John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by GC »

GC wrote:After all, there are only so many possible combinations of notes, chords, harmonies, and rhythms available, and there are inevitably going to be identical passages, near misses, and similarities.
I Really don't buy that. There are more than enough possibilities. If one really set out in a purely theoretical way, there would be no possible way to exhaust all musical material that one can create... Honestly, There are thousands of scales, hundreds of individual rhythmic cells, thousands of possible instrumental colors....

Similarity is not the result of having exhausted all musical material, it is the result of "Consciously" adhering to a style.
Nobody said that composers either have or will exhaust all possibilities; it's unlikely to happen. That's not even an issue here, especially since the majority of "all possibilities" will probably sound more like decomposition than composition. But composers who have similar backgrounds will often choose to do things in a similar and occasionally identical way. Listen to lots of Baroque or Classical period music and you will hear an enormous amount of stuff that sounds very, very similar, and occasionally identical. Listen to Wagner, Bruckner, Mahler, and Richard Strauss, and you're going to hear sections (NOT totalities) in the later composers that could have come directly from the earlier; the four of them are almost a linear chain of influence and homage, but no one seems to doubt their originality and no one should. And please don't forget that there have been tens or hundreds of thousands of composers over the centuries. History is full of music that sounds like music by other composers by accident AND intent.
GC wrote:Only they know what inspires them unless they specifically discuss it.
Again, I disagree. If I hear two passages and hear a strong resemblance, even if the composer doesn't acknowledge it I still feel free to associate. This point weakens your next point because many composers have refrained from specifically discussing composition method. Composers learn through imitation, they don't have to discuss it for us to understand that....
Sorry, but no. Many composers have acknowledged their influences, but only an idiot would admit to directly plagiarizing a contemporary source (old sources seem to be up for grabs, and openly attributing a piece to a theme by another composer seems to be a get-out-of-jail card). Many composers HAVE discussed their compositional methods. Some composers are taught by other composers and absorb ideas from them, and everyone knows where they came from. Whether they consciously or unconsciously imitate is sometimes easily definable, but a lot of it is wild-a$$ed guessing on the part of the listener, and many listeners are quick to attribute every similarity to poaching. Anyone can attribute imitation upon hearing, but that doesn't make it right.
GC wrote: I do get really tired of listening to how Williams "steals" from other composers. Composers have borrowed, begged, and stolen from each other for centuries. It's a time-honored practice of the best and the worst.
I concur that "Stolen" or "steals" are thrown around too easily... I think, however, that it is more than safe to say that the influence of many composers can be traced in the music of Williams... The influence of Stravinsky, Holst, Prokofiev, etc.... is more readily audible in Williams than it is, let's say, in Schoenberg. (Many others fit that category)
I agree. One thing about Williams that makes this kind of guesswork easy is that he goes deeply into whatever style influences him at the moment. But I think he's much into imitating style but rarely directly lifts recognizable melodies. I often feel that he hears a snatch of a melody from somewhere else and takes it to a better place than the original. I call that inspiration more than theft.

And regarding the whole argument that so much pop music sounds alike (I'm not quoting what you said here, but I pretty much agree with you), I've never heard it seriously discussed that songs sound alike because they're running out of new things to play. There's so much imitation because it sells, it's safe, lazy, easy, or fits a certain form or style. Look at how many songs that have been written over a blues progression, or the ridiculous number of songs with guitar parts "Wild Thing" and "Louie Louie" in the '60's. Even with innovative guitarists, most of what they play sounds like other things they play or what other people play (especially after 50 years of listening to them). Pop, rock, and the like have become a box that it's hard to break out of, just like the compositional methods of the Classical and Baroque period. Just for different reasons.

Maybe I'm wrong here, but one of my favorites, Jerry Goldsmith, didn't do a lot of lifting that I was able to catch because he had a fairly specific personal style and usually stuck to it. I often felt that he was the most personally inventive of the late 20th century film scorers. There are a few scorers who are getting really big in films who are original voices within the mass of influences and styles, and more power to them. They're doing the best work out there now.

Again, no disrespect intended, same as you said. We'll just have to agree to disagree.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by Z-Tuba Dude »

PMeuph wrote: 2. More people are buying recordings than ever (And can listen to music online). (Handel could copy and paste from other composers because most people wouldn't have heard a piece performed in Italy if they lived in London)
As a matter of fact Rossini borrowed from himself! When he would go from city to city, writing operas for each new city's opera house, he would often recycle arias & other music from previous operas. In fact, the very famous "Barber of Seville" overture was not originally composed for that opera! He used that overture in four different cities, as the overture for as many different operas!
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by OldsRecording »

I have heard that filmmakers, when they are blocking the 'rough draft' of a film they will score it with previously existing music. That's why 2001: A Space Odyessy used Strauss and, well, Strauss. Kubrick asked Alex North to write a score, but in the final cut, he chose to ignore it and go with Strauss/ Strauss. t's probably why Star Wars sounded like Holst and E.T. sounded just like Howard Hanson (Symphony #2).
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by GC »

For the ending scene and end title music for "Alien", they used a movement of a Howard Hanson symphony.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by PMeuph »

tuben wrote:
PMeuph wrote:
I think that saying that a different meter is the reason why two pieces don't sound alike is quite weak as a justification.
You are welcome to be wrong. Does a Strauss waltz and a Sousa march sound familiar even though one is in 2 one is in 3?
Not what I said AT ALL. Two pieces can sound alike while being in two different meters.

Read this to see where your "logic" is flawed: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syllogism#Basic_structure

tuben wrote:
PM wrote:-The thematic motive of both pieces starts 3 repeated quarters and also contain dotted eight sixteenths.(Darth Vader theme vis-a-vis the "Euphonium excerpt")
For the record, Mars starts with thematic material that is a dotted half followed by a half. The 'tenor tuba' excerpt is the second theme of the piece, and occurs and is developed twice and something I would view as a bridge between the true theme of Mars.
tuben wrote:
pm wrote:-Both start with an accompaniment before then proceeding to the fully fledged theme.
If you believe the tenor tuba line to be the true theme in Mars, which I do not. Look at the full tutti sections, it's the dotted half & half theme.
Again, not to be mean, but you don't understand the words that I said. I never used "True theme" (WTF term is that!) I said a Theme, (yes the second theme) shared commonalities with the Imperial March Theme.

If theme B shares of one piece shares commonalities with theme a of another piece, do they still share commonalities because they are not both theme A....

tuben wrote:
PM wrote: -Both are in minor keys.
Whoopty-****.
Granted, as it stand this seems weak. But nevertheless, the Harmonic Language is similar in both pieces. A complete analysis with scores would surely highlight this.
tuben wrote:
PM wrote:-The use of orchestral colour is similar
See above.
For an organ-builder I would expect you to be more accustomed to Timbre and Sound Colour (or Color)

The instrument forces in the Williams are similar and use of thereof are similar to Holst. (The are dozens of other works/composers that could be named)

Apologies for the personal attack, but by failing to take into consideration my last point, I feel that your were indeed doing me a personal attack.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by PMeuph »

GC wrote:
GC wrote:After all, there are only so many possible combinations of notes, chords, harmonies, and rhythms available, and there are inevitably going to be identical passages, near misses, and similarities.
I Really don't buy that. There are more than enough possibilities. If one really set out in a purely theoretical way, there would be no possible way to exhaust all musical material that one can create... Honestly, There are thousands of scales, hundreds of individual rhythmic cells, thousands of possible instrumental colors....

Similarity is not the result of having exhausted all musical material, it is the result of "Consciously" adhering to a style.
GC wrote: And please don't forget that there have been tens or hundreds of thousands of composers over the centuries. History is full of music that sounds like music by other composers by accident AND intent.
I have to disagree with "accident"; the rest I buy. Accident, to me, in composition implies having no knowledge whatsoever of the previous work. With Williams, this is just pure Horsesh*t. He has heard all the seminal works of the 20ieth century, he has a master's degree from Julliard after all. I know he didn't have both scores and wasn't copying and pasting. I know that. Regardless, the fact that he knew these predecessors, makes it weak to says it was an accident. Subconsciously... Maybe. But I am certain that when he is composing, he knows that in essence what he is writing belongs to another era...

GC wrote:Only they know what inspires them unless they specifically discuss it.
Again, I disagree. If I hear two passages and hear a strong resemblance, even if the composer doesn't acknowledge it I still feel free to associate. This point weakens your next point because many composers have refrained from specifically discussing composition method. Composers learn through imitation, they don't have to discuss it for us to understand that....
Sorry, but no. Many composers have acknowledged their influences, but only an idiot would admit to directly plagiarizing a contemporary source (old sources seem to be up for grabs, and openly attributing a piece to a theme by another composer seems to be a get-out-of-jail card). Many composers HAVE discussed their compositional methods. Some composers are taught by other composers and absorb ideas from them, and everyone knows where they came from. Whether they consciously or unconsciously imitate is sometimes easily definable, but a lot of it is wild-a$$ed guessing on the part of the listener, and many listeners are quick to attribute every similarity to poaching. Anyone can attribute imitation upon hearing, but that doesn't make it right.
Define Many.... What Bach writings are there where he states that Frescobaldi, Vivaldi, Froberger, Buxteude, et al. were influences.
Where about Mozart? Beethoven? Fauré? Debussy? etc.

Bach's aesthetic is known from digging, from knowing the contents of his library, from studying scores printed when he was alive, from associating A with B.

That can be done in the case a composer doesn't give a thorough account. After all, if a composer writes 200 works(or more) imagine the amount of time he would spent trying to explain why he wrote it, where all the ideas came from. It would take a lifetime.

Yes, anyone can attribute imitation upon hearing, it isn't all right. But some is!
GC wrote:
Maybe I'm wrong here, but one of my favorites, Jerry Goldsmith, didn't do a lot of lifting that I was able to catch because he had a fairly specific personal style and usually stuck to it. I often felt that he was the most personally inventive of the late 20th century film scorers. There are a few scorers who are getting really big in films who are original voices within the mass of influences and styles, and more power to them. They're doing the best work out there now.
Yes, Goldsmith is an original. It's kind of the point I was going for in my first point....(Not exactly, but) Composers could choose to write music that shares less than apparent similarities with other predecessors... As Goldsmith does... But, (Because of Studio Demands, etc) they write "in the Style of." I don't consider that stealing... I think no-one "in the know" truly does. But sometimes, in/directly composers use ideas that are apparent to other composers works... they might not say so...they might...But here is the crux of my argument.

Here is food for thought: Imagine yourself answering a multiple choice questionnaire:

Does the Holst sound like the Williams?
a. Completely Different
b. Mostly Different
c.Somewhat Different
d. Somewhat Similar
e. Mostly Similar
f. Completely Similar

I doubt no person would ever answer a or f. (they probably should look up completely in a dictionary)
But b to e seem to be the answers on this board.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by GC »

Horsesh*t, it isn't. My comments are much related to composition in general, not just Williams. Also note that I referred to Baroque and Classical composers for a purpose; they were eras where compositional style was rigid and repetition of ideas was more common. Beethoven broke this mold, and after him everyone who wanted to was free to go off the rails, including the later composers you cite. But it's still silly to say that similar or occasional accidental identical passages don't occur. It is not the responsibility of composers to vet their music against what others have written, and similarities occur. There are innumerable examples of songs that seem to borrow from others where the writers had no connection, copyright suits nonwithstanding. The idea that because it could be, then it must be is just wrong. With classical composers in the modern vein, it still happens.

Regarding Williams, you're hammering at an issue that is pretty much without doubt. His knowledge is encyclopedic and his understanding of multiple styles is among the best. He has repeatedly said that he was influenced other composers. But it's not up to you or me or anyone else to say that he had to consciously use this, that, or the other. Probably he does, but certainty is only for him to know unless he chooses to let the rest of us in on it. Like I said previously, he gets very deep into styles of composition and techniques that others use. That's not the same as copying.

And by the way, B. The two pieces are enormously different in rhythm, harmonic motion, shape of melodies, use of timbres and voicings, atmosphere, and so on.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by PMeuph »

knuxie wrote:You sound like two oenophiles arguing over two merlots from different vineyards. To most, both look, smell, and taste the same and, in reality, they don't care. Sure, if you take the time, swish it around, spit out, clean out the pallette with water, and do it all over, there are differences.

If you are listening for the first time to JW, you are going to hear similar stuff to what's in the classical, Romantic, and neo-classical ages. I hear a lot of Neptune from The Planets in the Ark of the Covenent theme from Raiders, for example. Of course, dissecting each piece of music, one who wanted to prove their point and show off their abundant music knowledge, could easily refute that and show what a true PIA they really are. So what that Mars and Empire aren't EXACTLY alike. One DOES remind me of the other. Get over the nit picking and ego-pumping.

Movie music is exactly what it is....for the movies. If it borrows, so what? 99.9% of those who buy a ticket to enjoy the movies don't know and, frankly don't care. The reaction of the .1% is not going to matter at all in the long run as these composers cash their paychecks.
To tell you the truth, I love John Williams' music. Not all the time, but sometimes. I just get irked by these Great Man Theories that portray composers as Savants who compose and create out of a vacuum. Maybe people tend to over-simplify and say he steals. I also get annoyed by those who claim that composers write music without the influence of others.

FWIW, I hear baroque elements in your compositions. Maybe you have written about it, maybe you haven't. I hear them and I think I can publically say so. (I hope you don't feel insulted, but I mean it out of respect).

If I say that I hear elements akin, albeit remotely akin to, even if the composer doesn't say anything, I am allowed to say so. As I said before, or else no composer would write music, they would just write the texts about the music. Anybody who composes becomes fair game for praise or ridicule. To me, associating stylistic elements is a complement. It shows that the composer is bright, aware, crafty, cunning and that he can have is own take on a situation.

After all, as humans, shouldn't we all have our own take on a given subject. I sure as hell think so.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by Dylan King »

Hans Zimmer for sure used "Mars" in the Gladiator sondtrack. I have no doubt that it was "temped" with Holst.

Go about half way into the track and you'll see right away...
http://youtu.be/ZAOTSO9ioZk

Gladiator is considered a breakthrough score. Interesting.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by GC »

Yeah, particularly around 4:30. Then around 6:00 it starts sounding like "Pirates of the Caribbean", his own later work.

EDIT: I goofed again. "Pirates" is by Klaus Badelt. So here's a section where two composers did something remarkably similar. Accident or intent? Who knows?
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by windshieldbug »

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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by Mark »

I recently watched the movie, Immortal Beloved. It was amazing how much of the soundtrack was stolen from Beethoven.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by PMeuph »

Mark wrote:I recently watched the movie, Immortal Beloved. It was amazing how much the soundtrack stole from Beethoven.

Cough... Smart a**.... :lol: :lol:
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by Dan Schultz »

I would be absolutely amazed if any tune didn't sound a little like another tune!... especially if you just pick out a half dozen notes or so.

The ability of these modern composers to write anything original is astounding.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by jeopardymaster »

When you look for common threads in film music composition, it's remarkable how much winds up coming back to the same instructor. He worked directly with Williams and Goldsmith, among many others, and taught a number of the guys the other currently active guys studied with. His name was Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by GC »

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Thanks, LJV. That's a neat animated gif.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by PMeuph »

bloke wrote:I sure would like an ardent John Williams belittler to write a really nice movie score (given a month's notice to compose/record) and show trite ol' Mr. Williams just how it's done.

It should be really easy; All you need to do is get a gig doing it. Tell some major studio that you'll do it for free. I'm sure they'll jump at the chance to receive such a tremendous bargain. Image
Even if the composer does it for free, you still have to pay for all those musicians. (A figure I read 2-3 years ago puts the cost of studio time in LA, with a large orchestra, at about 100K a day)

And honestly, given this economy, I am sure there would literally be a thousand volunteers ready to score a movie(of the same cultural importance as those scored by Williams) for free. (That is, beginners, students and others would do the first one for free in the hopes of getting more call backs and getting a reputation enough to charge what Williams does.)
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by oldbandnerd »

This thread has officaly jumped the shark.
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by PMeuph »

bloke wrote: because my comment was misunderstood.
I think misunderstanding has been at the heart of this thread. People, in this thread and elsewhere, use "copies"; "borrows"; "Sounds Like"; "steals" and "influenced" interchangeably and therefore inaccurately...IMHO

To me, saying that Williams music bears commonalities and shows the influence of Holst is not an insult. I think it is actually a compliment. The same were to go for Haydn and Mozart. If a Mozart work shows the influence of Hadyn (ie. the 'Haydn Quartets') is examined and discuss, I feel and anyone who thinks that one is insulting the composer is actually pushing some kind of agenda. An agenda that is usually the result of the acceptance of the "Great Man" Theory....

Digression.... The Great Man theory is basically one that presents a biased view of one man, often displaying him as a man who achieved everything possible without the help of others. (Just think of Beethoven in music. Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan, Julius Caesar, Napoleon.. and many others in politics... Even possibly Aristotle. (See the debate on the veracity of his works).... End of Digression...

The same goes with John Williams... To treat him as if he lived in a vacuum all his life and composed all this music without having heard the music of his predecessors (A point that his not far from some of the arguments in this thread) is simply foolish. To accuse him of stealing is also Foolish....

I think that the Reason he gets so much flak is not only the product of habitual practice but also the product of his very very successful career. After all, I would think that John Williams is probably the most heard composer of all times. (This would be hard to prove, so let's say in the top 5 at least...)
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Re: John Williams music sounds suspicously like ....

Post by oldbandnerd »

It has "jumped the shark" because what was meant to be a fun thread has been overrun,twisted,perferted and bastardized beyond the point of no return and is now just really boring .
I'm going to go find Gretchen and order a beer.
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