses enhances the audience's familiarity with a film and its characters.

    • More than that, a skilled composer who puts thought into the creation of his motifs will create them in such a way that the motifs themselves are interrelated in a proper way. Thus, for example, virtually all of the major themes in the Star Wars films that are associated with "the good guys" begin with wide intervals: the main theme (Luke's theme) opens with a fifth; Leia's theme and the Love theme from TESB open with a major sixth; the "Brother and Sister" theme from Return of the Jedi begins with a perfect fourth; t

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    • Film music composers often use leitmotifs to help build a sense of continuity. A leitmotif is a recurring musical idea (a melody, chord sequence, rhythm or a combination of these) which is associated with a particular idea, character or place.
      • Leitmotifs are manipulated to match the action and mood of a scene.

        They could be altered by:

        • changing the rhythm or pitch
        • changing the instrumentation or accompaniment
        • adding new material
        • developing fragments of the idea
    • Briefly, the idea is that the composer represents the important elements of the story — characters, objects, ideas — as musical themes or motives (leitmotif = "leading motive") in the score, and then uses these themes to expand and comment on the developing action.
    • Movie composers have been doing something like this, of course, ever since the invention of the talkies. But most such themes are treated in a rather straight representational way — see the character, hear his theme — and many a film composer must have wished he had the opportunity to flesh the system out a bit — to develop the themes, and use them not just to signify but to add layers, to elucidate and comment.
    • Anyone who has listened carefully to The Lord of the Rings, whether or not he or she has listened to the soundtrack albums, knows that Howard Shore has created several different themes in the music. These themes appear at different times, played by different instruments and playing under different kinds of action. This kind of scoring is called leitmotif.
    • Leitmotif is "a clearly defined theme or musical idea, representing or symbolizing a person, object, idea etc, which returns in its original or an altered form at appropriate points in a dramatic (mainly operatic) work."

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    • While Shore strived to capture a feeling of antiquity, he also had to maintain close ties to the story and the characters driving the story. To this end he composed numerous themes or refrains that were intrinsically linked to specific characters, objects, and moment within the films.
    • "In actual fact there's probably 40 or 50 of them," he says, referring to the number of distinct themes he wrote for various portions of the filmscore. "There's characters, there's culture and there's objects attached [to the music]. It's based on Wagner's storytelling and he was the first to do this kind of thing. He was the first to say

    •   Shore's approach to scoring The Lord of the Rings somewhat mirrors the approach John Williams took with the Star Wars trilogy, using a large orchestra to perform a score composed in the leitmotif tradition.
    • The sophisticated use of leitmotifs involves the skillful use of the motifs to enhance and extend the emotional fabric of the score, and therefore the film.

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    • the LOTR scores are full of sophisticated instances of musical foreshadowing, such as the Gondor theme being heard during Boromir's speech at the Council of Elrond, one-and-a-half films before we ever even get to Gondor.
    • Because one of the things that Shore's scores do so well is musically illustrate relationships that exist between the various elements of the story (example: the motifs associated with Saruman and with Gandalf the White both start with the exact same notes).
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