Musika and Film Scores - Adventure Land - In the Far East - A Passage to India
Comment: We started the month of September and, as if we were in the sport, it can be said that we started a new season. So, in this new exercise, we will definitely finish this tour of the world that this Colonial era has taken us, to leave for the moment, and let rest this trip of a "Tour through History" to open a new selection of musical folders much more attached to feelings, because we are going to immerse ourselves in the world of the heart, which is the same as saying the great soundtracks of romantic movies. So, make yourselves comfortable and grab a tank of popcorn.
Despite this, that moment has not arrived and, in order to put an end to this colonial era, and leaving behind the bewitching desert, we open a new folder called "In the Far East" that will have two installments: The first, this one that on the day Today we have "A Passage to India" and the second "Lotus Flowers" which, by name, we can get an idea of what we are going to find. So let's start with the first one and, therefore, with this "A Passage to India"
Thus, new installment of BSO's that on this occasion, we will make a little compilation of what has been that "Land of adventures" because, abandoned this "Old Europe" and of course, always, accompanied by the recurring British phlegm, we I propose to go around the world, leaving our continent, and ready to go to the great railway station to, on the train of life, travel with "A Passage to India" through an endless world.
Thus, after the presentations, I can tell you that this playlist could be summarized, telling you that there is the largest number of Oscars for soundtracks per linear meter. Let us therefore let great composers such as Víctor Young and, above all, Maurice Jarre, serve as locomotives for us, finally directed by Alexandre Desplat, and a most adventurous John Williams, to take us along those iron tracks, making us discover hidden landscapes and perhaps even prohibited for those who are vulgarly called as: "those uptight white gentlemen"
To do this, let's start with this selection listing the suites that we are going to find chronologically: Beginning with the first station, which is: the one in 1956, the American, Víctor Young and his Oscar for Best Soundtrack for "Around the World in 80 days" of which I will offer you three themes "The symphony of heaven", "Enjoying the trip" and a "Suite" compendium.
Then in 1960, four years later, we will make a brief paragraph with the Italian composer Nino Rota and his "La dolce vita". To finally reach the large restaurant-dining room car where we will settle in for a long stay, we will be accompanied by the Frenchman Maurice Jarre who will give us three huge BSos, especially the last two, tremendously eclectic and bewitching, which symbolize this enigmatic journey that will take us to India and that runs through the landscapes that the arch-famous Trans-Siberian train allows us to glimpse. In this way, in 1965 and from his "Doctor Zhivago" we will listen to his well-known song "Interior Student Café" to, then and after his "Ryan's daughter" from 1970, lead us to his famous "A Passage to India".
But yes, not before and in the same year 1984, make a stop on this path of adventures and by the hand of the most famous archaeologist in history, Professor Jones, delve into his Oscar nomination together with the New York composer John Williams. for the best soundtrack "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom", and from which we will enjoy four songs: "Beginnings", "You will wish me", "Shankara" and "Road to Pankob"
To finally reach our destination and, in the same year, 1984 and hand in hand, with our leading composer, Maurice Jarre, enjoy the composition that bears the name of our selection today, and travel with our "A Passage to India" to this enigmatic world full of copper-skinned characters, who on the path of the elephants make us delve into the jungle, enjoying their huge "Suite"
And so, we are reaching the end of this very traveling play-list, closing our wagons with another Frenchman and with another Oscar for best soundtrack, this time for Alexandre Desplat in 2014 and his "The Grand Budapest Hotel"
So, with the train, back at the station, fuming and about to leave, known to all our carriages, you are not ready to take it again? Well come on, grab that ticket that will take us to India, because we're leaving now, taking you through this play-list of colored landscapes that, lasting one hour, will make us enjoy a thousand and one dream landscapes. Enjoy them.
But, finally, remind you that, to enjoy the article that we have published in the
Ok.ru post, you simply have to click on the
Vos link that, also under the cover, we have created for you.
Нет комментариев