TLJ 19: Trombone Stings (Minutes 91-95 with Adam Liebreich-Johnsen)
Star Wars Music Minute - Podcast autorstwa Chrysanthe Tan - Poniedziałki
Beethoven once called the trombone the "voice of God," but how does this low brass instrument factor into the music of The Last Jedi? From stings to stabs, pads, and more, trombonist Adam Liebreich-Johnsen explains various trombone textures and talks about the role of low brass in Star Wars scores. This set of Last Jedi minutes happens to have one of his favorite low brass moments! Discussion topics/Highlights: The various trombone colors, textures and other brass textures used in the score: block chords, French horn stings, trumpet stings, etc "sting" = an accented hit that's often an interjection between other musical phrases. This is a common way to refer to that in jazz and commercial circles. "stab" = similar to a sting. The infamous iron (a reference to fan film "Hardware Wars") Sounds favs: blasters being cocked, the iron steaming, BB-8 imitating the melodic mouse droids "through-composed" music = essentially (in terms of this discussion), music that's relatively continuous and non-repetitive. NOTE: In this episode, Adam nails the definition of "through-composed" (music that doesn't repeat its sections or stanzas) while I'm a bit off (music that's more bespoke and fits more specifically to what's going on in the scene rather than relying on patterns and big main themes). Ultimately, our assessments of "through-composed" music actually line up, but in the episode, I'm admittedly describing more of an effect/my interpretation of how through-composed music affects scenes rather than the technical elements that define it. Just want to clear that up! Bass (singing) sub-harmonics parallel and planar motion, specifically the planar triads we hear in one part during these minutes Real trombones vs. in sample libraries Themes Referenced (in order of appearance): Main Theme Kylo Ren 2 (Hesitant) Kylo Ren 1 (Aggressive) - hinted in oboe Snoke's Theme Rose's Theme Resistance March 89. Subterfuge (incidental motif) throughout References Mentioned: "through-composed music" according to Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Through-composed_music If you're into music and math and want to understand set theory, here's a good lesson: https://youtu.be/49L3hOyOKCY "Witches' Sabbath" from Symphonie Fantasique by Hector Berlioz (awesome trombone part with Dies Irae): https://youtu.be/Q9cAyvjL9Z8 Beethoven's 9th Symphony, 4th movement (trombones don't come in until the last movement to add more bombs): https://youtu.be/tZ9NRL5Hmbo "Tuba mirum" from Mozart's Requiem (great trombone solo): https://youtu.be/wH71cC7Lb4s "Kyrie" from Mozart's Requiem (trombone is part of the fugue at the beginning): https://youtu.be/8ybTabIfLgY Geoff Castellucci singing bass sub-harmonics: https://youtu.be/fzlT80jQ3lo Switched On Bach (Wendy Carlos): http://www.wendycarlos.com/+sob.html sackbut: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sackbut Guest Links: Twitter: https://twitter.com/BigBassBone Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bigbassbone/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@bigbassbone Poxy Boggards (Adam's band): http://www.poxyboggards.com Connect with Star Wars Music Minute: Watch us on YouTube: youtube.com/starwarsmusicminute Twitter: @StarWarsMusMin and @chrysanthetan Instagram: @starwarsmusicminute and @chrysanthetan Email [email protected] Want more? Check out Chrysanthe's Patreon for weekly practice/composing/music analysis livestreams.