Star Wars Music is Getting Worse - Beyond The Last Jedi & John Williams - A Music Philosophy Review

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • The Last Jedi soundtrack was pretty underwhelming. Why is this? In this video, I introduce the concept of reification and use it to assess the entire Star Wars canon (as of early 2018). Why is the music of The Last Jedi so less impactful than the music of the original Star Wars Movies? What is being lost?
    Support me on Patreon!
    / tantacrul
    Helpful Reification Links:
    Introductory:
    Reification, Music and Problems of Modern Philosophy - Jonathan Lewis, 2014
    pure.royalholl...
    Adorno: A Critical Introduction - Simon Jarvis, 1998
    www.amazon.co....
    Advanced:
    History & Class Consciousness, Georg Lukacs, 1923
    www.marxists.o...
    Dialectic of Enlightenment - Adorno, Theodor, 1944
    www.amazon.co....
    Philosophy of Modern Music - Adorno, Theodor, 1949
    www.amazon.co....
    Some of the animations used to describe reification came from this excellent video: • Plato’s Allegory of th...

Komentáře • 3,7K

  • @Tantacrul
    @Tantacrul  Před 6 lety +2663

    Incidentally, for any people interested. I edited this while in Ireland over the Christmas holidays. Towards the end, just as I was tidying up the last pieces of footage, two disasters struck. 1: Dropbox had stopped syncing my folders, without me realising and 2: my laptop broke. As a result, I lost nearly everything, including the majority of all the video clips I'd spent weeks compiling. So this edit you're looking at is a recreation of the original. Yes.... I had to make this whole thing twice.

    • @histguy101
      @histguy101 Před 6 lety +30

      Tantacrul It's wonderful video!
      Be advised:
      There's an incorrectly spelled word in the video description(it starts with a "c").

    • @archgod_yt2431
      @archgod_yt2431 Před 5 lety +33

      Oof, I can feel the hurt in that one

    • @BigFatCock0
      @BigFatCock0 Před 5 lety +27

      You didn't need to keep saying "Don't worry Star Wars is almost here". I was interested enough in what you were saying that I actually got a little annoyed everytime you said "Star Wars is coming".

    • @nathanexplosionn
      @nathanexplosionn Před 5 lety +3

      so.....you're criticizing John Williams?
      How many film compositions have you written?

    • @BigFatCock0
      @BigFatCock0 Před 5 lety +66

      @@nathanexplosionn You don't need to be a chef to judge a dish.

  • @erikdumas9873
    @erikdumas9873 Před 4 lety +1125

    And they don't even necessarily need to throw out those older themes completely. They could be very powerful if used sparingly for important moments that genuinely call for it.

    • @celebrim1
      @celebrim1 Před 4 lety +65

      For example, in Anakin's theme from the prequels, the Imperial March theme that becomes associated with him as Vader appears briefly in a simultaneously innocuous coda and chilling foreshadow.
      I half agree with the critic in the video. Yes, Star Wars needs to go in new directions. But the idea that Williams or his successor needs to abandon Leitmotif is like saying Wagner needs to abandon Leitmotif. The biggest problems of originality in the Disney Star Wars movies haven't been in the music, and Rogue One - which the critic seems to hate - was simultaneously the most daring Star Wars movie and the one that most felt like it lived in the Star Wars universe. It wasn't a perfect movie, but it was much better than the sequel trilogy in every aspect.

    • @HerbaMachina
      @HerbaMachina Před 3 lety +15

      @@celebrim1 the critique is focused around the music, because that's his background. The video is a critique on the use of music in the new star wars films

    • @thekatazsiuniverse4868
      @thekatazsiuniverse4868 Před 3 lety +10

      One thing that the CZcams channel Sideways pointed out is that the leitmotifs of the older films are kinda falling apart, the Force theme was originally Obi-Wan's theme and that kind of transformation is lacking. Where in that instance the theme transformed from a character to an idea many of the musical moments in the newer films act as purely reference.

    • @isaacb77
      @isaacb77 Před 2 lety +1

      I actually thought Solo used leitmotifs pretty well, especially if you've watched "that scene". Han and Qira's theme shows the two-sidedness of their relationship beautifully in my opinion. This video critiqued it using leitmotifs, but never actually gave any examples from the movie.

    • @katieroberts7012
      @katieroberts7012 Před 2 lety +2

      @@isaacb77 This video came out before Solo did

  • @ontos8534
    @ontos8534 Před 5 lety +3675

    "If you steal from one source its plagiarism, if you steal from a lot of sources its research" - George R R Martin

    • @chelonianegghead274
      @chelonianegghead274 Před 5 lety +164

      @farenheit041 It's called postmodernism. Ideas like "bEaUtY iS iN tEh eYe Of TeH bEhOlDeR" and blindly saying "oUt WiTh TeH oLd AnD iN wItH tEh NeW" are its main philosophy. Kylo Ren's line, "Let the past die; kill it if you have to" is the most postmodern idea I have ever heard. It's just change for change's sake; a complete abandonment of tradition.

    • @christopherrapczynski204
      @christopherrapczynski204 Před 5 lety +169

      @@chelonianegghead274 I mean, kylo ren is saying "let the past die" in a series called star WARs, where in the lore there has been nonstop wild fighting and wars for thousands of years, so I can't really blame him for that conclusion considering that.

    • @rabidlorax1650
      @rabidlorax1650 Před 5 lety +24

      Christopher Rapczynski hmmmm kinda sounds like real life! Minus the west post WWII and all of history is pretty much nonstop war

    • @7991612
      @7991612 Před 5 lety +128

      @@chelonianegghead274 then again, "tradition" is literally "lets keep the old ways just because we have always been doing it like that"

    • @chelonianegghead274
      @chelonianegghead274 Před 5 lety +77

      @@7991612 Actually, it's more like "let's stick with what's been working". I'm not against change, but change just for change's sake is a recipe for disaster.

  • @TheMovieKnight
    @TheMovieKnight Před 4 lety +345

    I agree with this but I feel the blame should be placed upon a studio that requires a similar experience as to before in order to make profit. This results on harsh guidelines for the composer. Just blame the system for what it is and not the I individuals whom have showed much greater development in other works. Producers who want the same are to blame.

  • @5gonza541
    @5gonza541 Před 5 lety +540

    Another reason that the “Force Theme” lost most of it’s strength is due to how often it was used. It’s like if you ate your favorite food for every meal, it would loose all what made it special.

    • @houseoftoussaint9609
      @houseoftoussaint9609 Před 4 lety +14

      5Gonza5
      Maybe for you. Maybe for many.
      Not for me.

    • @reek4062
      @reek4062 Před 4 lety +39

      the sequels have a lack of creativity so nothing exceptional is made
      you can say anything about the prequels, but they're original, push boundaries and the good moments are exceptional

    • @ConsumerOfCringe
      @ConsumerOfCringe Před 4 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/fra4RvZ1CKQ/video.html the force theme at the end is really powerful here and still gives me goosebumps

    • @houseoftoussaint9609
      @houseoftoussaint9609 Před 4 lety +2

      Reek
      I disagree with your opinion concerning the lack of creativity. Sequel trilogy, to me, have everything you think they lack. The dreadnought attack for instance.

    • @reek4062
      @reek4062 Před 4 lety +10

      @@houseoftoussaint9609 the dreadnought attack was very amateurish

  • @XitlalicProductions
    @XitlalicProductions Před 4 lety +1766

    ”This is a technique called incompetence” 😂 comedy gold right there

    • @Balnor
      @Balnor Před 4 lety +24

      I nearly spat out my drink... brilliant.

    • @coool20
      @coool20 Před 4 lety +16

      Had a good laugh at that part

    • @Naxt366
      @Naxt366 Před 4 lety +2

      Is it comedy when saying something.

    • @marchdarkenotp3346
      @marchdarkenotp3346 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Naxt366 Comedy is when you like your own comment for the sake of unearned agreement.

    • @jimcrelm9478
      @jimcrelm9478 Před 3 lety

      @@SoggyMicrowaveNugget Says the person passing off mass produced and poorly ventilated supermarket ready meals as authentic Pollo Lemomi Sicilianu. Point is, build it and they will come, it in this case being the whole rotten incentive structure that is destroying worldwide civilisation and they being people like Snyder.

  • @i.j.dragonfly3123
    @i.j.dragonfly3123 Před 4 lety +913

    "Future composers need to do away with leitmotifs."
    Somewhere, Sideways is frothing at the mouth.

    • @treehann
      @treehann Před 4 lety +5

      who dat

    • @SkittleBombs
      @SkittleBombs Před 4 lety +38

      zevex747 search why giving Harry Potter the map of mischief was the best scene musically

    • @pedrokenzo4670
      @pedrokenzo4670 Před 4 lety +2

      Exactly my first thought!

    • @jo-vf8jx
      @jo-vf8jx Před 4 lety +93

      zevex747 Sideways is a channel that breaks down a lot of leitmotifs in movies and other things, but mostly movies. He’s awesome too.

    • @drakejack4380
      @drakejack4380 Před 4 lety +8

      Or use it like John Powell does
      Like he did, in the httyd trio

  • @xsiverider1351
    @xsiverider1351 Před 5 lety +444

    Kylo Ren's theme, sing it with me: "Here comes... the bad, guy."

    • @westvirginiaglutenfreepepp7006
      @westvirginiaglutenfreepepp7006 Před 4 lety +28

      You're so right!

    • @ConsumerOfCringe
      @ConsumerOfCringe Před 4 lety +23

      @@GimmickBox39 he means it's a little simple, like what you do in GCSE music where they ask you to write a bad guy theme

    • @eccentricjoe5410
      @eccentricjoe5410 Před 4 lety +18

      But... Vader theme isnt here comes the bad guy?? Or Darth Sidious?? Or General Grievous for crying out loud?

    • @TheBfutgreg
      @TheBfutgreg Před 4 lety +12

      @@GimmickBox39 I think he means the melody of it literally fits the line, just 5 notes for 5 syllables

    • @alflemon2783
      @alflemon2783 Před 4 lety

      Duh.

  • @marcumbricht7138
    @marcumbricht7138 Před 4 lety +1315

    When I walked out of "The Force Awakens", my first reaction was that it was a shame that they didn't use John Williams for the score. I was *shocked* to find out that it was Williams work. It was so devoid of his usual creativity that I was convinced it wasn't him.

    • @LevelingTo100
      @LevelingTo100 Před 4 lety +62

      Rey's theme? The Scavenger? The Resistance theme?

    • @Soridan
      @Soridan Před 4 lety +238

      @@LevelingTo100 I literally (not figuratively or virtually but quite literally) can't remember the score for the new movies aside from a few bits from the trailers.

    • @lightsidemaster
      @lightsidemaster Před 4 lety +82

      I got massive hate for saying that back then.

    • @PhazonX
      @PhazonX Před 4 lety +26

      @@LevelingTo100 All terrible.

    • @Nina-cd2eh
      @Nina-cd2eh Před 4 lety +65

      You people also forget how many years the old movies had to establish their soundtrack in retrospect. No new movie's soundtrack, star wars or not, is going to be as memorable, or etched in your brain the same way a "classic" movie's that came out decades ago would be. It's an impossible standard to live up to, especially if you consider how most people experienced star wars for their first time, being "cool old space movie" compared to the vastly different "fresh new released sequel" reality of now.

  • @jamesduffy7549
    @jamesduffy7549 Před 4 lety +155

    "overall, the themes in the force awakens feel like a bargain bin version of the originals" well in that case john williams did his job perfectly, because thats what the entire movie is.

    • @Kaiserboo1871
      @Kaiserboo1871 Před 3 lety +33

      Your not wrong.
      In hind sight, I think the sequel trilogy died the moment they revealed Star killer base, to me it just jumped the shark in terms of logic.
      How the hell was this tiny insignificant Insurgency group in the fringes of the galaxy able to get the resources necessary to build that monstrosity without alerting the republic?
      It would be like ISIS successfully building a long-range nuclear missile without the US detecting it.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před rokem +9

      @@Kaiserboo1871 I felt similarly but for different reasons - not in-universe believability, but showing that the new trilogy was simply not prepared to take risks, would undermine other aspects of its worldbuilding for the sake of plotline familiarity, and cared more about spectacle than narrative cohesion.

    • @Kaiserboo1871
      @Kaiserboo1871 Před rokem +3

      @@kaitlyn__L Absolutely.
      They went at it with the wrong mindset.
      Star Wars is not James Cameron's Avatar. It can’t get by on mediocre store telling and amazing visuals, quiet the opposite in fact.

  • @DorimiPrism
    @DorimiPrism Před 5 lety +1281

    The Prequels had a lot of new musical ideas, as well as creative use of old ones.
    It's more like the sequels are creatively bankrupt. I wouldn't blame John. Someone above telling him what checklist to fill, instead of letting new ideas flow like George and the Duel of the Fates choir.

    • @AimlessSavant
      @AimlessSavant Před 5 lety +86

      and atleast when it was reused in Revenge of the Sith it made sense to make the FIRST AND LAST saber fights with that same intense music.

    • @caseypayne5138
      @caseypayne5138 Před 5 lety +147

      I'd say the Prequels had some of John Williams' best work. Duel of the Fates, Battle of the Heroes, the Trade Federation Theme, Across the Stars, Padme's Ruminations, and The Immolation Scene were all amazing bits of film scoring that really set the musical tone for the Prequels and allowed them to stand on their own while grounding them in the overall saga. Can't really say the same for his scoring for DisneyWars, though...it feels like he's just kind of phoning it in. I was really hopeful that he'd be able to create new and exciting themes that were at least on par with the Prequels, but...well, you have to be in denial to feel like either of the DisneyWars Saga movies have soundtracks that even come close to anything in the rest of the saga.

    • @incendiaryagenda3569
      @incendiaryagenda3569 Před 5 lety +8

      Ominethious Calistian The Mustafar scene had a different theme, not Duel of the Fates. Not sure what you're referring to.

    • @cripplehawk
      @cripplehawk Před 5 lety +37

      @@incendiaryagenda3569 The duel of fates did make a return but only briefly. It was utilized during the final battle sequences between Yoda and Palpatine.

    • @AimlessSavant
      @AimlessSavant Před 5 lety +11

      @@incendiaryagenda3569 it has pieces and choirs lifted from Duel of Fates

  • @mccsnackin
    @mccsnackin Před 6 lety +2958

    fillum

  • @andrewsprojectsinnovations6352

    23:19 NOOO!!!
    Leitmotif can still be a very powerful tool, if used properly. You just demonstrated this with Luke's theme (force theme) in A New Hope. The same exact melody was reused, but John Williams evolved it throughout the film, using its familiarity as a foundation to add new meaning on top of. It gained layers of nuance and subtlety each time it was reinterpreted for a new context. The theme's familiarity allowed those layers of nuance to take hold because, being an evolution of an earlier theme, it could call back to a previous scene. It's almost like Williams was using it to say, "Hey, remember that scene when Luke dreamed of being free from his aunt and uncle? Well that was just achieved, but in the worst way possible." It also gave the audience a direct comparison of the two emotional contexts, making it easier to spot and understand the nuanced differences. The same is true the third time around in the famous "Use the Force, Luke" scene. This just doesn't work as well with an entirely new piece of music.
    The new films weren't bad because they reused the same theme over and over again. They were bad because they didn't do anything NEW with it. It was just the same predictable 'force theme' with no significant modification or development. They just failed to find the appropriate balance between novelty and familiarity, which is something the original trilogy, and even the prequels, excelled at and used to great effect. Every well-established franchise has a particular and recognizable musical 'flavor' and leitmotif is an important part of that. At the same time, music can easily get stale if it lacks development. Composers just need to remember that leitmotif is a tool, not a magic 'silver bullet.' Just like having a hammer doesn't mean every problem is a nail, Leitmotif isn't always the right answer, but it is still useful when the situation warrants it.

    • @Dacronhai
      @Dacronhai Před 2 lety +38

      You spared me the effort to write my own comment, I completely agree

    • @eliasjakewallace2239
      @eliasjakewallace2239 Před 2 lety +14

      Agreed. *Krhm* Lord of the Rings.

    • @Kioget
      @Kioget Před 2 lety +37

      Thats almost the exact thing he said, only that he didnt say everything word for word but left the last part as it is rather obvious to say "you can still use it well tho!!!!". Which is equivalent to hearing "not every X is Y tho!!!" every goddamn time you mentioned a group of things and want to speak broadly about it.

    • @201bio
      @201bio Před 2 lety +16

      Actually I think the prequels are a perfect example. There, Williams invents solid new themes, develops and creatively deploys old ones (for instance Augie's Great Municipal Band hiding the emperor's theme). He also adds the set-piece non-leitmotiv tracks like Duel of the Fates as a new concept. He employs both familiarity and novelty and makes a fantastic soundtrack.

    • @tehjamerz
      @tehjamerz Před rokem +1

      Imagine writing an opera, but you just change the lyrics to an existing classic.
      You didn't write an opera.

  • @KingNefiiria
    @KingNefiiria Před 4 lety +276

    "Horns blasting all the time."
    God that's what irritated me about the new Jurassic World movies, instead of it being a crescendo that ends up being the narrative of what you see, it's turned into this overwhelming blare of violins and horns telling you "DO YOU REMEMBER THAT BRACHIOSAURUS SCENE FROM THE FIRST MOVIE?! YEAH YOU SHOULD FEEL THAT."
    And especially the trailers, ugh, they took the entire phrase of the theme and blasted it to your face in 3 notes, all in this tonally dissonant state. HEY THIS IS SPOOKY
    It just hurts my ears

    • @dead9247
      @dead9247 Před 4 lety +2

      Dam.

    • @kopowa2836
      @kopowa2836 Před 3 lety +3

      Nice tiz arrior profile. I always have warm feeling when I see another bravely default fan on the internet :)

    • @Barakon
      @Barakon Před rokem +2

      To me it’s like a parrot screaming, but he movie should have done that intentionally instead of being idiotic.

  • @blammod664
    @blammod664 Před 5 lety +418

    I think Williams is struggling with the material he's given to work with on the sequel trilogy as well.
    Uninspired art rarely inspires another artist.
    I would NOT remove the title crawl on the saga films though, ever.

    • @noahfessenden6478
      @noahfessenden6478 Před 5 lety +52

      Funny enough, his best sequel track imo, Rey's Theme, was based not on the character, but an image of the character. Stills have more influence than their source.

    • @blammod664
      @blammod664 Před 5 lety +20

      @@noahfessenden6478 WOOOOW. I mean, I know the ST is pretty creatively bankrupt at least so far, but that's sad. Funny enough as well, I use images to inspire a lot of my writing :) so I can understand where JW comes from with that...but wow. It actually is my fave piece of music (just about the only memorable track) from the ST and I will say her character introduction footage does establish her pretty well initially.

    • @darthtroller
      @darthtroller Před 5 lety

      @@noahfessenden6478 I think Kylo's theme is the best, one of the best themes ever

    • @reek4062
      @reek4062 Před 4 lety +8

      the sequels have no heart and are just a money grab by disney and the easiest, most proven way are making nostalgic movies full with action and spectacle

    • @reek4062
      @reek4062 Před 4 lety +2

      @@darthtroller Kylo's theme is ok, and Kylo himself is good, but the sequels as a whole suck

  • @TheFluffyDuck
    @TheFluffyDuck Před 4 lety +441

    “I promise Star Wars is almost here” - yeah Disney has been saying that since 2017 and I am still waiting.

    • @rhettorical
      @rhettorical Před 4 lety +22

      People said Star Wars came back in 2015 but I've yet to see any evidence of that.

    • @tjejojyj
      @tjejojyj Před 4 lety +4

      So true. So very, very true.

    • @bringoawfuttery2525
      @bringoawfuttery2525 Před 3 lety +5

      @@rhettorical no, they brought it back. They dug up the corpse of Star Wars, made it dance, and put a tiny bit of makeup on it. Isn't that what you wanted? 😂

  • @episodenull
    @episodenull Před 5 lety +474

    The single largest creative influence on the new Star Wars movies is other Star Wars movies. Gone are they days when they were distilled from samurai films, newsreel footage, car culture, suburban teen angst, and personal expression.

    • @emsnewssupkis6453
      @emsnewssupkis6453 Před 4 lety +18

      @Bringer of Death Star Wars is dead. The Sith won.

    • @Vaultboy101
      @Vaultboy101 Před 4 lety +12

      In that case, in an ideal world, Quentin Tarantino would've the best person to helm the Sequel Trilogy.

    • @jimmy5391
      @jimmy5391 Před 4 lety +1

      Well said episodenull

    • @johnjackson9767
      @johnjackson9767 Před 4 lety +2

      It's the issue with all sequels/prequels in general. They just keep drinking from the same pool until there's nothing left.

    • @etherealsky7078
      @etherealsky7078 Před 4 lety +3

      Kevin Cobb
      TFA comes out: “Waah they’re just copying A New Hope there’s no originality”
      TLJ comes out: “Waah they did some unpredictable things they killed Star Wars why couldn’t it be like the other movies”

  • @ND-yp3sk
    @ND-yp3sk Před 6 lety +1743

    This is a technique called: INCOMPETENCE

    • @andrewtucker94
      @andrewtucker94 Před 5 lety +34

      I've noticed this phenomenon and got shot down by fans...

    • @dvader518
      @dvader518 Před 5 lety +14

      This is a technique called: COMPETENCE!

    • @TheTwilitHero
      @TheTwilitHero Před 5 lety +19

      Is it possible to learn this power? 😈

    • @dvader518
      @dvader518 Před 5 lety +30

      TheTwilitHero Not from the people behind Disney Star Wars.

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Před 5 lety +28

      John Williams is hardly incompetent

  • @borgwardd24
    @borgwardd24 Před 3 lety +185

    I think leitmotifs can definitely be overdone and predictable, but they can be very cool when they're employed in more subtle ways (rather than just playing the same theme everytime the villain shows up, etc.)

    • @adjoint_functor
      @adjoint_functor Před 2 lety +5

      Found the sideways fan

    • @Netherfly
      @Netherfly Před 2 lety +14

      Leitmotifs are fantastic, but they're useless without well-articulated characters and stories with thematic depth.

    • @17thstellation
      @17thstellation Před 2 lety +19

      Calling leitmotif overdone in music is like calling red overdone in painting. Its uses are too broad and undefined, and it really doesn't limit creativity much at all. I can understand being annoyed when a specific theme is used simply because "the other thing did it," but an entire technique, especially one so widely used in film music, and where NOT using it would arguably be the more limiting option? It seems like bias speaking.

    • @ViciousVinnyD
      @ViciousVinnyD Před rokem +4

      I think a comparison could be made to painting as well. I just so happen to remember a similar critique of an artwork that lacked focus due to it's flat, repetitive use of red. Red is a very important color, but using it foreground, background, everywhere can drown out the picture and take away focus from it's subject. Same can be said for disney's chronic dependance on old content instead of making something fresh for once.

  • @BillyCobbOfficial
    @BillyCobbOfficial Před 5 lety +389

    Hot take: ROTS has the best soundtrack

    • @tlotpwist3417
      @tlotpwist3417 Před 5 lety +46

      He went "hold my beer" to himself with Battle of Heroes

    • @westvirginiaglutenfreepepp7006
      @westvirginiaglutenfreepepp7006 Před 4 lety +39

      TPM though. Or is Duel of the Fates cheating?

    • @billdestroyerofworlds
      @billdestroyerofworlds Před 4 lety +26

      Yeah, the soundtrack in that movie is absurdly good. Empire still takes it for me, but Revenge really is up there.

    • @ToxicBastard
      @ToxicBastard Před 4 lety +6

      The force unleashed did

    • @Carabas72
      @Carabas72 Před 4 lety +2

      @@westvirginiaglutenfreepepp7006
      Duel Of The Fates might be great, but the score of The Phantom Menace as a whole is underwhelming, and easily my least favourite of the entire saga.

  • @stekenxu
    @stekenxu Před 4 lety +34

    A video about Star Wars, with a brief cameo by Georg Lukacs.
    ...wait a minute

    • @naturalroyalflush
      @naturalroyalflush Před 3 lety +1

      For some reason I find this comment hysterically funny.

  • @elsongs
    @elsongs Před 5 lety +959

    Say what you want about the Prequels, but the music was excellent. The Sequel Trilogy music is basically Williams phoning it in.

    • @troodon1096
      @troodon1096 Před 5 lety +68

      I've never watched the prequels again, but I listen to the soundtracks of those films quite often. Fully agree with you there.

    • @mattrismatt
      @mattrismatt Před 5 lety +43

      Williams still produced better music than the films deserved/needed. The reverse has NEVER been the case. Let that one sink in.

    • @Verebazs
      @Verebazs Před 5 lety +102

      In defense of Williams, as Tantacrul said, he's used to telling the story through his music. He can't do that with the rehashes, because they don't have a story. They're just a bunch of "remember that?" moments strung together. So of course the best Willams can do is string together a bunch of leitmotiffs for characters and events.

    • @EBTwitts
      @EBTwitts Před 5 lety +46

      @@Verebazs You also have to keep in mind that Disney gives the yay or nay toward the music he writes for the new Star Wars movies. He very well could have written some really cool and original music, but Disney felt it wasn't safe enough to use. Not saying that's what happened, just that it's a possibility. George Lucas, through all of his faults, wanted to do something different with Star Wars when he made the prequel, which would explain why we had something different with Duel of the Fates (easily one of the most badass pieces of music in my opinion). The movies may not have hit, but the music sure as hell did.

    • @DarkArtistKaiser
      @DarkArtistKaiser Před 5 lety +23

      Its actually hilarious to me as the years go on, it seems like the prequels become less the most hated thing with star wars fans.

  • @kevincorey4406
    @kevincorey4406 Před 4 lety +81

    Another brilliant moment of music complimenting character?
    “I’m a Jedi. I know I’m better than this.”
    *Imperial March*

  • @cal928
    @cal928 Před 4 lety +196

    Idk if you still check comments from 2 year old videos, but i wanted to say this actually helped me a lot. i'm writing a little album for a project of mine and it was starting to become nothing but lietmotifs. If i hadnt watched this i might still be doing that

    • @LolLol-ok4lr
      @LolLol-ok4lr Před 3 lety

      What did u replace the motifs with?

    • @cal928
      @cal928 Před 3 lety +7

      @@LolLol-ok4lr depending on the specific song, something entirely original, or pieces that I envision a specific scene while making rather than a character. Although I’m breaking the rules by scoring an animated scene that doesn’t exist

    • @tsudough
      @tsudough Před rokem +2

      commenting on a two year old comment about a five year old video that was two years old at the time

    • @nelejanbbi4616
      @nelejanbbi4616 Před 2 dny

      ​@@tsudough my numbers don't make sense with that one, but maybe you are using different ones

  • @cocothesocialist3690
    @cocothesocialist3690 Před 5 lety +303

    As a banjo player I really hate people constantly making fun of my instrument. The banjo can be a really sad and daunting instrument connected with dark and interesting themes.

    • @thealientree3821
      @thealientree3821 Před 5 lety +36

      Same can be said with accordions.

    • @juliahenriques210
      @juliahenriques210 Před 5 lety +23

      Or you can go to Brazil, where the banjo is a staple of samba and choro... and accordion is a staple of baião and forró.

    • @angelsartandgaming
      @angelsartandgaming Před 5 lety +17

      Bagpipes are one of my favorite instruments because as Scottish as they are, they also give a sense to power and can also bring forth tons of emotions.
      I like Banjos too as well as Accordions. Especially after Kass from Legend of Zelda where he uses his accordion to tell his emotions as well as help you out in puzzle solving. He plays it tragically but also peacefully. When you go to the stables and hear Kass's accordion play Epona's theme, you get a sense that you're in a nice place of peace and relaxation. It's not just for shanties and Weird Al (though he plays Accordion fantastically), it's for story telling and driving a story too.
      I know banjos can be the same way. They're just another form of guitar. Their pluckiness can be optimistic and sometimes tragic.

    • @alexander-ru4gd
      @alexander-ru4gd Před 5 lety +15

      I feel the banjo is being seen increasingly seriously, due to the general rising popularity of folk and bluegrass type music

    • @ZenoDovahkiin
      @ZenoDovahkiin Před 5 lety +5

      Trianglists unite!
      I make fun of that instrument for it's simplicity, but can absolutely do nice things if used well. Every instrument can. That flute you played in Kindergarten? Yes.
      I'm no music expert at all, and may not pay much attention to what more knowledgable people focus on, but I managed to find stuff I like taht I'm pretty sure is using a Glockenspiel. Which I associate with music class at school and simplicity, it was never really in the cool kids club as far as musical instruments go in my experience.

  • @MANDELAZZA
    @MANDELAZZA Před 5 lety +148

    I think you are completely wrong about leitmotifs, your critisim was pretty much that the themes weren't good..not that they were leitmotifs.
    Where I think you are correct is that the familiar themes had played out their roles, and that they weren't used correctly. For instance, the "force theme" was actually more of a "Luke's theme", as you pointed out. That's not the same as the music idea of leitmotifs is wrong.
    Leitmotifs built up as a structure to give familiarity, done as a framework with the same musical idea to express sadness, epicness, heroism, fear etc. for some character is pretty much unbeatable.
    "Inside the score" here on youtube explains this better than I ever could.
    There are GOLD soundtracks in most movies. What makes movies and movie series themes stand out in this oversaturated market is leitmotifs.
    /Leitmotifnazi out

    • @thesharpercoder
      @thesharpercoder Před 5 lety +10

      MANDELAZZA In the liner notes on the original double LP Star Wars Soundtrack Williams points out that the Force theme and Luke’s theme are one and the same.

    • @sgste
      @sgste Před 4 lety +15

      This.
      Also, you have to remember that leitmotifs have to portray the character while also fitting the
      cinematic setting that the character currently inhabits - Rey's theme on its own may seem like it doesn't quite fit her character (an argument pointed out in the video, not that I agree with it) - but it was also designed to play in the scene where we see her in the desert alone for the first time, and it fits that moment perfectly. Its the MELODY that fits Rey, not just the instruments... And this is absolutely clear as the film's go on - the same melody brought with more power! Also, how seamlessly they fit with other themes, hinting at potential connections between characters!
      One last thing - commenting on the use of the force theme when Bail Organa walks in (Rogue One) really grinds my gears... Its not just an abstract musical reference - it's hinting at DESTINY. These are the actions that spark episode 4! This man is about to call upon the princess who will push us into the wild ride that is STAR WARS. Not just a man entering a room... But to quote a terrible line from a bad movie, the spark that'll light the flame that'll ignite the entire saga!

  • @brisingr29
    @brisingr29 Před 3 lety +115

    While I agree with many of your comments, I do believe that 'Rogue One' should be cut a break when it comes to this reification concept. The movie is all about connecting the dots between Ep. 3 & 4, and I think that reusing a number of the classic star wars motifs is a justified part of that. That scene at the end with darth vader. That's MEANT to make you think of 'a new hope', because that movie leads on immediately after this one. You're MEANT to be thinking of the original trilogy when you see the X-Wings. And as for the movie itself, I believe the type of story was very refreshing as far as the hashed-out star wars formula goes. The sequel trilogy had a chance to break new ground though, and it's in this case that I 100% agree with your points.

    • @almost_harmless
      @almost_harmless Před 2 lety +11

      Rogue One has become on of my favourite SW movies. It just feels right.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před rokem +3

      I do think musically they could’ve done more, but I agree about the plot (which of course isn’t what this video was about). The wider events weren’t ever in question, so the movie could focus on one small group of people. Focus on how fascism tears families apart even on the “successful” side. Focus on their hopes and dreams for their rebellion.
      I didn’t internalise their names but I still think about the blind guy with the staff and the sarcastic freed droid. I loved that the protagonists didn’t make it out alive, either. It’s a story about selfless sacrifice for one small part of a larger whole, without even knowing whether it’d work. In contrast, the mainline movies are all about that larger whole, and almost every character is presented with proof of their actions’ outcomes by the end.

    • @expilectakunai
      @expilectakunai Před rokem +3

      @@kaitlyn__L keep in mind Giacchino had only 4 weeks to write the entire soundtrack, and I honestly really appreciate the new melodic material he came up with, particularly in the (imo, absolutely stunning) 3rd act where the message is sent and Scarif is destroyed

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před rokem +2

      @@expilectakunai that kind of rush explains a lot. No composer should only get a month!

    • @Barakon
      @Barakon Před 8 měsíci +1

      They should have studied undertale in terms of transforming leitmotifs.

  • @Trygvar13
    @Trygvar13 Před 5 lety +491

    The problem is the way the movies are shot. There really is no place for music in the new movies. It used to be a great part of the movie, almost a character in itself. Now the scenes are too fast paced and there is not time for the music to fully develop.

    • @kochmusicproductions3585
      @kochmusicproductions3585 Před 5 lety +54

      Exactly. There is little opportunity for musical thematic development in film today. The edits are generally so quick there's no room to stretch out musically. Compare vs. e.g. Star Trek: The Motion Picture where Goldstein was given multiple scenes where the music carried it and could develop. No way any major movie studio would allow that today.

    • @hikingworm1028
      @hikingworm1028 Před 5 lety +19

      Rogue One handled this well, and actually ended up giving us multiple memorable tracks. "Hope," "The Imperial Suite," and "Your father would be proud" to name a few.

    • @anothercrappypianist
      @anothercrappypianist Před 5 lety +10

      @@kochmusicproductions3585 *Goldsmith. Agree with everything else (in general, notwithstanding a few exceptions which are unfortunately too few).

    • @focalized
      @focalized Před 5 lety +16

      Agree. Great example. The Jawa sequence with R2. It was a few minutes where some really memorable and interesting music was used to fill the lack of anything really going on.

    • @pauombuena3175
      @pauombuena3175 Před 5 lety +13

      So accurate. Listen the difference between the Imperial March and the March of the Resistance. Both great, but the first one is way more complex since the movie in which it appears knows how to drive the scene.

  • @adamlhayman
    @adamlhayman Před 4 lety +176

    "This is a technique called... Incompetence." Forgive me, but I'm gonna have to steal this and add it to my standard verbal repertoire.

    • @NathanEllery
      @NathanEllery Před rokem

      Was I wrong in thinking he was applying this to John Williams?
      It was this point where I thought "put up or shut up" and was very disappointed because I watched The Piano Trio next.

    • @AliceLoverdrive
      @AliceLoverdrive Před rokem +9

      @@NathanEllery ...no? It was applied to Snyder, long before Williams was even mentioned.

  • @thehermit8618
    @thehermit8618 Před 4 lety +93

    Stars Wars then: a passionate space opera who borrowed from all over the place to create a pop culture epic.
    Star Wars now: hey remember when we did that cool thing like 20 years ago? Wanna see me do it again for like the seventh time?

    • @namesurname7172
      @namesurname7172 Před 4 lety +4

      While being uber woke

    • @tjejojyj
      @tjejojyj Před 4 lety +1

      You could say “Star Wars episodes VII, VIII, IX” borrowed from earlier films in the same franchise.
      This is an excellent video. The introduction reification is excellently.

    • @legrandliseurtri7495
      @legrandliseurtri7495 Před 4 lety +1

      I mean, eh, when was the last time you actually watched the originals? A New hope was already generic when it came out, Empire strikes back has a lot of wasted time and the cringy Leia and Han solo romance, Return of the jedi has an awful start, wookies and
      Darth Sidious is more ridiculous than menacing.

    • @thehermit8618
      @thehermit8618 Před 4 lety +6

      @@legrandliseurtri7495 its enjoyable because even if its campy, it feels genuine and passionate. Nowadays its all the same boring and dumb beats of the ogs but without any of the charm that made them watchable. It may not be a great experience, but it was a genuine experience

    • @legrandliseurtri7495
      @legrandliseurtri7495 Před 4 lety

      @@thehermit8618 I guess I can accept that.

  • @jonseyjones321
    @jonseyjones321 Před 4 lety +180

    Trailer music is almost never done by the film's composer. Trailers are edited by a trailer house, in which they will source scores or even remake scores specifically for that trailer. Most times they create an "epic" version with loads more orchestral stuff going on to give the illusion this is big, grand, and epic. These scores are usually done ion the computer with digital instruments or editing the original scores.

    • @jimcrelm9478
      @jimcrelm9478 Před 3 lety

      At the end of the day who was responsible doesn't really matter unless the object of the exercise is to pass moral judgement on them. The extremely reified nature of Star Wars content™ produced the boring and unproductive music of both the trailer and the film itself. And that reification is the result of a whole set of factors as the video alludes to by referencing Adorno. What is interesting, at least to me, is how the music became so uninteresting, not which individuals we can blame for it.

    • @jonseyjones321
      @jonseyjones321 Před 3 lety

      @@jimcrelm9478 it wasn't exactly to excuse it, but to steer the criticism in the right direction with more understanding of who, what, and why the trailer was done the way it was. Talking about how it's used in the film (which isn't the trailer music) is a completely different thread itself, which is why I didn't comment on the film, but only the trailer.

  • @jamiebraswell5520
    @jamiebraswell5520 Před 5 lety +187

    I completely disagree with you about the opening credits of Star Wars. This was done on purpose to compliment the episodic nature of the old serials that Star Wars harkens back to. It is no different than a TV show having the same opening theme. As long as it is an episode of the saga, it is going to be the same.

    • @prod.by3zko
      @prod.by3zko Před 4 lety +8

      Yeah, if the new trilogy was of artistic quality, who cares about the opening anyways?

    • @precoius
      @precoius Před 4 lety +3

      Different people are making Star Wars movies now, people who find inspiration from other sources. They shouldn’t have to copy George Lucas and put a title crawl in the beginning of the film if they don’t want to. If they aren’t taking inspiration from old film serials like George was, why carry on the title crawl thing? It’s getting old. At this point, the entire Star Wars series feels like a boring old tradition. Same beat, different drum. We need a new beat.

    • @user-jn1wm3tb8v
      @user-jn1wm3tb8v Před 4 lety +1

      @@precoius All main films should have the crawl. Nothing else.

    • @CosmicTeapot
      @CosmicTeapot Před 4 lety +3

      The point of the title crawl was to originally put a bit of context because the concept of these movies was so utterly bizarre and alien to people in the 70s/80s (to see a giant roaring carpet, a british robot and a beeping trash can rolling around, space monks with laser swords, all hunted down by a villain in a mask with a bad case of asthma) that it was necessary to invite people in this new world. My guess is, as the first one was so massively popular, GL just went "welp, might as well keep the title crawl for the whole trilogy to keep people up to date as to what they missed". But now, everyone knows about this universe, there's no ridiculous/bizarre aspects to it anymore. Everyone knows how that world works. I'm with him on letting go of the title crawl because we no longer NEED context to watch a SW movie, I would rather have the pleasure of feeling intrigued and questioning myself on what I'm seeing at the beginning of the movie, to try and figure out who am I seeing and what is going on than have it all pre-chewed/dumbed-down for me. That's even one of the core aspects of what makes a movie good or bad: if the viewer doesn't feel compelled or engaged to do a bit of thinking and figure things out on his/her own, but only watches passively without any effort, it's not quality art, there's no intellect to the experience, no feelings of reward from putting your brain to work. Think of the best movies of the decade: Parasite does its exposure subtly during the movie, Ex Machina does the same, Arrival lets you question everything until the very end. Sure, there are movies that are designed for you to shut your brains off after work and just feel cheap/easy emotions, but those are generally the kinds of movies you forget about the next day and never watch again. Star Wars has never been that, it let its mark on many generations of people and created a cult because it was never that kind of movie...until now. For the first time in my life, I no longer think about Star Wars, it doesn't excite me anymore and I didn't even go watch The Rise of Skywalker because it's no longer a rewarding experience. It's just a Star Wars skin on the other bad movies spoiling modern cinema (Transformers, Pixels, the Emoji movies, etc.)

  • @huskobyte
    @huskobyte Před 4 lety +31

    15:38 - 16:26
    Nonstop chills even now. The tracks in the originals were so much more than they are now

  • @redsimonyt
    @redsimonyt Před 4 lety +853

    All of Star Wars has deteriorated immensely under Disney. Story, characters, and look at the horrible fighting choreography to give another example.

    • @reek4062
      @reek4062 Před 4 lety +61

      only one lightsaber fight, Kylo vs Rey, and besides Rey being far too powerful, the fight doesn't really catch
      the throneroom fight in TLJ was just terrible; I've always wanted to see the Guards fight, but this was way too amateurish

    • @stanimirmn
      @stanimirmn Před 4 lety +13

      + videogames, books, comics... literally everything branded star wars

    • @hadez908
      @hadez908 Před 4 lety +14

      @@reek4062 and considering she is still super dad man new to this and without any training at all and is somehow now just randomly fucking good at it

    • @wolfieinu
      @wolfieinu Před 4 lety +7

      @mickor The impression is better, I'll give you that. I honestly didn't see all the tricks and cheats they used to make it work when I watched it the first time. I'm not a TLJ fan but I won't fault its ability to make a good first impression through sheer style if nothing else.

    • @divinestrike00x78
      @divinestrike00x78 Před 4 lety +13

      Even the toys got shittier. Episode 3 figure are of greater detail and quality than TFA of TLJ

  • @AndrewRichesson
    @AndrewRichesson Před 5 lety +641

    This video was put together very well, but I have to disagree with your conclusion. Leitmotifs keep music across a film saga consistent and memorable to the audience. The Harry Potter Films did exactly what you wanted, getting rid of (most) leitmotifs and having each film (except for the first couple) be new compositional works. As a result, the music deteriorated into unmemorable blandness as new composers came in and out and discarded the musical themes that had come before them. Inside the Score has a great video on this: czcams.com/video/8b7-3lOgb24/video.html
    Now I do agree that Star Wars rehashes the old themes too many times, but in no way should we discard William's excellent themes that keep movie goers (like me) returning to the theaters. Just use them more sparingly and in more important moments.

    • @FrankieHchannel
      @FrankieHchannel Před 5 lety +23

      Completely agree!

    • @jamiebraswell5520
      @jamiebraswell5520 Před 5 lety +24

      A recent interview with John William ' s son revealed that they are piling on the old themes more than ever before for The Rise of Skywalker. Sigh.

    • @FrankieHchannel
      @FrankieHchannel Před 5 lety +45

      Jamie Braswell That wasn’t his son, that was his brother. Also, that is not intrinsically bad; look at the Lord of the Rings. In and of itself, it has over 100 leitmotifs spread over 12 hours of music. Even in the piece “The Uruk-Hai”, 5 leitmotifs are quoted in just 2:59 of music, and there are not many people who would dispute that those films’ score are a masterpiece. So, many motifs applied appropriately can be hugely beneficial and give the film a rich motivic identity - I wouldn’t be so hasty to assume the worst, especially considering this is John Williams we’re talking about.

    • @maxzerbini_music
      @maxzerbini_music Před 5 lety +23

      Damn right! I would also like to point out that a composer's job is to follow the director. If they continue using the same motifs it's surely not because Williams has no more new ideas lol.. it's because it's the director's wish to do so

    • @blackpowerdiva4958
      @blackpowerdiva4958 Před 5 lety +9

      This comment is PERFECTION.
      My thoughts EXACTLY in a more well said way. LOL

  • @PedanticTwit
    @PedanticTwit Před 4 lety +65

    Well, the "force" theme is actually Luke's _secondary leitmotif,_ although it was originally intended to be Obi-Wan's. The main theme was Luke's primary. It's just had its meaning overwritten, much as Luke's character was overwritten in these sequel films.

  • @dropkickmonk3y
    @dropkickmonk3y Před 5 lety +106

    Michael Giacchino had less than 4 weeks to replace the previous composer, Alexandre Desplat, and that's why I'm giving Michael huge respect for his quick turnaround. You need to put everything in context than just past judgment without understanding the situation.

    • @evertonporter7887
      @evertonporter7887 Před 5 lety +25

      Giaccino's music for Rogue One was quite an achievement considering the short time he had to work on it.

    • @dropkickmonk3y
      @dropkickmonk3y Před 5 lety +4

      @@evertonporter7887 Yeah. It's crazy how little time he had. He has a few themes, one being using the Dies Eries.

    • @DanielMasmanian
      @DanielMasmanian Před 5 lety +8

      And yet, like almost all of his work, it's as memorable as used loo paper.

    • @Reggie1408
      @Reggie1408 Před 5 lety +2

      @Daniel Lindholm
      so it's bad for a reason? still bad.

    • @dropkickmonk3y
      @dropkickmonk3y Před 5 lety +1

      @@Reggie1408 , because a Frenchman wouldn't want to do new pickups which would've been better, I still think Giacchino did an acceptable job if he had more time, It would've been, unfortunately, studios only think about release dates, not production...

  • @cowboi61
    @cowboi61 Před 4 lety +367

    Prequel-era star wars had the best original themes imo

    • @lightsidemaster
      @lightsidemaster Před 4 lety +12

      THANK YOU!!

    • @steevrawjers
      @steevrawjers Před 4 lety +1

      cowboi true for sure

    • @prod.by3zko
      @prod.by3zko Před 4 lety +44

      Dude...yes. The march on the temple. The Darth Maul duel. Anakin losing his shit after his mother died. Anakin breaking Padme's heart at Mustafar. Obi-Wan's ensuing duel with him. I remember these scenes particularly because of the music.

    • @Orsan_
      @Orsan_ Před 4 lety +8

      @Rising Horizon Gaming He's a terrible director, but at least he leads to more creative freedom for their composers. At least in the prequels. Williams and Lucas had a great connection in that matter. One of the very few positive aspects of him having complete control over those movies.

    • @giovannadonadini4282
      @giovannadonadini4282 Před 4 lety

      What about march of the resistance?

  • @A.C_B.
    @A.C_B. Před 4 lety +168

    I think the major issue with star wars which most people seem to miss is that the original movies were not original. You mentioned many of the inspirations in this video. The story is the classical Heroes journey. There really is not a lot of truly original ideas here. The reason why the prequels enjoy cult status, despite having awful dialogue, terrible CGI and some serious pacing issues, is because they were written using the same process. Instead of being inspired by more modern tropes such as the Heroes journey, they were inspired by antique tragedies like the odyssey, mixed with the Roman Empire (a senator who overthrows a republic to build an empire). In a way this makes a lot of sense. You made a trilogy heavily inspired by tropes which originated in medieval Sagas and now you want to create prequels. What came before the medieval times? the Roman Empire.
    Which tropes do the modern movies draw from? More Star Wars. Tropes inspired by Tropes. Tropeception. Or they try to be original, which then leads to them not feeling like Star Wars. One Way they could have made the new Movies, while make them feel like Star Wars without referencing their own work could have been by tapping into some tropes which weren't used in Star Wars before. One idea could have been to continue down the timeline. First the antique tragedy, then the medieval sage, next something like Shakespear or Operas. Another option could have been to look at Fairy Tales, such as those collected by the brothers Grimm.
    The Original trilogy works so well, because it uses tropes which have been ingrained into our culture over centuries. We all know the significance of Obi-Wan as the wise mentor, which is why nobody questions why his death has so much significance for Luke. There are many examples for this. Star Wars attempts to tell great stories, while being limited to only a few hours of screen time. Without pre-made structures to reference, this would not be possible. When Obi-Wan dies, we barely knew him. Without a structure to assign him meaning, his death would feel meaningless or cheap.

    • @zenv9180
      @zenv9180 Před 4 lety +6

      THANK YOU

    • @Shenaldrac
      @Shenaldrac Před 4 lety +7

      Or they could have reused the hero's journey again but with complex, likeable characters and a consistent, cohesive plot without half hour pointless digressions to casino planets and gross unconsenting sexual harassment kisses. It probably wouldn't have been as groundbreaking and amazing as the originals were, but I bet they would have been decent, enjoyable films instead of..... what we got.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před rokem

      @@Shenaldrac was there a casino planet in the prequels too?

    • @Shenaldrac
      @Shenaldrac Před rokem +1

      @@kaitlyn__L Not that I remember.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před rokem

      @@Shenaldrac never mind, I misread your comment as saying the prequels could’ve reused the hero’s journey rather than taking inspiration from Greek tragedies lol.

  • @AntonioKowatsch
    @AntonioKowatsch Před 5 lety +341

    LOL, John Williams almost destroyed "Duel of Fates"....
    interesting...

    • @jakubgrzybek6181
      @jakubgrzybek6181 Před 5 lety +2

      He needs to retire

    • @BungieStudios
      @BungieStudios Před 5 lety +5

      He only has one more Star Wars movie in him.

    • @SensuixShinobu7
      @SensuixShinobu7 Před 5 lety +4

      anyone know where that clip is from of John Williams suggesting they remove the choir?

    • @AntonioKowatsch
      @AntonioKowatsch Před 5 lety +7

      @@SensuixShinobu7 Yeah, here you go, man:
      czcams.com/video/EYE-mhJOm5g/video.html
      p.s.
      shameless plug incoming: I'm also a composer. I'd really appreciate it if you just checked out my stuff.
      Let me know what you're thinking.

    • @Ryan-mech-muffin
      @Ryan-mech-muffin Před 5 lety +4

      The duel of fates was amazing. What the heck....you can't please this guy....

  • @Arbiter099
    @Arbiter099 Před 5 lety +514

    I CLAPPED WHEN I SAW RED LETTER MEDIA I RECOGNIZE THOSE HACK FRAUDS!
    But seriously, great video.

    • @dirtyharry1881
      @dirtyharry1881 Před 5 lety +53

      I KNOW WHAT THAT IS!!

    • @ramonek9109
      @ramonek9109 Před 5 lety +11

      I am familiar with it.

    • @jamiebraswell5520
      @jamiebraswell5520 Před 5 lety +15

      Oh is that where those highly annoying idiot clips came from? I was tempted to turn off this video because of that shit.

    • @SuperCaleb360
      @SuperCaleb360 Před 5 lety +27

      Red letter media is hilarious though

    • @barbarianjk2355
      @barbarianjk2355 Před 5 lety +15

      @@jamiebraswell5520 yeah the video is great, but RLM sucks plenty.

  • @wirelesmike73
    @wirelesmike73 Před 3 lety +129

    And then came *The Mandolorian* soundtrack. I'd love to hear your take on that. Personally, I loved it. It was new and original with a classic quality that gave a sense that it was made back when the original movies were made. That combination of old recorders, modern synths, distorted guitars, and just the right amount of horns and orchestral elements was lightning in a bottle, IMO. Ludwig Goransson is one talented dude.

  • @demovidtest
    @demovidtest Před 5 lety +130

    18:03 whoa there, it's a pretty big (and subjective) leap to claim that Williams was afraid of creating new music. First off, that whole duel of the fates theme is new which is contrary to your premise. Second, the film features a lot of moments that do present the duel of the fates without choir and it works fantastically. Williams' role is to provide the film with a coherent musical tone and the concern of a full-on choir being a little too operatic and on-the-nose is a totally valid composer's perspective which doesn't have anything to do with fear of being "new".
    Additionally, we do know that the recording sessions with Williams are done with the choir live with the orchestra, which means the elements bleed together in the masters. So the suggestion of recording an additional orchestra-only track is just professional forward-thinking from a very experienced composer because it gives everyone the OPTION to use or not use the choir when the music is edited to the picture. That's just a smart, professional suggestion to make, and many takes of songs are recorded with certain elements swapped to other instruments, or changed on the fly, simply to give the music editor more options.

    • @macmurfy2jka
      @macmurfy2jka Před 4 lety +4

      demovidtest agreed

    • @christophernuzzi2780
      @christophernuzzi2780 Před 4 lety +15

      This whole video is a collection of big, subjective leaps. He has an "it is that way because I say so" attitude. Personally, I disagree with almost every word out of his mouth.

    • @macmurfy2jka
      @macmurfy2jka Před 4 lety +20

      Christopher Nuzzi I do agree with his thesis, though. The music in the sequel trilogy is certainly forgettable compared to the original and prequel trilogies. This is especially true of TLJ. Weather Williams is over the hill, is phoning it in, or is being badly directed, doesn’t really matter.
      Lets be honest hear, thats more of an indictment of the people producing and directing the movies as a whole, and less to to with the music people directly. After all, at the end of the day, they have the final word on these projects. They are the first and last lines of defense for the project’s quality. If Williams isn’t performing up to snuff, they should have set him straight or gotten someone who could.
      The blame for the failure of this project sit firmly on Disney. You’ld have to have a really good argument to convince me otherwise.

    • @righthere27
      @righthere27 Před 4 lety +1

      @@macmurfy2jka I agree, one of the complaints I had when I saw the first Disney trilogy. Though his harping on leitmotif in movies that are heavily inspired and treated like movie serials is baffling to me.

  • @cameronjosephvideos5942
    @cameronjosephvideos5942 Před 4 lety +197

    Original Trilogy: Whatever that Tatooine one was, Main Star Wars theme, Imperial March
    Prequels: Duel of the fates, Duel of Heroes
    Sequels: ??? honestly I don't remember anything other than remixes of the original soundtrack

    • @ZakJordan98
      @ZakJordan98 Před 4 lety +18

      Rey's Theme and Kylo Ren's motif are the only one's i remember that aren't taken from the other movies

    • @outsidetheasylum_1
      @outsidetheasylum_1 Před 4 lety +18

      +Trade Federation/Droid invasion theme, Across the Stars, Arena theme. (from the prequels)

    • @UnderNettle4974
      @UnderNettle4974 Před 4 lety +4

      Prequels: Across the Stars

    • @Gambit771
      @Gambit771 Před 4 lety +1

      @@ZakJordan98 I don't remember how those tunes go.

    • @ZakJordan98
      @ZakJordan98 Před 4 lety

      @@Gambit771 Tbh don't blame you, they're merely the best of a bland lot

  • @Andrew-vz3qk
    @Andrew-vz3qk Před 4 lety +19

    remember in the original movies, when we would get long periods where no music was playing? and the tension just built in the silence?

  • @jessiestory
    @jessiestory Před 5 lety +87

    I agree that the Force Theme is obscenely overused, but I adore leitmotifs. I think (if used correctly) they can elicit the perfect thought and emotion for the moment. I do believe in the Star Wars sequels the Force Theme is complete fanservice (for the most part). Interestingly, you rag on Rey's Theme for being a Harry Potter reject and not something that feels like Star Wars, but didn't you say that Star Wars should take chances and makes changes to try to be original and different? So Williams wrote a theme to be driving-but-delicate (to represent the different facets of, Rey's personality) but you say it's bad because it didn't sound like something out of Star Wars (something familiar/possibly reference)? It's new. It's original. Sure, it's not as complex as 'Luke and Leia', as sweeping as 'Across the Stars', or as "catchy" as the 'Imperial March,' but it's still decently memorable and it's still very pretty. And it does it's job. Having her theme be a leitmotif instead being fully thematic, lends to modern film making's way of faster editing. Plus, you can stick the theme into many situations without having to commit to trying to develop it each time you use it.
    Interesting video on the whole, but I think your general point was muddled down by a little contradiction. Maybe personal bias?

    • @YogGroove
      @YogGroove Před 5 lety +4

      I mostly agree with Tantacrul overall, but I think he's totally off when it regards Rey's theme. Not to mention, the Music is probably the best part of the Sequel Trilogy. If the rest of the movie was as good as the music, you'd not even notice.

  • @krimzongangbeats
    @krimzongangbeats Před 5 lety +85

    Michael Giacchino will always have a soft spot in my heart
    Rogue One was like Medal Of Honor in space

    • @scottkrafft6830
      @scottkrafft6830 Před 4 lety +3

      But Star Wars isn't Medal Of Honor. It's Star Wars. xD

    • @hallowtrash9874
      @hallowtrash9874 Před 4 lety +7

      Scott Krafft
      Big brain

    • @sparkside217
      @sparkside217 Před 4 lety +4

      He seems to do his best work when he has time (not surprising). Pixar movies have a huge runway, and his Pixar work is definitely his best imo. Rogue One had him with no time at all, and there's not a lot of creativity in it.

    • @weirdofromhalo
      @weirdofromhalo Před 4 lety +3

      Actually Giacchino did great. Watch Sideways' video on Rogue One.

    • @The1stFishBone
      @The1stFishBone Před 4 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/Fv7QcsuvfH0/video.html. 2nd best game soundtrack ever. Halo being #1 of course.

  • @Marco_Onyxheart
    @Marco_Onyxheart Před 4 lety +58

    Can we just have a moment of silence for the greatness that is the Phantom Menace soundtrack? The movie might not be respected, but the soundtrack is just crazy good.

    • @koldemperor8474
      @koldemperor8474 Před rokem

      The movie isn’t respected because it’s a corny attempt to Disneyfy Star Wars. Lucas admitted it himself.

  • @doesanythingbreathe
    @doesanythingbreathe Před 4 lety +44

    i’ve gone so long without hearing or thinking about “look what you made me do” thanks a lot

    • @palewine
      @palewine Před 3 lety +2

      Look what you made @pknm do!

  • @willmcc4070
    @willmcc4070 Před 5 lety +456

    oi stop bashing my leitmotifs they are fundamentally why lotr and star wars music is so good

    • @Kissamiess
      @Kissamiess Před 5 lety +89

      I'm pretty much addicted to those things, but I'm willing to entertain the idea that their use and especially overuse is a bad thing.

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer Před 5 lety +46

      Just imagine lambasting Wagner for his use of leitmotif's in Twilight of the Gods. "Dude you used all that themes before and now I have to listen to this for 4 and half hours?!" Pff..

    • @saber-jocky3436
      @saber-jocky3436 Před 5 lety +74

      @@Kissamiess It's the overuse that needs addressed. My take is that they are falling back on the music to try to get an emotional response because character development and connection simply isn't there. They are compensating for poor story through our connection of the music and far better story telling.

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Před 5 lety +5

      Operatic film score is the best. Especially for the regular viewer. So many people don't even realize the importance of music, I honestly don't know how they'd fair if movies didn't give the subtle clues and emotions via music and the leitmotifs

    • @Richard_Nickerson
      @Richard_Nickerson Před 5 lety +1

      @Alyn Smith
      Original main theme jumbled about in Rogue One?

  • @TheMrVengeance
    @TheMrVengeance Před 4 lety +56

    Not sure if you did it intentionally; but in a video on reification in Star Wars, putting Georg Lukács on the screen was excellent. 👌🏻

    • @Tantacrul
      @Tantacrul  Před 4 lety +33

      I never even thought about that, Lol!

    • @madeline6951
      @madeline6951 Před rokem +1

      this is hilarious and criminally underrated

  • @lolshark99b49
    @lolshark99b49 Před 4 lety +21

    The worst thing about Ride of the Valkyries in Watchmen is that the exact piece has a completely different meaning in the graphic novel!!!

  • @Troopertroll
    @Troopertroll Před 3 lety +14

    Any time "In the Hall of the Mountain King" plays in a commercial or other media I instantly tune out. People use the *Incompetence* technique you mentioned because the score itself is epic and they want [PRODUCT] to seem epic, when there's absolutely no gravity behind it 100% of the time.

  • @enigmaodell6806
    @enigmaodell6806 Před 4 lety +240

    It's so funny to see that EVERYONE with technical knowledge hates the new star wars movies. A dude did a tactical analysis, another fight scene analysis, you did a musical analysis, another did the technical story telling aspect.

    • @oldbird4601
      @oldbird4601 Před 4 lety +6

      True

    • @Flowtail
      @Flowtail Před 4 lety +9

      perhaps films aren't only meant to be enjoyed on a technical level

    • @Orsan_
      @Orsan_ Před 4 lety +30

      Technically the prequels are the ones to blame in the alleged “fight analysis,” as the original trilogy didn't have any consistency nor real structure in that matter. The overloaded and glossed over choreography made everyone think that the lightsaber fights should be like that in the new movies, while they didn't aim for such things. Of course they are flawed, but it's not really the point. They are science fiction, a lot of stuff while put through the lense of overanalyzing end up being extremely bad. Both prequels and original trilogy could suffer the same issues. It's not that they're more flawed than the previous ones, it's that most people just plain hate this new movies (I do, at least the ones directed by Abrahams), and try to “justify” or “settle” their hatred in nonsensical critics that in fact lead to nowhere and could be a double edged weapon if applied to previous films. Some are kinda on point or at least we'll structured, but the hate received by TLJ is simply ridiculous and has been tied to childish fanboy cry in some “critical” form. This video is NOT in that realm of critic, of course. This has a point and stablish the aim on the general musical analysis, not a “TLJ is bad music” kind of video.

    • @Tamaki742
      @Tamaki742 Před 4 lety +15

      @@Flowtail Maybe, but it helps elevate the films beyond just being enjoyable. That's what makes them unique and interesting.

    • @Flowtail
      @Flowtail Před 4 lety +7

      @@Tamaki742 true, but the implication of the comment kinda makes me wary--it's not said, but Enigma implies that the more "technical" analysis are, like, more "true" to the films' actual quality?
      like, the themes of 8 were pretty strong--that was why the racist asshole crowd hated it so much. but that's not a technical quality, so it usually gets put on the back-burner for the kinds of folk who focus on technical stuff

  • @jackpollard550
    @jackpollard550 Před 4 lety +45

    Am I the only one who thinks Kylo’s theme sounds like a badass version of the classic “WAH WAAAAAH”?
    Seems pretty fitting, I have to say.

    • @theredfish6258
      @theredfish6258 Před 4 lety +5

      Kylo's theme was the theme I actually remembered the most and actively looked for when I got out of the theater. I actually really liked it.

    • @andrewstout1832
      @andrewstout1832 Před 4 lety +2

      @@theredfish6258 John Williams borrowed Kylo's theme from Alban Berg's opera Wozzeck. It's the "Wir Arme Leut" leitmotif. Listen to the Interlude from Act III.

    • @DistractedGlobeGuy
      @DistractedGlobeGuy Před 3 lety +1

      More like a half-remembered improv on the Renée Beloq theme from _Raiders of The Lost Ark._ Like how Whiter Shade of Pale sort-of weaves around a misquote from Bach's (?) Minuet.

  • @Nethseaar
    @Nethseaar Před 5 lety +156

    Excellent analysis. Hard no on abandoning leitmotifs, though --
    Yes, the soundtracks for the Disney Star Wars movies heavily abuse the original leitmotifs. Yes, references to the original soundtracks in sequel movies ought to be sparing and carefully considered.
    However, linking musical ideas with elements of a story allows for extremely powerful musical payoffs when done well. Just because it can be done poorly doesn't mean the technique should be abandoned. The emotional resonance of meaningful, returning themes makes leitmotifs among the most powerful tools available when making a movie. The Lord of the Rings soundtrack is a masterful example of this -- though, interestingly, The Hobbit soundtrack is comparatively a disaster.
    I think the main issue with the Disney Star Wars movies (and The Hobbit) is abject failure on the part of the writers, compounded with other dubious choices (Rogue One's intro shots, for instance). Given the quality of the writing, maybe it would have been better to compose without leitmotifs. How can Rey be given a fitting leitmotif when she is so poorly characterized? For all that she begins the film lonely and fiery in her self-defense, she ends the film an all-powerful Force fairy with whim as her overriding motivation. How can the First Order's theme be compelling when the First Order is not? I think the theme is exquisitely appropriate -- as the First Order is generic and dull, so the theme is. It's like Williams knows that the new movies are parodies of Star Wars, and is writing his music accordingly.
    Then again, maybe incessant returns of the original leitmotifs is one of the main reasons people are still excited to see a Star Wars movie. Cheap though it is, and as much as it destroys the efficacy of the leitmotifs, it's more effective than having dramatically different music that doesn't reference the original soundtracks.
    Hopefully the market, restricted and distorted though it is (i.e. ridden with cronyism and corporate welfare), and ignorant and foolish though most consumers are, successfully convinces Disney executives to reconsider their plans. Solo's box office performance gives me hope.

    • @evertonporter7887
      @evertonporter7887 Před 5 lety

      How about a Star Wars movie with only the opening crawl music...

    • @Nethseaar
      @Nethseaar Před 5 lety

      It would match the intelligence of Disney's Star Wars movies. If they want to continue to neglect the writing, they may as well completely toss out intelligent soundtrack composition as well.

    • @flashbaggins427
      @flashbaggins427 Před 5 lety +4

      @@Nethseaar Relevant XKCD: xkcd.com/1843/

    • @Jallorn
      @Jallorn Před 5 lety +17

      There's another youtuber, Sideways, who did a video about Rey's theme that feels relevant to this discussion. He defends John Williams, citing that Rey's theme is written the way it is due to William's lack of knowledge about where her character is going, that he slid in several of the iconic Star Wars themes in her theme so that he could evolve her leitmotiv with whatever direction she ended up going. So I think that supports the idea that the failure here is on the part of the writers, that Williams just wasn't given enough to work with, and so relied on what was there because he couldn't afford to close off musical avenues that the future might require.

    • @Nethseaar
      @Nethseaar Před 5 lety +1

      ​@@flashbaggins427 That XKCD is on point!
      Also, good reference to Sideways -- I definitely appreciate the John Williams videos on that channel.

  • @georgesikorski9891
    @georgesikorski9891 Před 4 lety +16

    I think the leitmotif and reification in Star Wars suits the franchise. It truly makes it feel like a coherent and consistent universe. I think it can be dialed back a bit (Like overusage of the force theme) but I still believe that themes like the Imperial March are crucial to Star Wars and shouldn't be completely discarded

  • @icebergmm
    @icebergmm Před 4 lety +198

    "Duel of the Fates"" was the best thing to come from the prequels.

    • @fatsilentbob
      @fatsilentbob Před 4 lety +5

      That is one of the best in the trilogy.

    • @animageofsound5351
      @animageofsound5351 Před 4 lety +2

      gotta agree.. the best nostalgia I have from that era is playing some PC games with that playing in the soundtrack.. Good times..

    • @tylerskiss
      @tylerskiss Před 4 lety +12

      Battle of the Heroes blew Duel of the Fates out of the water.

    • @steevrawjers
      @steevrawjers Před 4 lety +1

      IcebergMM you mean besides the prequels

    • @steevrawjers
      @steevrawjers Před 4 lety

      Cyril true

  • @SimsAwesome
    @SimsAwesome Před 4 lety +21

    The trailer for the Last Jedi was not scored by John Williams, it was done by a trailer composer.

  • @raycearcher5794
    @raycearcher5794 Před 4 lety +38

    Tantacrul: "Film hacks transform meaningful music into lazy shorthand."
    Film Colorists: "WELCOME TO OUR LIVING HELL."

  • @coffeestainedwreck
    @coffeestainedwreck Před 5 lety +47

    Still waiting for the Sideways Vs Tentacrul leitmotif smackdown.

  • @evrypixelcounts
    @evrypixelcounts Před 5 lety +359

    Revenge of the sith had the best score....star wars music at it's best

    • @Fearless1247
      @Fearless1247 Před 5 lety +33

      Agree, the beginning of the movie with the drums, Padmes ruminations. And anakin vs obi wan, general grievous theme, march on the jedi temple, some examples

    • @RaptorJesus.
      @RaptorJesus. Před 5 lety +5

      Dual of Fates says no. ;)

    • @unchallengedmediocrity7886
      @unchallengedmediocrity7886 Před 5 lety +18

      That was also in episode 3, but it wasn't prominent.

    • @StrigoiVampire
      @StrigoiVampire Před 5 lety

      @@RaptorJesus.O que há de errado com o Dual Fates? Eu acho que essa música é uma das mais icônicas de Star Wars.

    • @caldog619
      @caldog619 Před 5 lety +9

      @@Fearless1247 also 'Anakins Betrayal' (the order 66 music) and 'The Birth of Twins and Padme's Destiny' (the music that plays in the last Darth Vader scene)

  • @Oi-fo1wt
    @Oi-fo1wt Před 4 lety +22

    I think you’re right about music needing creativity and reusing the same leitmotifs is definitely a mistake. However, I think leitmotifs are highly beneficial when written and used correctly. Consider the Mandalorian TV show. I think the Mandalorian score is great but when a character uses the force and the yoda/force motifs don’t play, I feel like Im in a completely different cinematic universe. Again, I’m not saying all music should be recycled over and over. But sometimes music is as much as part of the world as characters, setting, and rules.
    Also, I would have to disagree about your point about Rey’s theme. I feel like Rey’s theme is one of the strongest musical pieces in the star wars universe. You claim that the star wars universe lacks originality and I totally agree. Rey’s theme suits her character (however awful it may be) well so why does it matter if it FEELS like star wars music or not? If something doesn’t feel like star wars, it’s the fault of the thing itself, not the music describing it.
    Overall I think this was a great video but some of the points were a bit off. The leitmotifs hold incredible value to the cinematic universe and they should be used appropriately.

  • @Percival917
    @Percival917 Před 5 lety +34

    "The Force Awakens..." "original and creative..."
    WELL, THERE GOES YOUR CREDIBILITY.

  • @stephencrawley2862
    @stephencrawley2862 Před 5 lety +110

    As someone who loves Rogue One, I'll acknowledge that the use of Luke's theme when Bail Organa appears was a misuse of the theme. However, the use of the Rebel's theme when the X-Wing saved the Scarif ground troops and the use of the Imperial theme when Vader is present is *perfectly* appropriate, and I don't know why you're criticizing themes for being used when the things they represent are *on screen* as "uncreative".
    This leads in to your improper criticism of Rogue One as a whole; you criticize it for using staple classic Star Wars icons when the film literally takes place where those things first appeared. The film was never meant to be wholly brand-new and different; that's what The Force Awakens should have been. Using X-Wings in a film that takes place immediately before A New Hope is proper, not uncreative; whereas using X-Wings in a film that takes place 30 years after the original trilogy is improper and uncreative. Rogue One was different and creative in its stories and main cast, yet you just yawn at those. Like you said yourself, when you do something different there's no pleasing everyone and apparently it didn't please you.

    • @ARCcommand
      @ARCcommand Před 5 lety +10

      I couldn't agree more, you phrased it perfectly!

    • @Sawngawkuh
      @Sawngawkuh Před 5 lety +8

      Luke's theme wasn't used for when Bail appeared, though. Luke's official leitmotif is the main theme of the franchise (hence why you always hear it accompanying him, or when Williams uses it for him when he utilizes the twins' two themes for the climax of RotS). What played for Organa was the Force theme, which was initially tied to Obi-Wan before becoming a general idea for Jedi for the rest of the series. With that said, obviously it doesn't fit for that character either, because he's not a Jedi. :P

    • @gregoryl.levitre9759
      @gregoryl.levitre9759 Před 5 lety +3

      Rogue One was boring and uninspired.

    • @stephencrawley2862
      @stephencrawley2862 Před 5 lety +22

      @@gregoryl.levitre9759 Wow, thanks for that insightful opinion. No one has ever said that before, and it certainly never occurred to me that anyone might think that. You have totally changed my mind on the movie. Good job.

    • @politicscommentator
      @politicscommentator Před 5 lety +2

      I completely agree with your argument. Rogue One's use of established themes was appropriate and got me excited when they are placed at the right moments.

  • @wazzu4488
    @wazzu4488 Před 3 lety +13

    I'm glad to see that the Mandalorian theme didnt have this issue. It was completely new, while still having the _spirit_ of star wars music.

  • @shayneoneill1506
    @shayneoneill1506 Před 6 lety +19

    I should also note that the reasons Williams stuff in SW has a lot of similarity to Holst etc, is a practical one. George Lucas had edited the film using orchestral pieces he thought fit then handed that to Williams and told him to rebuild it with original tunes. So basically Williams kinda rewrote the tunes. This is pretty common in film scoring apparently

  • @focalized
    @focalized Před 5 lety +15

    I loved how Rouge 1 opened as prelude up to its true, though brief title frame and musical theme. Making Star Wars different in any way yet still retaining similar feelings is an imposing task. I think it worked.

  • @jmfs1701
    @jmfs1701 Před 4 lety +18

    Tantacrul: The preocess of reififcation.
    Sheeve Palpatine: Ironic.

  • @TheDen-ec9xe
    @TheDen-ec9xe Před 5 lety +119

    I was really enjoying this video for how well it explains the structure of music and how Williams took bits and pieces from other maestros to create his own masterpiece. But then I lost you at you whining over the use of leitmotifs. Star Wars was pretty much always about leitmotifs. Williams' music is all about leitmotifs. The problem is not leitmotifs themselves, but how they're being used. It's how they're being dropped as musical cues to tingle to nostalgia instead of being, as you said, part of how the story is being told.
    Pity, I was really enjoying this until that point. Makes me wonder if your original version was better thought out on that last part.

    • @Tantacrul
      @Tantacrul  Před 5 lety +14

      I'll admit one thing - I'm unhappy with the section you mentioned because I didn't flesh it out enough (was worried the time was already running way too long). However, I do think that the choice of Leitmotifs is structurally problematic because it nails the music down too much. You know each characters will have an identifying theme - and therefore you're guaranteeing a rehash of the Empire theme / Darth Vader theme for the bad guys. It's chicken and egg though - the movies are rehashes, so the music has to be a rehash too. For me, watching the first movie, I rolled my eyes when I heard Kylo Ren's theme. It told me all I needed to know about how unoriginal the films were going to be.

    • @TheDen-ec9xe
      @TheDen-ec9xe Před 5 lety +7

      @@Tantacrul On the argument about rehashing, I agree. These pathetic movies are as trite and nostalgia-clingy as they can get, the amount of music recycled is just absurd (Tie Fighter Attack from ANH, Force theme EVERYWHERE, Emperor's theme for Snoke at complete random). Hell, Williams barely utilized his Jedi Steps motive outside of the beginning, instead going for the same old Han and Leia theme and a sort of heroic remix of the Imperial March for Luke. Solo, on the other hand, while being still dependant on leitmotifs, felt more creative musically speaking, although some rehashes here and there were still present. The movie itself was just bland and forgettable.

    • @bovineking8927
      @bovineking8927 Před 5 lety +1

      The occasional "nostalgia moment" is a great choice. I cheated when asteroid field came on in solo, but route fighter attack has been so overused it's not even funny. Still waiting for a reuse of battle if Naboo......

    • @gaiusflaminius4861
      @gaiusflaminius4861 Před 5 lety +1

      "I rolled my eyes when I heard Kylo Ren's theme. It told me all I needed to know about how unoriginal the films were going to be." - I'm glad I didn't roll my eyes so it didn't tell me how "unoriginal the films were going to be" at that time. Also I'm glad for not taking up musicology or musical analysis as the path of life instead giving myself to piano playing: they say sometimes reading too much specialized literature hurts. I accept your POV: your type is Apollonian principles-driven way of contemplating things. My question is where is Dionysian-driven one?
      Nothing to contend your arguments with, though. Excellent.

    • @alfa01spotivo
      @alfa01spotivo Před 5 lety +8

      @@gaiusflaminius4861 wut

  • @dkevans
    @dkevans Před 5 lety +31

    20:56 "It would take a whole video to do this piece justice..."
    Oh, go on then. :)

  • @ApsisApocynthion
    @ApsisApocynthion Před 4 lety +46

    From a musicology point of view, your thesis comes across a little weak. I appreciate the research and most of your info is on point, but you don't really land at the core problem of what is happening with these films. You're posing a black and white fallacy when you say there at two choices: 1. Create a new score or 2. Just use the existing melodies.
    Both choices are actually incorrect in the case for Star Wars. The first choice is bad because John Williams's score is really great and iconic BUT MORE IMPORTANTLY, because familiar musical material helps to flesh out a fictional world, story, or aesthetic. Even if John Williams' original score was mediocre, later composers should still look to use its best parts and improve the weaker parts while adding to it, rather than taking it away. The idea is crafting a believable world and music is a big part of that, which is why the original score is extremely important, unless the world you're crafting not meant to be linked by music and aesthetics in general. The second choice is bad because of the arguments you present - composers risk overusing the same material without any deviation until its meaning and power is diluted.
    So then I ask, how was Wagner able to re-use his same musical motives in his grand saga of Der Ring without destroying his themes of meaning? It's because of the third choice - musical development. He didn't just copy and paste the same melodies for 15 hours... He changed them organically, extended them, varied the texture, changed the instruments, transposed them or modulated them, and used other means of keeping them relevant to the narrative. The first time we hear Siegfried's tragic motif and the very last time we hear it, they sound recognizably the same, have a similar meaning and function, but don't sound stale because of the motif's musical journey alongside with the story narrative. The melody went from a sort of reserved, melancholic, optimism, in the end of Die Walkure, to a more heroic straight forward optimism in Siegfried, and then back again in the end of the saga - a span of three operas. Wagner's leitmotivs gain meaning with repetition whereas the motifs in Star Wars have the reverse effect.
    In short, the reason is a lack of musical development, which is why the themes become static and stale. However, this option is not mutually exclusive with writing more original material. A good composer would do both and I agree that the parts in between the motifs are weak and forgettable. There is just no real way to excuse that.

    • @hb3393
      @hb3393 Před 3 lety

      Read through this comment a little sceptically and then I saw the Wagner and Mahler playlists on your profile 🤣

  • @ProjectEchoshadow
    @ProjectEchoshadow Před 4 lety +38

    Rey-ification that’s kind of what I heard people complaining about with the film.

  • @horvathbenedek3596
    @horvathbenedek3596 Před 4 lety +93

    I think you're giving Rogue One a hard time for no reason, while passing on TFA's failings in creativity. Sure Rogue One used the Force theme/binary subsent theme badly, though that can be attributed to corporate interference. However, using the imperial march can be explained with the fact that Rogue One was meant to be a direct prequel to Episode 4, so it makes sense for the score to hit the same noted as the original.
    And your criticism of not including a title crawl is just wrong.
    "I will criticize you for deviating from the tired theme I expected of you, which I would criticize you for". This is a catch 22 - the movie can't win in your book. Personally, I never really cared about the title crawl. For me it was always about the first scenes ever since seeing the OT, and Alien. And I think Rogue One absolutely nailed it. The quick jumpcut to a distant planet emphasized the lonelines and vastness of space, and the music instills fear and uncertainty in the viewer. Though the opening score was not much to talk about, as it was the rework of a less known theme, there were plenty of memorable themes in Rogur One. Particularly the Jeddha theme stood out to me.

    • @HalooINC
      @HalooINC Před 4 lety +7

      It's not a catch 22, a catch 22 has no correct answer. Whether you agree with his criticism or not his complaint is that they feign like they are going to do the title crawl but then don't, the "correct" answer to the author of this video is to either A: do the title crawl that people expected from the shot you set up or B: use a different shot that doesn't bait the title crawl, then proceed to not use the title crawl.
      In order to accomplish A or B you would have to be aware of expectations and then make a choice to either differentiate or stay the same, instead their choice is to get the familiarity of the title crawl but then do something different.
      I personally disagree with the author on this point and think it works because Rogue one IS familiar but different, it's Star Wars and we all know exactly what's going to happen but it's also not quite a space opera this time it's more like a war movie and that's different, thematically to me that works.

    • @horvathbenedek3596
      @horvathbenedek3596 Před 4 lety +21

      @@HalooINC The lucasfilm logo is not "baiting" anything. It's simply not part of the movie. Hell, it's not exclusive to Star Wars - as far as i know, other lucasarts products have it too.
      As for catch 22 - he said the movie shouldn't reuse themes and motives, but then chastised the movie for innovating.

    • @HalooINC
      @HalooINC Před 4 lety +5

      @@horvathbenedek3596 Again it's not JUST the lucasfilm logo, its the logo and the pan upwards, the whole video is about Reification and we all know what that signals at the beginning of a Star Wars film, the title crawl. Again because in his opinion it's basically trying to reuse a theme and motive but also do something different it's not really innovating hence the joke about Red Letter Media mocking it as not an innovation.
      You can disagree if you want but it's not a catch-22.

    • @horvathbenedek3596
      @horvathbenedek3596 Před 4 lety +8

      @@HalooINC I don't know what you are smoking. Watch from 22:00 (ironic) - Star Wars logo, Lucas Films logo, jumpcut, pan upwards. At no point does the film bait the title crawl, nor does it imitiate the original movies too much.
      And it's a catch 22 from the standpoint of the creatord and the maker of this video. Show me how it isn't.

    • @HalooINC
      @HalooINC Před 4 lety +2

      @@horvathbenedek3596 What happens during the title crawl? basically nothing is in the middle of the shot except space because that's where the title and the exposition will go. What happens in that jumpcut? There's nothing in the middle of the shot except space because that's where the title and exposition will go... oh wait they just panned away, fucking fooled us.
      At this point we're talking in circles but it's not a catch-22 because even if you fundamentally disagree with the authors premise he clearly has something he thinks the movie could have done correctly, just because you're interpretation means the movie couldn't do anything to please him doesn't mean the author didn't have something in mind. If there is a correct answer, and clearly to the author there was, then it's not a catch-22.

  • @ArmouredProductions
    @ArmouredProductions Před 4 lety +36

    I liked Rogue One's soundtrack because it was similar to the OTs. I love the Imperial Suite, it's a nice variation of the Imperial March and it fits for representing the Empire as a whole, while the Imperial March is more for Darth Vader. I didn't like Force Awakens because it had nothing good sounding and iconic. At leas RO sounded good.

  • @skeletorrobo
    @skeletorrobo Před 5 lety +115

    I heard that John Williams couldn't work with a complete cut of the Last Jedi, so he was hamstrung. Jaws, ET, Starwars, Close Encounters, Indiana Jones, AI. Don't blame the master John Williams. Blame Johnson, Kennedy and Disney.

    • @Reggie1408
      @Reggie1408 Před 4 lety +9

      That's how composing for movies works. You never get to see the whole movie.

    • @jamesduffy7549
      @jamesduffy7549 Před 4 lety +6

      How is that the directors fault? Besides, that happens all the time

    • @polymetric2614
      @polymetric2614 Před 4 lety +9

      @@Reggie1408 That's not true. Usually the composer doesn't begin their job until the production reaches picture lock. TLJ was a special case.

    • @SirYodaJedi
      @SirYodaJedi Před 4 lety +6

      To be more accurate, he was asked to compose prior to post-production. Johnson wanted to use Williams's actual compositions during post-production, rather than temp music (but Williams obviously doesn't do as well composing that way, comparing Last Jedi's soundtrack to the other seven films).

    • @jamesduffy7549
      @jamesduffy7549 Před 4 lety +4

      I feel like pretty soon people are gonna start telling me why I can blame rian johnson for 9/11, its the new "thanks obama"

  • @politicscommentator
    @politicscommentator Před 5 lety +17

    I appreciate your musical expertise on the subject, but I got to have to disagree about you saying that Rogue One was not as good with the musical choices as The Force Awakens. I think the use of certain themes or pieces of established music helps Rogue One. I can agree the the Force Theme playing with Bail Organa appeared on the screen was probably not the best use of it, but everything else was great.
    Check out Sideways video of Rogue One to get his defense of liefmotifs in Rogue One.

  • @beyondtheirlevel3726
    @beyondtheirlevel3726 Před 4 lety +6

    Oh my god, until now I never knew why Tchaikovskys Violin Concerto had this familiarity...

  • @BungieStudios
    @BungieStudios Před 5 lety +13

    Leitmotifs can be great. I think Marty's work as a jingle writer for commercials helped make Halo so iconic by assigning themes to different characters.

  • @Wpic
    @Wpic Před 5 lety +100

    Mom I want some Star Wars music
    No we have Star Wars music at home
    Star Wars music at home

  • @Adeloye1000
    @Adeloye1000 Před 4 lety +6

    13:33 kinda dried out how everyone uses Zack as the "hack" director. What about if he understood the meaning behind the initial use of the music and decided to reuse that to gove the exact same feeling.
    America unceremoniously kills but heres ceremonial music

  • @chicopapass
    @chicopapass Před 5 lety +16

    That's the first time I've heard a different perspective on Hendrix's anthem cover... what's the theory? Naturally school told me it HAD to be anti war, and a quick internet search leaves me flooded with the usual narrative.

    • @fuglaa4766
      @fuglaa4766 Před 4 lety +1

      just throwing bullshit out there with no proof and gishgalloping for 10 minutes is peak youtube

  • @fredleggett923
    @fredleggett923 Před 5 lety +37

    While I agree in general that reification could become a Bad Thing, making Star Wars the example is EXTREMELY problematic. That problem being that John Williams' themes and other compositions are interwoven into the DNA of the film series. You can build on it, perhaps even riff on it, but you can't simply excise it in favor of something completely new.
    To misquote Jonathan Kent, those themes are there for a reason. I've read the complaints in here that Williams' music is now little more than a meme, but remember why memes are effective and (sometimes) funny - they're immediately identifiable. Identification isn't something to avoid, but rather something to pursue. When it's not pursued, you're liable to get a bunch of music that is neither effective within the context of where it's placed in the film nor memorable after curtain drop.
    Howard Shore also did this for The Lord of the Rings and it worked magnificently. John Barry was also a maestro at this for the Bond films (David Arnold, eh, not so much).
    That said, the Star Trek film series is a somewhat decent example of how reification can be avoided. Jerry Goldsmith's score for The Motion Picture is almost unrivaled in its thematic brilliance. And then James Horner stepped in and gave us two more wonderful bombastic scores for The Wrath of Khan and The Search for Spock. Unfortunately, Leonard Rosenman's efforts for The Voyage Home were completely lost on me (though I did quite enjoy his employ for Bakshi's Lord of the Rings). Goldsmith returned to rescue The Final Frontier from schlock to entertaining schlock. However, Cliff Eidelman's compositions for The Undiscovered Country were just okay-ish and only really shined during the ending credits.
    To summarize, reification in and of itself isn't necessarily just laziness on the part of the composer, especially someone of John Williams' caliber. In Star Wars' case, it GREATLY helps Star Wars to BE Star Wars.
    BTW, I echo the lament other people have expressed in here about film scoring being a lost art. It's actually a big reason why I can't muster a lot of excitement for modern-day movies.

  • @tedb.5707
    @tedb.5707 Před rokem +5

    There was a great disturbance in the score, like a million motifs crying out ...and being abused.

  • @virgult
    @virgult Před 5 lety +14

    Finding Georg Lukács referenced in Star Wars: ✓

  • @CameronM1138
    @CameronM1138 Před 5 lety +36

    ...what? Star Wars literally wouldn't be what it is today without John Williams's excellent use of leitmotifs. He's one of the only composers who still consistently does it well and if they were to abandon that in future Star Wars soundtracks that would truly be the death of the franchise. Bringing up Rogue One is especially egregious. TFA does make quite heavy use of existing themes but Rogue One is mostly original material, only bringing in Williams's themes for key moments. Darth Vader's scenes wouldn't have been anywhere nearly as impactful without the Imperial March scoring them. It wouldn't have felt like Star Wars.
    I do agree that the score for TFA was a bit weak, but it was the parts that *weren't* using leitmotifs that I found lacking in originality. I thought he did a better job with that in TLJ though, with more memorable non-thematic action music.

    • @CrabTastingMan
      @CrabTastingMan Před 4 lety +2

      *JAR JAR ABRAMS and his cronies could not finish the TFA script on time, so he could not give enough time for John Williams to contemplate what score to give it.* So Williams had to churn out generic utilitarian scores all the while Jar Jar was struggling to write something original for once, then double-failing when his uncreative results amount to overrated *MYSTERY BOXES* that have no substance. Also, John Williams's failing health due to age, he could no longer be frequently flown about studios and whatnot so he had to do it in as minimum number of stays as possible.
      Mystery boxes are just an overglorified misuse of another tool called The McGuffin. Except that McGuffins are used in plots that are centered around the drama and struggle of getting the McGuffin so what they are are not important to the scope of the plot. But the way JarJar Abrams uses it and rebrands it as Mystery Boxes, they are just core parts of the movie plot that needed explaining, but he postpones explaining it like it's one of those weekly TV series he was working on and not a movie with 2 year gaps. All because he doens't know how to amaze the audience, so he keeps gesturing for us to be amazed, like serving us fine wine after a meal that consisted of a plate full of empty air, then telling us what an amazing meal we had tonight just cuz the wine was tasty.
      Jar Jar Abrams is a retarded hack.

  • @jlhitz35
    @jlhitz35 Před 4 lety +5

    At 15:09, I think the force theme is used here to symbolize Bail Organa as the Rebellion's connection to Obi-Wan. Binary Sunset was used as Obi-Wan's theme for most of the first movie, and later in Rogue One, when Bail is talking about Obi-Wan the force theme comes back. The use of the force theme during Bail's first appearance in the movie isn't pandering to nostalgia (at least that's not it's only purpose); it's a reminder of Bail's importance to the story of A New Hope and the music itself shows the connection.

  • @DJMankiewicz
    @DJMankiewicz Před 6 lety +32

    I greatly enjoyed your thoughtfully laid out critique of these non-risks taken in the recent Star Warses. I agree that I don't think I will be looking at music in the same way again either. Although, even before you introduced me to reification, I remember in no way finding the recent Star Wars additions memorable. They did the job, and yeah, I teared up in each one in the theater when the right music button got pushed in my head... But the memories of hearing those themes for the first time are already taken up by other Star Wars films. Watching a new Star Wars film is almost sad, now, because while the feeling of "Star Wars" music is there, the enduring experience is more akin to watching a soulless, immediately-forgettable Marvel movie. Brass and sampled drums ahoy...
    Excited to hit my head against the advanced level links. The place of reification in our everyday, non-musical lives seems like it could have vast consequences. Seems perhaps related to the society of the spectacle, i.e., pertaining to what we both perceive and desire from the things we take in day after day - even if it's just The Force theme.

  • @timgehrsitz3267
    @timgehrsitz3267 Před 5 lety +13

    I gotta disagree about Rey's theme. Adventurous but lonely does fit Rey and that sound, and I think it's a really cool song on its own

    • @jackthorton10
      @jackthorton10 Před 4 lety +1

      Alone in the stars with so much to see only to be confronted with reality

    • @seanshamblin1131
      @seanshamblin1131 Před 4 lety +1

      I think rey's music is the best thing about the character.

  • @starbomber
    @starbomber Před 3 lety +5

    9:46 I remember George Lucas talking about some of this in an interview that was on the first VHS remaster of the star wars trilogy (yes I'm that old) Where he talked about writing the scene to music, using it as a temp-track for editing, and then handing those tracks to John Williams saying "can you use some of these melodies, or evoke some of these feelings."

  • @alpha77productions22
    @alpha77productions22 Před 5 lety +29

    Rey's Theme sounds like Harry Potter to me...
    Edit: Oh well, I'm not alone I see.

  • @jacktheflash8478
    @jacktheflash8478 Před 5 lety +22

    This was the first movie scored by John that I don’t remember the music(aside from the reuse of previous themes)

  • @HarmonicVector
    @HarmonicVector Před rokem +4

    Update: They completely ingored what you said, and even straight up had Rey commit identity theft.
    *slowly sinks into couch until completely eaten*

  • @SamVillano
    @SamVillano Před 5 lety +37

    No. Do not get rid of my opera in Star Wars.

  • @NormanconEVE
    @NormanconEVE Před 4 lety +10

    This makes me think of Halo and how 1 was original, 2,3 evolved being part of that trilogy. but how Reach and OSDT felt like something different while still feeling like Halo. Definitely some overlap but it wasn't overuse of like what modern day starwars is doing. Although I cannot speak for 4 or 5...

  • @TaranVH
    @TaranVH Před 4 lety +57

    Bruh fix your subtitles

    • @henrikoldcorn
      @henrikoldcorn Před 3 lety +6

      You’re in all the best places.

    • @adjoint_functor
      @adjoint_functor Před 3 lety +2

      At least he has subtitles, that's a sign of effort. People who put in that kind of effort tend to be the greats like CGP Grey, who treat their videos like productions. He still has my respect

  • @billdestroyerofworlds
    @billdestroyerofworlds Před 4 lety +21

    I think Giacchino's ending score in Rogue One was amazing. It really was time contraints that hindered him on that one. The score for the Last Jedi was absolutely forgettable, however, which I did not like. I heard they made Williams write the score while in the scripting stage, so that might be why leitmotif is overused here.
    I think overall you do have a pretty good point, however.

    • @steevrawjers
      @steevrawjers Před 4 lety

      Bill the Destroyer of Worlds the incredibles had better music than all of these Disney movies

  • @dad6644
    @dad6644 Před 4 lety +14

    Me thinking the live version of Smells Like Teen Spirit is the best version

  • @stefanpredoi4564
    @stefanpredoi4564 Před rokem +4

    One day I want to hear a Star Wars score that's just the weird alien jazz band doing avant-garde improvisations with one instrument representing each character.

  • @PolichromaMusic
    @PolichromaMusic Před 5 lety +40

    How is 19th century orchestra being overused these days? Most soundtracks go for the big Zimmeresque generic synths. We need innovation, yes, but innovation can't mean dumbification of stuff. Between the 19th century (or beginning of the 20th century's) classical music and the forgettable "themes" we have with most scores these days, I'll stay with the orchestra

    • @mathematics117
      @mathematics117 Před 5 lety +9

      I think he meant like Wagnerian orchestra with an extreme love of brass, it makes sense with his sentence after stating that all he hears is brass. He just wants a little more variety in what instruments we utilize in film score. I like a lot of Zimmer's earlier music with the emphasis primarily on the strings, it is a nice reprieve from the big brass used in a lot of williams scores. Not to say that williams isn't good, but variety is the flavor of life. so to speak.

    • @PolichromaMusic
      @PolichromaMusic Před 5 lety +4

      @@mathematics117 Yeah that does make sense. There must be a middle ground between throwing away all of the advances in harmonic development, or even atonal timbre-focused classical stuff and ignoring the advances of technology and production. I'm not a nostalgia glossed eye "I miss the old ways" guy (even though I love the old ways and enjoy it). And even though I love John Williams and have a huge respect and admiration for his craft, I won't say he's original because he's not. He's incredibly competent in what he sets to accomplish.
      John Williams indeed likes brass, but in his vast work he used a lot of other aesthetics too. If you listen to the more drama-fuelled stuff, there's a loooot of strings and woodwinds, and even though he uses the horn a lot, it's adding to the WW section a lot of times. Star Wars, on the other hand, is very brassy and I think that's a conscious decision and, at the time, it was fresh. Sci-Fi usually goes for the futuristic synth sounds, but when you use a military band brass vibe, it passes the idea that war is always the same, only the technology is different. And yes, the new movies are surfing the nostalgia vibe but, honestly? Fine by me. It's enjoyable, and I don't think we should take it too seriously. And the need to innovate is valuable, but sometimes it's overrated.
      And yes, Zimmer was really good. Like really good. He had an amazing balance between the old and the new, he was fresh. Now I think he settled for branding and selling his big brass synth spiced low gritty sound, with a really good production but, in my opinion, low on substance. Really well produced, mixed, interesting sounds, not amounting to anything great. It works, it's big, it's trailer hype, but it's essentially the equivalent of fast food. Overexposure to stimuli.
      And that's what producers want, that's what directors want and that's what sells. So, me personally, I think it's nice to hear the 19th century orchestra in a major blockbuster movie. Even if Holst, Strauss, Wagner, Stravinsky, Mahler, Tchaikovsky, Prokofiev etc etc did it before, it's still REALLY well executed, orchestrated and produced. So I can appreciate that.

    • @HarryFontaine
      @HarryFontaine Před 5 lety +8

      Star Wars is one of the very few film series to actually use a full-size symphony orchestra at the moment - its way cheaper to get 8 cellos and a solo violin and multi-track (which is how most film and tv music is scored now). I'm all for the orchestra too. There is NO overusing

    • @atomicmrpelly
      @atomicmrpelly Před 5 lety

      @@HarryFontaine 8 cellos and a violin? Please can you explain that remark?