Friday, October 12, 2012

Soundtrack Composer Nathan Johnson Guests on Morricone Youth [ARCHIVE]

Check out this edition of Morricone Youth ARCHIVED HERE where host Devon E. Levins welcomed film soundtrack composer and The Cinematic Underground frontman Nathan Johnson to the program for an exclusive interview and in-depth listen to his music.



As a composer, producer, art director, and songwriter, Nathan Johnson's innovative film scores and hybrid media performances have consistently blurred the lines between stage, screen, music, and narrative. Best known for his unconventional work in film and music, Nathan favors modified, organic instrumentation combined with unique approaches to recording and performing. Nathan Johnson’s creative partnership with writer/director (and cousin) Rian Johnson started when the two were children and has continued throughout their professional lives. Beginning with the critically acclaimed score for their first feature collaboration, Brick, Nathan and his team used and abused a variety of household implements including dinner settings, filing cabinets, cheese graters, and radiators. Any real instruments that were included in the soundtrack were horribly misused: pianos were bolted and tacked, double basses were beaten with mallets, and tuned wine glasses were re-purposed in place of a string section. After developing this "junkyard orchestra", Nathan went on to produce and compose the scores for Rian Johnson's second film, The Brother’s Bloom, Joseph Gordon-Levitt's Morgan M. Morgansen series, and the forthcoming Melanie Laurent feature Et Soudain, Tout Le Monde Me Manque, among others.

 Rian Johnson's third film, Looper starring Bruce Willis, Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Emily Blunt, is perhaps Nathan's most unique score to date, featuring a host of indecipherable instruments along with intertwining rhythms and textures. In preparation for the project, Nathan began gathering a wide range of field recordings and then he and his team created a sort of playable, hybrid found-sound orchestra using those original recordings. The results were combined with live strings and horns to produce deep textures featuring pitched industrial fans, tuned treadmills, and a wide range of intricate rhythmic elements — all looping and cycling on themselves at various speeds.

Nathan continues to compose and produce while fronting The Cinematic Underground, a sprawling artistic collective known for mixing visual art with performance and found-sounds. He is part of the atmospheric pop band Faux Fix, and has produced a variety of independent artists while acting as a concert developer and live show consultant for a number of bands. When he is not creating music, he works as an art director with The Made Shop, a boutique design firm that specializes in graphic and architectural projects. Learn more by visiting www.nathanj.com.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Morricone Youth Live Scores The Adventures of Prince Achmed @ Nitehawk 9/28 and 9/30

 


Lotte Reiniger • 1926 • 65 Mins. • Germany • English & German Subtitles • Digital

This is a LIVE + SOUND + CINEMA event!
MORRICONE YOUTH play live music & soundscape to the film.

The Adventures of Prince Achmed is boldly innovative in its approach to animation and charmingly in its adaptation of the ancient “Arabian Nights” tales. The rarely-seen animated feature was produced and directed by Lotte Reiniger, one of the very few women animators to achieve international recognition. The film brilliantly invents a variety of remarkable characters, frightening creatures, exotic locations and challenging topographies using silhouettes, providing a unique monochromatic experience which, in its bold simplicity, puts today’s complicated digital animation to shame. The story is rich with wildly imaginative scene. The film also serves up a wonderfully old-fashioned sense of exotica with glorious Arabesque architecture and set designs, and even the characters’ costumes. The film’s artwork is fluid and graceful, spiced with humor. "The Adventures of Prince Achmed" is not only the oldest surviving animated movie, it's a beautifully innovative and enchanting masterpiece.

The last live scoring screenings sold out so buy tickets in advance HERE!


The Lounge Lizards' Evan Lurie Guests on Morricone Youth [ARCHIVE]

On the September 16, 2012 edition of Morricone Youth, Devon E. Levins welcomed film and television soundtrack composer and founding member of The Lounge Lizards Evan Lurie for an exclusive interview and in-depth listen to his music. In addition to his twenty year tenure in The The Lounge Lizards and releasing three solo albums, Evan Lurie has composed music for over 30 films and television programs including Steve Buscemi's Trees Lounge, Interview and Lonesome Jim, Cindy Sherman's Office Killer, Roberto Benigni's Johnny Stecchino and Il Mostro, Stanley Tucci's Joe Gould's Secret, Philip Seymour Hoffman's directorial debut Jack Goes Boating and four seasons of Nickelodeon's The Backyardigans. Notably each of the 77 episodes of The Backyardigans introduced children to a completely different musical genre.



Evan Lurie previously gained renown as the pianist of The Lounge Lizards formed in the 1970's in the Lower East Side recording nine albums and performing internationally through the late 1990's. Lurie composed some of the band's most memorable songs. His second solo album, Pieces of Bandoneon (1987) was commissioned as the soundtrack to Japanese yakuza film Chochin and his third, Selling Water by the Side of the River (1990), included tracks originally composed for Benigni's Il Piccolo Diavolo soundtrack. His subsequent album on John Zorn's Tzadik label, How I Spent My Vacation (1998), consists of pieces Lurie wrote for many smaller budget films such as Trees Lounge and Danny Leiner's Layin Low, and performances by many of his Lounge Lizard cohort from various incarnations.



The ARCHIVE can be heard HERE and the playlist viewed HERE!

A GROOVY SITUATION w/ Morricone Youth, SMOOTA and Cochemea Gastelum Tue 6/5

"A GROOVY SITUATION" 
 with 
8:30 MORRICONE YOUTH 
9:30 SMOOTA 
10:30 COCHEMEA GASTELUM: The Electric Sound of Johnny Arrow 

Tuesday, June 5, 2012 
Doors 8pm
$10

Union Pool 
484 Union Ave 
Brooklyn, NY 11211 
(718) 609-0484 
www.union-pool.com/

www.myspace.com/cochemea 
www.smoota.com 
www.morriconeyouth.com/ 

Thanks to Rocket Rob Patton for the flyerage: www.twoblacksocks.com

MORRICONE YOUTH Live Scores David Lynch's ERASERHEAD Two Nights! Fri 5/25 and Sat 5/26


    •  
      MORRICONE YOUTH 
       
      provides live score to 
      David Lynch's 1979 cult classic 
      "ERASERHEAD"

      TWO NIGHTS the closing weekend of Nitehawk Cinema's
      May-long Late Night David Lynch Series

      Friday 5/25 and Saturday 5/26
      @ midnight, of course.

      $16

      Nitehawk Cinema
      136 Metropolitan Ave
      Brooklyn, NY 11211
      (718) 384-3980

      for ticketing: http://www.nitehawkcinema.com/movie.php?movie=167

      Late Midnite + Loud Movie + Live Music

      www.morriconeyouth.com/
      ______________

      Thanks to Rocket Rob Patton for the flyerage: www.twoblacksocks.com

    Monday, September 10, 2012

    Tribute to Lyricist Hal David (1921 – 2012)

    Hal David, the renowned lyricist whose collaborations with composer Burt Bacharach produced endless memorable hits in the '60s and '70s died in Los Angeles on Saturday September 1st. He was 91. The September 9, 2012 radio show is dedicated to his work. His timeless soundtrack work includes Louis Armstrong's "We Have All The Time In The World" from On Her Majesty's Secret Service, Shirley Bassey's "Moonraker," Tom Jones' "What's New Pussycat," B.J. Thomas' "Rain Drops Keep Fallin' On My Head," and Dusty Springfield's "Look of Love" from Casino Royale. You can find a list of his soundtrack hits HERE. You can listen to the archive of the show HERE and/or view the PLAYLIST.

    Monday, August 27, 2012

    CAN Lost Tapes Box Set


    Who knew CAN's beloved "Vitamin C" from the "Ege Bamyasi" LP arose out the soundtrack for Sam Fuller's 1972 TV crime film "Dead Pigeon on Beethovenstrasse," integrating the same flute, percussion, bells, iconic bassline and guitar until 8 minutes in, when Damo begins shouting the vocal to ‘Vitamin C.’   Just the best! "Vitamin C" is now officially re-labeled in my iTunes as a "Soundtrack."

    CAN -  Dead Pigeon Suite (edit):


    CAN Vitamin C: 


    CAN -  Dead Pigeon Suite (in its entire 12m glory):


    Check out last week's radio show where and other revealing soundtrack tidbits are unearthed and discussed. Archived HERE. And here is the PLAYLIST.

    Saturday, August 18, 2012

    Joe Strummer's 60th Birthday This Tuesday!

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    Morricone Youth Celebrates Joe Strummer's Soundtracks This Sunday 2pm ET on EastVillageRadio.com


    Be sure to check out Morricone Youth this Sunday at 2pm ET as host Devon E. Levins has something quite special planned for this week's show. 

    Many fail to realize that after the official breakup of the "The Only Band That Matters" a.k.a. The Clash in 1986, co-founder, lead vocalist and rhythm guitarist Joe Strummer (born John Graham Mellor on August 21, 1952 in Ankara, Turkey), turned to film and film music.  Starting in 1986, Strummer wrote music for and/or acted in three Alex Cox films; Sid and Nancy, Walker and Straight to Hell (the latter named after The Clash song).  In fact, he scored the entire soundtrack to Walker and later more notably scored the Keanu Reeves vehicle Permanent Record, the Jim Jarmusch-produced When Pigs Fly and the George Armitage-directed Grosse Pointe Blank.  Although he made brief appearances in numerous films such as Aki Kaurismaki's I Hired a Contract Killer and F.J. Ossang's Docteur Chance and the television series South Park, Strummer played his most memorable role Jarmusch's classic, Mystery Train, as a drifter named Johnny (also referred to as "Elvis") in the "Lost in Space" sequence of the film opposite Steve Buscemi.  In 1999, Strummer went on to form The Mescaleros with Pablo Cook and Richard Norris, who originally came together to write the soundtracks for two short films, Tunnel of Love and Question of Honour.  Before Strummer's death on December 22, 2002, The Mescaleros went on to release three albums and contribute notable songs for films Black Hawk Down and Mr. and Mrs. Smith, and provided the theme song to HBO's John From Cincinnati.


    The show will be archived HERE!

    Interview: Devon Goldberg of Morricone Youth Talks Live Scores and Fantastic Planet




    Devon of Morricone Youth interviewed by Hatched for upcoming Fantastic Planet Live Score.  Check out the original interview HERE!

    Devon Goldberg’s band, Morricone Youth, has been performing in and around New York for over a decade. Dedicated to playing music designed with the moving image, Morricone Youth performed live-scores to several films at Nitehawk, including Jean Rollin’s erotic horror film Fascination, David Lynch’s weird opus Eraserhead and F. W. Murnau’s wildly ambitious Sunrise. This weekend Goldberg and his band of talented cineastes are returning to Nitehawk to perform their score of Rene Laloux’s surreal and lovely Fantastic Planet.
    Hatched reached out to Goldberg to talk about his relation to the film, how he and the group prepared and how to re-work the score while paying respect to the original.

    Hatched: How did you approach scoring Fantastic Planet? Were you familiar with the film before you worked on the score?
    Devon Goldberg: This was a bit different from the others we have done in the past. Many in the band were quite familiar with the film and it’s possibly our keyboardist’s favorite film of all time. I personally saw the film in the early 90′s and became obsessed with Alain Goraguer’s original score and have deejay-ed the track “Deshomination I” for many years.  You hear it’s influence in bands like Air, Radiohead and Stereolab as well as with the endless hip hop producers who have sampled it. I re-watched the film last summer strangely while considering live scoring it for another venue that asked us to do it.

    H: Did you take Fantastic Planet’s existing score into consideration while writing your own version?
    DG: I concluded that the original music is too iconic and I didn’t want to do the film any injustices so we decided on something else. When Nitehawk curator John Woods asked us this summer to consider doing it for his birthday weekend, we decided we should do it but instead in a way that pays direct homage to the original score. In other words, we are learning the central orchestrated pieces and themes and reinterpreting them the best we can as a six piece band. Besides the improvised portions which we will derive from the original themes, everything we do will be based on Goraguer’s original score. It is a tough score written in deceptively odd meters and unusual instrumentation. To prepare, we have watched the film endlessly, each taking copious notes, and started playing live to the film on mute in our practice room two weeks ago.

    H: What scenes in Fantastic Planet were you looking forward to working on the most?
    DG: Truthfully, the intro scene when the mother is being chased is my favorite and pretty challenging with a lot of interesting chords and strange hits/stops. The striptease scene theme music is beautiful as is the waltz towards the end (“Les Fusees”)… and, um… as the guitarist, I would be lying if I didn’t admit that I was kind of looking forward to the David Gilmour-esque big rock guitar solo on the End Credits theme….

    H: Do you find that writing the score for an animated film somehow different or more challenging than writing for a film that’s live action?
    DG: Being that we didn’t per se “write” the score for this one, as we normally do, I’m not sure how to answer this question. If we had, I suspect that it would not be much different as there is quite a bit of action in the film regardless of it being animated as well as there being deep underlying socio-political concepts attributed to the plot, in addition to its surrealist imagery.

    H: How much of these scores are worked out ahead of time and how much is improvised during the movie?
    DG: We approach every live scoring project differently. It all depends on the film, the film’s original score and our relationship to it. We always try to pay homage to the original score in every case by at least quoting, if not, reinterpreting a memorable portion of it. For Fascination, we quoted “La Vaise Crincante,” the waltz music of the women dancing on the bridge in the title sequence and “L’Interieur Des Ecuries,” the music for the first sex scene. Otherwise, we really wanted to write more driving music in the style of some of our favorite 70′s horror film music.
    For Eraserhead we HAD to reinterpret “In Heaven” aka “The Lady in the Radiator Song” by Peter Ivers since we actually perform that song live in clubs. Our singer reverse lip-synched it providing the vocals to the muted film which is actually pretty challenging since Laurel Near does not sing the song in perfect time on screen.
    For Sunrise, it was Charles Gounod’s “Funeral March of a Marionette,” which… is more widely known as the theme to the “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” television series, [but]… appeared nearly three decades before in Sunrise.
    So, the first thing we do is figure out what from the original score we are going to use and then go from there.  Sunrise was pretty much completely scored from the beginning to the end (which makes it tough), while Fascination was 75% scored/25% improvised and the opposite with Eraserhead (25% scored/75% improvised).
    With Sunrise and Fascination, I brought the film itself into my Protools treating them like I would if I were truly being asked by the director to score the film.  So again, it really depends on the film itself and what it involves.
    Regardless, any of the improvisation is pretty controlled as far as improvisation is concerned since we really have the film’s sections well mapped out so any improvised part is usually based on a predetermined theme or at least concept or sound but there are always happy accidents, of course, which work their way through it all and make the performances random, exciting and different each night.

    http://nitehawkhatched.com/2012/08/07/interview-devon-goldberg-of-morricone-youth-talks-live-scores-and-fantastic-planet/

    Morricone Youth performs entire Alain Goraguer score to Fantastic Planet LIVE

     

    MORRICONE YOUTH will provide LIVE music and soundscape for Fantastic Planet at Nitehawk Cinema Fri 8/10 and Sat 8/11 midnight. 

    Rene Laloux • 1973 • 72 Mins. • France

    A testament to the power of imagination and the limitless possibilities of animation, this masterpiece must been seen to be believed. Even the plot, let alone its visual style is difficult to explain: enormous blue beings known as Triages hold complete dominion over the comparatively infinitesimal human-like Oms. The Traags hold the Oms in relative slavery, with little to no access to basic knowledge but as the captives soon find out, knowledge is power and plan a rebellion against their overseers. As with most Eastern European animation at the time, the story stands as an allegory for the dominion that blanketed free speech courtesy of the Iron Curtain. In fact, the creative process was forced to relocate to France from Prague in order to escape threats by KGB enforcers. Ultimately, the final product is one of the oddest aesthetics ever created, including the most convoluted and intricate sex scenes ever committed to film.