NOTE: different time - DaylightSavingTime 12 Ki = 19:00 CET
Music can make or break a film:
perhaps that is why so many directors choose classical music to take their films to the next level.
Welcome
01. Julie Andrews - Prelude/The Sound of Music
The sound of music
Is it a musical or a music film? We have to leave that question in the middle, because if you draw up an overview of great music films, you simply cannot ignore this classic. The story of the musical Maria and the Von Trapp family is still so popular today that tours are still given every day in Salzburg that visit the locations of the film.
02. Ennio Morricone - Morricone: De Missie - Gabriel's Hobo
03. Debussy - Suite Bergamasque - Clair de Lune Appears in many different films which films: including Oceans Oleven, and Twilight etc...
04. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra - Godfather - Hoofdthema
05. Raging Bull - Intermezzo van Cavelleria Rusticana
(Pietro Mascagni)Org soundtrack
The juxtaposition of the physical toil and tragedy of Robert De Niro s portrayal of boxer Jake LaMotta, weighed against the utterly romantic and indulgent whining of Mascagni s Interlude, has to be one of the best in film history. Director Martin Scorsese is known for using pop music that matches the time and place of his films, so for him it was a gamble to make such a feature film from an important piece of opera repertoire a gamble that has had an indelible effect on music and film history.
06. Vangelis - Conquest of Paradise
07. Johannes Brahms - Brahms Violin in d major op 77 3 Vivace Non tropo
There Will Be Blood - Vioolconcert in D groot (Johannes Brahms)
The climax of There Will Be Blood has to be up there as one of the most unexpectedly perfect uses of classical music in a film. So, oil baron and drunken rogue tycoon Daniel Plainview (played by Daniel Day Lewis) has delivered his famous "milkshake" speech and thoroughly terrified Paul Dano's preacher. There is, let's say, an altercation between the two, and it's surprising and frightening, to say the least. And what piece do we hear just like Daniel Day Lewis shouts: "I'm done!"? Only the most joyful violin concerto movement imaginable.
08. West Side Story, film score: I Feel Pretty
09. Byron Janis - Sergei Rachmaninov,
Piano Concerto No. 2 in C op. 18 - 2. Adagio sostenuto
Short Encounter - Piano Concerto No. 2 (Sergei Rachmaninov)
This is the biggie: the most romantic movie, the most romantic music, the most heartbreaking combination. Rachmaninov knew how to wring every last emotion out of the piano keys, and director David Lean certainly knew this when he selected music to accompany these most repressed, reserved, and very English love stories. Ask yourself: is there a more iconic soundtrack to a fateful love affair than the slow-paced part of the Rach 2? The answer is no, by the way.
10. Hans Zimmer - Pirates of the Caribian (Davy Johns)
11. Movie Soundtracks - Samuel Barber - Adagio for Strings (Main Theme)
Platoon - Adagio voor strijkers - Samuel Barber -
Oliver Stone s Vietnam epic, in the same way as Apocalypse Now, is imbued with a broader meaning thanks to its association with classical music in this case, the sonorous and poignant tones of Samuel Barbers Adagio for Strings. The music has become so synonymous with the image of Willem Dafoe kneeling in the mud that it has transcended the reference point of pop culture and is often parodied, perhaps the clearest proof that Barbers enduring work was always destined for a life outside the concert hall.
12. Ennio Morricone estasi Dell oro: The Good, The Bad And The Ugly
13. Giacomo Puccini - Puccini: Turandot - Nessun Dorma
Mission Impossible: Rogue Nation - Turandot (Giacomo Puccini)
The deeply implausible but highly enjoyable Mission Impossible films take a step into the concert hall with 2015s Rogue Nation, an entire scene hinges on and works around a performance of Puccinis Turandot. As a self-contained cinematic set piece, it is composed with the precision of each opera scene as the action swirls in and around the staged performance.
14. BrunuhVille - King of the North
15. John Rutter - A Gaelic blessing
17. The Man Who Never Was -
Pianosonate nr. 8 in c klein, 'Pathetique' (Ludwig Van Beethoven
The sickening masterpiece by the Coen brothers contains the slow movement of Beethovens Pathetique, interspersed with the whole story while the quiet life of hairdresser Ed Crane (Billy Bob Thornton) is gradually turned upside down. Something about the slow, inevitable calm of Beethovens classic becomes almost ironic and mocking, changing the meaning of the piece throughout.
18. Best Movie Soundtracks - Braveheart- Main Title Theme (From Braveheart)
19. Soundtracks - Bare Necessities [From Walt Disney's The Jungle Book]
20. Cinema Themes and Music - Fantasia - Dukas
21. Philadelphia opera scene - La mamma morta from Andrea Chenier (Umberto Giordano) - Philadelphia opera scene - La mamma morta from Andrea Chenier (Umberto Giordano)
The film that immediately earned Tom Hanks praise for his performance as a man suffering from the effects of AIDS, the key scene in Philadelphia is a hugely poignant monologue/explanation by Hanks character about how Maria Callas singing
La Mamma Morta- from Umberto Giordanos opera Andrea Chenier gets him feeling good.
22. - Classical John Williams- Schindler's List Theme (violin solo by Itzhak Perlman)
23. Ennio Morricone - Cera Una Volta 2 - Once Upon A Time In The West-
March 17: Classic with Babbel, theme Classical movie - music
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March 17: Classic with Babbel, theme Classical movie - music
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