Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Super Trailer

Sometimes it's a little too pricey (or impossible) to use music from an official soundtrack recording. This is why I can do 'sound-alikes'.

Very similar to Hans Zimmer's Man Of Steel trailer music, but legit, still inspiring and familiar.

Enjoy!


5 Reasons Titanic Should've Been A Mystery Movie

Before we go any further, I must just say that I'm a huge fan of the 1997 movie. The production value is massive and was way ahead of it's time. The attention to detail is also mind-blowing: Did you know that James Cameron purposefully built the Grand Staircase at a slightly larger scale, because people in 1912 were slightly smaller than they are today? THAT is attention to detail that very few filmmakers apply today.

But what about the other details that could be expanded upon if it wasn't all about the romance?





1. Jack Dawson: Time Traveller

This has been a fan theory on the web for quite a while now. The theory goes that Jack appeared to stop Rose from committing suicide, because if she jumped, the ship would've stopped to retrieve her, and that delay would've caused them to sail through the 'berg zone' in warmer weather or possibly even when there was sufficient daylight - possibly avoiding a collision altogether.

Several facts to validate this theory:

  • Jack has no currency and has to gamble his way on board the Titanic;
  • He speaks of Lake Wissota; a man-made lake built 5 years after the Titanic sank;
  • Jack's haircut and rucksack are inconsistent with 1912. The latter only being popularized in the 1930's; and
  • He promises Rose a visit to the roller coaster on the Santa Monica Pier - nonexistent until 1916.
The theorist goes further to say that because James Cameron also directed the Terminator movies (which involve time travel) that Rose is Sarah Connor's grandmother.

How It Could've Been Better:


We know that Jack wasn't the type to hurt anyone. He always kept alert, showed kindness to children and made the effort to be polite - even when others weren't the same to him.

However, letting 1514 people die to save one person is something that even hardy time-travellers would struggle getting over.

That would've surely created a hero in heavy turmoil: someone needing to balance the moral scales, whose heart is also "a deep ocean of secrets".

It's a story bursting with mystery: why did Jack come back to 1912? Where did he come from? Who sent him? Did he accomplish his mission? Are there others like him?

2. What If The Man Rose Eventually Married Knew About Jack


This is an unhappy thought, because it reveals Rose to be quite a horrible person.

Throughout the film Rose transforms from a spoiled rich girl to a down-to-earth friend who has an exciting new lease on life. But there is a huge gap between her arriving in New York on the Carpathia in 1912, and her arriving on Brock Lovett's (Bill Paxton) research vessel in 1997.

What we do know:

  • She changed her name to Dawson;
  • She got married;
  • She had children, who had children of their own; and
  • She never told her husband (or anybody) about Jack.

If we read between the lines, something is out of place.

Old Rose has the double-barrel surname of Dawson-Calvert, meaning she kept Jack's name and just added the new one when she married. Was her husband ok with this? Wouldn't he have wondered why she was so darn adamant about keeping the name Dawson there?

A name changer is a game changer.
Let's consider all the photos that Old Rose 'never goes anywhere without': we see a woman who fulfilled her promises to Jack and lived the dreams that Jack inspired. We don't see any wedding photos or pictures of her children; the happiest moments of one's life are not included with Rose's photos!

She clearly still had huge feelings for Jack and the man she married suffered enormously because of it.

How It Could've Been Better:


Shedding even a little light on this reveals a mystery man that was messed around emotionally by a woman whom we once admired and loved.



This man had to have known that something wasn't right with his wife and possibly pursued the mystery himself.
Rose may have not told him about Jack, but did he know she still possessed the Heart of the Ocean?

Perhaps he did find out about Jack and when he did, everything strange about Rose suddenly made sense. And maybe she had to 'get rid' of him, because if he knew, he would probably leave and take the diamond with him.


3. A Missing Key Caused The Titanic To Sink


All big disasters could be traced back to one of many tiny variables that set off a chain reaction.

In this case, Fred Fleet (played by Scot G. Anderson) was the man who first spotted the fateful iceburg. He survived and eventually testified to a senate inquiry that if he had access to a pair of binoculars - he probably would've seen the iceberg early enough to avoid it.

But then you'd probably be reading an article on Why The Hindenburg Should've Been A Musical or something.

However, Fred did have binoculars close at hand! But they were locked inside the crows nest locker. And the key to that locker never came on board.

David Blair

Whilst in Southampton, there was a reshuffling of Senior Officers by the White Star Line. David Blair, who had been Second Officer on Titanic since her trials and journey from Belfast to Southampton, was (at the last minute) transferred to the RMS Olympic, and replaced by Charles Lightoller.

So last minute was the call, that Blair forgot to handover his locker key to Lightoller. But, hey! The Titanic was unsinkable, everyone's eyes were fine and the weather was clearing up.

That key became a family treasure, reminding Blair of what could've been. Eventually the key came up for auction for over £70 000.


How It Could've Been Better:


The film could've been revolved around the keys or the binoculars changing hands, revealing and unraveling mystery occurrences, leading up to the disaster.

Also, there were loads of people who never made the journey, either due to illness or delayed travels, bad feelings from their families, etc - Create a mysterious connection between these people and their collective evasion from disaster builds to a climax.


4.  Murder, Murder, Murder


There are already many 'Whodunnit' novels about the Titanic, including two Sherlock Holmes stories!



Already shrouded in real-life mystery, the story of Titanic naturally lends itself to yarns about how it could've sank and what really caused the iceberg collision.

But what about mysteries separate to that leading up to the disaster?

Like, for example, if the Murder on the Orient Express took place on a luxury liner - that just happened to sink before it's destination.

There's even a real theory, about how the Titanic never sank and that it was her sister ship, the Olympic, disguised as Titanic, as an insurance scam by the owners. And surprisingly there is plenty of real evidence of it's plausibility!

Murder, money and scandal! Brilliant!

How It Could've Been Better:


It would be great to go on a journey aboard history's greatest cruise liner (at the time) and discovering that certain crew members aren't really crew members. Perhaps there are two 'teams' on board disguised as crew and passengers alike, both trying to outwit the other in potentially the biggest heist/hijack ever plotted.

Perhaps when Cal Hockley purchased the Heart of the Ocean, a gang was commissioned to follow the diamond at all costs and return it to an unknown kingpin.

Perhaps Jack was on the run for some unbearably terrible accident and it turns out that the law is waiting for him in New York. A mystery only revealed when Rose arrives in New York under the name of Dawson - a false name used by Jack to evade the authorities.


5. Rose Arrested For The Murder Of Jack Dawson


We've already touched on portraying Rose as a dark, foreboding character.

We've seen the dynamics between Jack and Rose: The friendship, the quirks, the intimacy.

But what if it was all done for a reason?

How It Could've Been Better:


Let's take it further and assume a story in which Rose, under threat of her fiance, must do whatever it takes to make sure Jack is killed and disposed of before reaching New York. For whatever reason - we don't even have to find out - it could be a Maguffin. Failure to comply will result in her and her family's own terrible demise; if she succeeds, she will be met with reward.

And I think we all know who would play the evil mastermind.

Jack is watching the stars when Rose (in character) times her little run past him to the back of the ship, where she waits for Jack to 'get involved' and pull her to safety.

Rose "reminds"Cal to invite Jack to dinner  to draw some more info out of him and make him relaxed. Although Jack can sense the hostility (common between classes in those days), he finds solace with Rose, which is alright since she's going to kill him anyway.

Eventually the ship starts sinking, which adds time pressure on Rose to get rid of Jack. She gets lowered in the lifeboat, watching Cal and Jack. Cal stares back. Knowing that her and her family will die if Jack isn't killed, she springs off the lifeboat, back on board the sinking ship to hook up with Jack.

Eenie meenie minie mo...

Realising the ship hasn't got long to go, she keeps Jack running around until all the lifeboats are gone, because she somehow knows that either way, she is dead. Eventually Cal even chases after them, shooting them, not caring about blowing his cover anymore.

We all know there was space on the floating debris for Jack, they only tried one attempt at both getting on, but she kept him off, and waited until he froze to death. It's because of Jack that Rose had to go through all of this, but now she could return to America and claim her reward.

Then we see Old Rose: she's lived a long, good life. She got married and had kids. It wouldn't make any sense that when she dies, she reconnects with a guy she only knew for a couple of days (when she was a teenager) - unless it went a little further than what we saw: Jack reminds her that this is an unhappy ending.





Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Potemkin Soul

An alternative rock song that kind of touches on the experimental/progressive fringes.

Enjoy!

Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Dangerous Land

A rock song with an anthem-like chorus and guitar riffs.

This song is quite close to my chest for two reasons:

Musically, I wanted to capture that teetering sense of danger as if you've just noticed a drop of blood or heard a very strange noise that is out of place.
Lyrically, I'm conveying truths that most of us can agree on, but it just may be hard to express.

It is a dialogue between Misfortune (tragedy personified) and ourselves. Misfortune welcomes us in and sings the verses and we, the people, sing the triumphant chorus.



DANGEROUS LAND

Welcome to a land where perfection is banned
but it's the hope of every soul.
While it's sexy to be bad, the truth is ironclad
that we all want good to take control.

Pre Ch: Misfortune hunts this dangerous land.

Chorus:  You are the compromise in my eyes
               No surprise
               You love to watch me die and glorify
               Now I know why
               I don't belong here, but I'm needed
               So I'll stay here until I've succeeded
               And when that time comes, listen for the drums
               The old evacuates, the new will celebrate

Lock into the beat where success needs you to cheat
You'll be mocked to try the honest way.
To sit upon a throne, you need time in a jail-zone
What if God heard you pray?

Pre Ch

Chorus

Bridge: In a land where wrong is right, the flame of truth shall cast it's light
             like a burning laser-beam, some will turn to run and scream
             The rest of us will break our bonds, fly free and see our chains are gone
             Our rescue plea has found us aid
             No more will we ever have to be afraid.

Chorus

What Was The First Album You Bought?

Before we were old enough to buy our own music, we all grew up listening to what our parents already had. In some cases, this is a terrible memory. In other cases, what was once "Aw, dad! Do we really have to listen to this rubbish?" eventually became, "This is the beautiful music my dad used to listen to."

My folks were awesome enough to have such a wide variety, exposing me to opera, jazz, rock and everything in between. Hence my passion for music today! They had thousands of records and cassette tapes, all labeled and in their correct order. Some of them had even been imported from overseas, which was quite a big deal back in those times.

Photo: StefanG81
And listening to the music was an occasion - very rarely was it put on for ambience. We would literally slide out the Sgt Pepper vinyl, switch the TV off, get comfortable, place the needle in the groove and enjoy the music.
'Enjoy' could be singing along, playing air drums or listening to the technicality of the bass guitar - but we enjoyed the music hard!
There was a brief intermission to switch to the second side of the disc - "Catch you on the flip side!" - and we'd launch into side two.

At the end, we would sort of wake up from the dream and remember that there's a real life to get back to. But it was a dream that was real - a beautiful escape away from the norm of being busy.

And the cats were waiting for their food the whole time.

Yes, those musical moments were like mini holidays that you sort of kept in the cupboard for 'next time.'

Then came a day where you walked into a music shop, with your own self-obtained money, knowing that you would leave with music that YOU chose.
Perhaps you knew for a long time what your purchase would be.
Perhaps you were spontaneous.
Perhaps you bought several items - all of them being your first.
Nonetheless it was very, very thrilling.

In my story, it was a time long before Facebook, I remember wanting to tell the world that I had just bought my first album (Independence Day soundtrack). I wanted to shout it from the rooftops and have a huge party where we would dress up, say speeches, have celebrity guests and celebrate the music.
But instead, I simply wound up going home as quickly as I could (because the magic would leak out if I took too long) And making sure no one bothered me for at least an hour, I slipped on a good set of headphones, inhaled deeply and pressed play.

I felt like the TARDIS vanishing into another dimension. It was such a beautiful experience that for a while I compared other experiences to it, to see if it measured up.

Admittedly, it is a tough act to follow.
Not long after, I went and bought my second album, and then my third and fourth. Eventually I was hip-deep in CDs. One could now buy music and even tell the world about it without leaving their computer.

Today I still  make it an occasion to listen to music as much as I can. Sometimes I'll park outside the house and just youthfully savor the music in the car until the mini holiday has ended. All because of that first album that I bought.

What was the first album you bought?

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Clarinet Interlude

A brief, harmless piece of music that almost hangs on at the end for more.

Enjoy!


Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Lyfstraf Suite

This was composed as a potential main opening theme for the film, Lyfstraf. It includes most of the major themes of the movie.

Enjoy!