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The Ennio Morricone Thread

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  • #4556
    Thor Joachim Haga
    Nøkkelmester

    For the first 30 years of my film music fandom, I was a “semi-fan” — meaning that I loved some of his work, usually the most famous, but was also alienated by a lot of stuff. I had a few titles — your THE MISSION or LEGEND OF 1900 or MALENA or stuff like that. Managed to see him live twice, in London in 2009, and in Oslo ten years later, in 2019. But then after he died in 2020, my collection exploded. Mostly digital titles, sure, but still. Have some 120 now.

    My Morricone love is mostly centered on a) his bittersweet, lyrical writing or b) his loungey stuff. The dissonant Morricone, I’ve never been able to stomach. But maybe some day.

    My favourite is the 2005 Holocaust drama FATELESS.

    What about you folks? What’s your relationship to the great Italian maestro?

    #4563
    Graham Watt
    Deltaker

    Let me sweat this one out.

    #4566
    Graham Watt
    Deltaker

    I think that in many ways Morricone was a true genius, but I’m by no means a fan of all his work.

    Perhaps other Brits of a certain vintage will remember that the BBC screened the DOLLARS movies around the mid-1970s (but not THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY – that one was too long for the regular time slot), and they were a kind of “rite of passage” for young teen boys. Some of my friends and I had the LP (on the cheap Pickwick label I think – it cost about 1 pound 50) of highlights from the first two films. That was a gateway release for many.

    I’m fairly selective when it comes to buying his soundtracks. In general they’re all too long, with a lot of repetition of perhaps two or three themes which go through various subtle changes in instrumentaion. Main Theme 1, Love Theme 1, Dissonant Hell Theme 1, Main Theme 2, Love Theme 2, Dissonant Hell Theme 2, Main Theme 3…. but I have a (how did Thor put it?) high pain threshold with much of that stuff.

    Perhaps my favourite Morricones are not even full scores. Those compilations (“Psychedelic Morricone” and so on) are mostly a joy, although there’s ALWAYS at least one very silly track on then, just to annoy Onyabirri I’m sure.

    #4568
    slint
    Deltaker

    Morricone has always been and he is still my favourite film score composer. I like all his styles, dissonance included. The only thing is that Morricone only composed less than 5% of Italian scores released on CD. While he is arguably the best, there are tons of other good Italian scores too.

    #4571
    Nick Zwar
    Deltaker

    Along with John Williams and Jerry Goldsmith, Ennio Morricone was certainly among my “initial” film composer interests, among the first composers who I knew by name and whose records I bought. His music for the Italian western was of course legendary, and he was a “big” name, probably the most famous film composer in his day. My first Varèse Sarabande album of all time was the soundtrack LP for THE ISLAND. Now at that time, I knew Morricone from some of his western scores, and from the cover (I had not seen the movie), I expected the music to by more “twangy”, perhaps with guitars, horror style. Instead, the music opened with warmth and lyrical beauty. It was totally unexpected at that time, but I enjoyed it quite a bit, it became a Morricone favorite. The whole score is not very long (just about 35 minutes), but it’s quite diverse: next to the lyrical main theme, it’s got suspense (“Boarding Party”), action (“Tue-Barbe Hunts Maynard”), pop (“Beth”) and more. The five minute “Island Magic” is quite a set piece.
    I was shocked when Varèse Sarabande finally released that on CD, and it was SOLD OUT before I had a chance to get a copy! Fortunately, I was able to trade in a copy at the FSM board some time after that. So now I’ve got the LP and the CD (here they are today):

    Ennio Morricone: THE ISLAND (Varèse Sarabande CD and LP)

    I always enjoyed Ennio Morricone, I like his inventiveness, he was very good at all kinds of styles.

    Apart from THE ISLAND and all the “classics” (Leone Collaborations, The Mission, etc.), other favorites include UN UOMO DA RISPETTARE (a recent favorite), UN GENIO, DUO COMPARI, UN POLLO (one of the most joyful Morricone scores), LOLITA (just beautiful), RED SONJA, and MOSES (the latter is one I often mention as my “favorite” Morricone score, but I like them all. Oh yeah, NOSTROMO is another favorite.

    I have over 200 Morricone albums, by no means all, but at least it’s a sizable portion. Included in these are several multi-disc compilation sets, so I should have for quite a few of his movies at least a few tracks.

    #4574
    Malte Müller
    Nøkkelmester

    I also got to knew Morricone via his the italo westerns which I love and primarily the lyrical side first: My father loved both music and the movie ONCE UPON A TIME IN THE WEST. That was one of my first soundtrack CDs in the later 80s.

    Later I got exposed to a weird re-labeld single named GOLDRAUSCH/TERRA MAGICA (https://www.discogs.com/de/release/3973769-Ennio-Morricone-Terra-Magica-Goldrausch) which was sold and playeed at the visitor center of a limestone cave my parents and I visited (Harz over here I think it was). I only learned some years later that those tracks are actually “Chi Mai” and “Come Maddalena”. Still have that original single.

    Later I got this double LP https://www.discogs.com/de/master/48106-Ennio-Morricone-Film-Music-1966-1987 and this best of CD https://www.discogs.com/de/master/238893-Ennio-Morricone-The-Best-Of-Ennio-Morricone.

    Now I have some more CDs of him and probably 150+ digital albums now. I do like all of his styles even the dissonant one although I have to be in the mood for that as it is really challenging at times. Even more than anything dissonant Goldsmith.
    One of my many favorites is also more lyrical: NUOVO CINEMA PARADISO.

    #4624
    Thor Joachim Haga
    Nøkkelmester

    Yes, compilations like that were always a great gateway. For me, it was this 2CD set from the 90s that opened my eyes (and ears) to the Morricone BEYOND the famous spaghetti westerns and THE MISSION and things like that, and although my collection didn’t really explode until a couple of decades later, it was very important in that regard:

    #4630
    Malte Müller
    Nøkkelmester

    Morricone is really often a “best of” composer to me. As much as I love his scores lots of his scores do have the same 2-3 themes in minor variations. Not to speak of very direct style revisits.

    #4663
    Nick Zwar
    Deltaker

    Yes, Morricone collections are great. I like them a lot, and they introduced me to a lot of his music. I have the “An Ennio Morricone Anthology” pictured by Thor up there, and a number of additional compilations. That’s because Morricone often composed self contained themes, which work great in a collection of individual pieces from individual movies. Compilations are a great way to get to know some of Morricone’s vast output.

    I think my first (and I still have it) was this 3LP set, which I picked up in the 80s in Munich (it’s an ebay Link, so I don’t know for how long it will be there)Ennio Morricone – The Italian Western

    Funny thing: Over the years, I tried to actually get all the Western scores in this collection.

    I got most of them, but UN FIUME DI DOLLARI remains elusive.

    #4672
    Thor Joachim Haga
    Nøkkelmester

    Cool set. If you have that, you’re pretty much set for life as far as his westerns are concerned (well, there are obviously many more, but looks to be a representative collection!).

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