|
p>
COMING
SOON




|
| |
Who could have guessed that Marco Beltrami, the
film composer whose musical innovations have redefined the
sound of terror at the end of the 20th Century, had never
watched a horror film prior to writing one of his best known
scores? "Scream was the first one I’d seen in its
entirety," he discloses, "Previous to that I had
little familiarity with the genre, probably because I'm a
cheap scare.
Coming from
a concert background, though, I realized that horror lends
itself well to compositional techniques associated with 20th
Century music, and so I was easily able to come up with a
unique voice for these films. Of course, the movies themselves
are a little bit over the top in their own right, so that
affords me the chance to have fun and shine musically."
Marco Beltrami
has brought new dimensionality to the scoring of suspense and
horror in the cinema, yet his quixotic progress through many
genres of film music reflects more than mere creative
restlessness.In coming to film music, Beltrami sought to
escape from the late 19th century harmonies and melodies that
the immigrant Hollywood composers of the early 20th Century
brought with them from Europe, their legacy having endured as
a dominant paradigm for score writing."Though there will
always be new statements made utilizing that vocabulary, I’d
rather speak my own musical language. Film has the potential
of allowing me to explore my own ideas, which I
find very
attractive." Those ideas have found an ever-widening
audience via numerous recent opportunities for this in-demand
composer.
Beltrami has scored the hit TV drama series The
Practice and his recent film credits include Angel
Eyes and Blade 2. Other Beltrami scores have
been heard on the soundtracks to Scary Movie 2,
Mimic, Joy Ride and the 2002 Sundance
festival favorite The Dangerous Lives of Altar Boys.
In addition to the recognition afforded by his cinematic
efforts, Beltrami has received awards from the American Acade
my of Arts and Letters, the New York Foundation for the Arts,
the ASCAP Foundation, the Harry Warren Fellowship Committee
and Meet the Composer.
Beltrami’s family emigrated from Italy,
and Marco grew up on Long Island, New York, where his
predilection to create music surfaced early on. Beginning
piano lessons at age 6, the future film composer was often
more interested in re-writing, rather than practicing, his
assigned pieces. As a teenager, he played keyboards in rock
bands, but when the future film composer enrolled at Brown
University, music
was not initially his
focus; a career in urban planning beckoned at the time.
Beltrami gravitated to Brown’s electronic music studio, where
he quickly realized the innate compatibility of synthetic
sounds with the European tonal palette. Working there in the
mid-‘80’s, using both older analog synthesizers and
then-recent innovations such as the Synclavier, Beltrami
nurtured a passion for electronic sound and an aptitude for
bold, assured and arrestingly physical musical gestures.He
strove to incorporate synthesis alongside his orchestral,
chamber and vocal works, fostering a predilection for
carefully structured music built with meticulous attention to
detail that has served him well in his cinematic endeavors.
Graduating from
Brown, he studied in Venice, Italy with firebrand avant-garde
composer Luigi Nono, though recalling the period Beltrami
admits that his lessons at the time had more to do with
politics than music. Upon his return to the U.S., he entered
the Yale School of Music on a scholarship. There he was
mentored by one of the most prominent of contemporary American
composers, Jacob Druckman, whose masterful expansions on
principles of orchestration put forward by Stravinsky and
Ravel led Beltrami to cite Druckman as "My biggest
influence, the one who prompted me to look at music in a new
way." The polyglot
influences of the young composer’s student years left him
convinced that there was room for new voices in American
orchestral composition. His was not to be the pastoral vision
of an Aaron Copeland, but rather one that reflected the f
ounding notion of America as a cauldron of
hybridized ideas and cultures. Beltrami relished the idea of a
musical landscape where, in his words, "the music of a
Jamaican bandleader was of equal importance with the work of a
Germanic music scholar." The one-time urban planner,
inspired by the energy of American cityscapes, resolved to
incorporate comparable intensity into his music.
Marco Beltrami’s
transition to film work was abetted by a commission from the
American Academy of Arts and Letters to write music after
graduation. (Not wanting to teach, "the money held me
over," he allows.) Having applied to a program at USC in
Los Angeles taught by the venerated film composer Jerry
Goldsmith, Beltrami migrated westward in the early ‘90s,
stopping along the way for performances of his work at a North
Carolina dance festival, prior to landing in California in
time for Goldsmith’s classes.While learning the technical
aspects of film scoring, Beltrami completed orchestral
commissions for the Chicago Civic Orchestra, the Sao Paulo
State Orchestra and the Oakland East Bay Symphony. After
pounding the pavement subsequent to his latest brush with
academia, Beltrami earned initial notice with his 1994
soundtrack for a Sony-funded USC short, The
Bicyclist. In the following year his theme for the
television series Land's End enhanced his profile
substantively, leading to an invitation from noted horror film
director Wes Craven; the latter requested a thirteen-minute
cue, which Beltrami wrote over a weekend. Craven’s subsequent
offer to score Scream led to other Miramax projects,
including the next two installments in the burgeoning
Scream franchise, additional scoring for 1998’s
Nightwatch as well as the music
accompanying the killer insects of Guillermo del Toro's
Mimic.
Despite working on back-to-back projects during the
past two years, Beltrami still has much interest in
extra-cinematic applications of music, consistently writing
for dance ensembles and orchestras. His music is regularly
performed in concert venues; the Oakland Symphony premiered
one of his pieces in January 2002 and Marco is currently
preparing for the concert premiere of a work written for two
pianos. Of his most recent writing, a recent Beltrami score
for the Scandinavian film I Am Dina
marks something of a departure for the composer. The film is a
dark epic period piece concerning the life of a tempestuous
Norwegian cellist. Beltrami studied the work of northern
European composers such as Grieg and Sibelius, who added folk
instruments such as the hardanger fiddle to their orchestral
writing. Beltrami then added electronic manipulations of
acoustic instruments, creating an unusual subtext to already
exotic timbres steeped in historic significance. "More
important to me was the challenge of bridging classical
Norwegian musical ideas with 20th Century timbral style. The
picture's thematic emphasis drew me in, with her melodic gifts
emphasized in the story." In art,
as in life, an iconoclast with melodic gifts alters the
landscape around them. The titular subject of I Am
Dina
can’t help but bring to
mind composers like Marco Beltrami, forward-thinking, willing
to take creative risks in the name of capturing intensity with
novel and enduring melodies.
Biography
written by Richard Henderson (source www.marcobeltrami.com)
|
| |