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Adria
July 5th, 2007, 07:24 PM
from the robert cooper interview


Will Joel [Goldsmith, composer] be getting a budget for an orchestra?

RCC: We've included a certain amount of money for some orchestral score, yeah. Joel has a way of making everything sound orchestral, but yeah. It's a huge deal for us to make sure. Everywhere we can, with the money we've been given, we're trying to make these as spectacular as we can.

At the end of the day, they're still TV movies. These are not $80 million features and we can't even begin to compete with those. But compared to the series, compared to a double episode like "Lost City," we're hoping they look spectacular.

yay we're getting good music :cool:


i'm hoping for a big score for both movies

Beckmen
July 5th, 2007, 08:06 PM
Other than innappropriate re-uses of themes (Using the Genii theme for a general suspense cue, etc) I have always been more than happy with the Stargate music Joel delivers. I think it's feature-film quality. He is definitly his father's son. :)

Ganthet Jr.
July 6th, 2007, 12:05 AM
I'm an F hornist, and if I didn't adore the Goldsmiths, it would be criminal.

Go pick up Jerry's score to The Final Conflict. It is amazing!!

Daniel Jackson
July 11th, 2007, 02:44 PM
What's an F hornist? :S

PG15
July 11th, 2007, 02:48 PM
A French Horn (http://img.alibaba.com/photo/50215546/French_Horn.jpg) player, perhaps?

I don't know; just guessing.

Ganthet Jr.
July 11th, 2007, 02:50 PM
What's an F hornist? :S

F hornists play the F horn. Or "horn in F". People know it as a "French horn", but that title is incorrect. It is by no means an aversion to the word French... there was an annoying period of here in the states where, for stupid reasons, people replaced the word "French" with "freedom" LOL!

French horn just isn't the name of the instrument. There are a few theories of how it became called such. I bet the wikipedia article has something on it.

jenks
July 11th, 2007, 04:04 PM
It was to do with anti French sentiment, it happened to the Germans during the war too. Frankfurters were renamed hot dogs, weird.

Ganthet Jr.
July 11th, 2007, 04:11 PM
It was to do with anti French sentiment, it happened to the Germans during the war too. Frankfurters were renamed hot dogs, weird.

Yeah, it was weird here in the states too. I think most of the rest of the world thought we were all into it, but that was a minority who was just louder the everyone else.



It started out as the Horn in F, or just "horn". There are a few stories of how it became called, in vernacular, the French horn. One rumor is that there was a professional horn ensemble from France that was really really good, and people went "Wow, did you hear those French horns?" When a person played very well, folks went "Wow, you sounded like a French hornist!" Over the years, that just entered instrument lingo. But in reality, it's just the F Horn. Also, since it's in the key of "F", it's easy to think that the F in F Horn stands for "French", when it only refers to the key the instrument is in. Nothing at all, to do with anything anti-French.

jenks
July 11th, 2007, 04:12 PM
I meant the French/freedom thing ;)

Ganthet Jr.
July 11th, 2007, 04:15 PM
I meant the French/freedom thing ;)

Yeah, I gotcha. While you were replying, I was editing my post because I realized that :-D. Silly me!!