Honorary
Oscar 2006 goes to composer Ennio Morricone
congratulations
Morricone most heartily
Ennio Morricone Mini biography:
A classmate of director Sergio Leone with
whom he would form one of the great director/composer
partnerships (right up there with Eisenstein
& Prokofiev, Hitchcock & Herrmann,
Fellini & Rota), Ennio Morricone studied
at Rome's Santa Cecilia Conservatory, where
he specialised in trumpet. His first film
scores were relatively undistinguished, but
he was hired by Leone for Per un pugno di
dollari (1964) on the strength of some of
his song arrangements. His score for that
film, with its sparse arrangements, unorthodox
instrumentation (bells, electric guitars,
harmonicas, the distinctive twang of the jew's
harp) and memorable tunes, revolutionised
the way music would be used in Westerns, and
it is hard to think of a post-Morricone Western
score that doesn't in some way reflect his
influence. Although his name will always be
synonymous with the spaghetti Western, Morricone
has also contributed to a huge range of other
film genres: comedies, dramas, thrillers,
horror films, romances, art movies, exploitation
movies -making him one of the film world's
most versatile artists. He has written nearly
400 film scores, so a brief summary is impossible,
but his most memorable work includes the Leone
films, Gillo Pontecorvos _Battaglia di Algeri,
La (1965)_ , Roland Joffé's The Mission (1986),
Brian De Palma's The Untouchables (1987) and
Giuseppe Tornatore's Nuovo cinema Paradiso
(1988), plus a rare example of sung opening
credits for Pier Paolo Pasolini's Uccellacci
e uccellini (1966). It must be stressed that
he is *not* behind the work of the entirely
separate composers Bruno Nicolai and Nicola
Piovani despite allegations made by more than
one supposedly reputable film guide!
(see
here)
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