Speaking of interesting film music...
Reg
location: back to the wilderness
listening to: static
registered: 1999.11.22
I have not seen Mr. Herzog's new film yet but check out this bit about the score:
The film's score goes a long way to transporting us there, combining the talents of Dutch jazz cellist Ernst Reijseger, the Senegalese singer Mola Sylla (singing in her native Wolof), and a five-man Sardinian shepherd choir, all under the strict, wondering hand of Kapellmeister Herzog himself. Fittingly, the results sound like nothing previously recorded on this planet.
The name of the film is "The Wild Blue Yonder" and it's some sort of sci-fi meditation on man and his place in the universe...no light sabers in this one but he does use a "ghost town" south of LA as a set...this made me wonder...where is there a ghost town south of LA?
–--
'The only way to avoid getting crushed by absurdity, is to humbly include the absurd in our calculations.'
Reg
(view)
I have not seen Mr. Herzog's new film yet but check out this bit about the score:
The film's score goes a long way to transporting us there, combining the talents of Dutch jazz cellist Ernst Reijseger, the Senegalese singer Mola Sylla (singing in her native Wolof), and a five-man Sardinian shepherd choir, all under the strict, wondering hand of Kapellmeister Herzog himself. Fittingly, the results sound like nothing previously recorded on this planet.
The name of the film is "The Wild Blue Yonder" and it's some sort of sci-fi meditation on man and his place in the universe...no light sabers in this one but he does use a "ghost town" south of LA as a set...this made me wonder...where is there a ghost town south of LA?
–--
'The only way to avoid getting crushed by absurdity, is to humbly include the absurd in our calculations.'
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