YouTube, Part II

So, I have some more substantial posts coming up, but I need to get a few more things in mind prior to writing them.  But let me say this, if you are a fan of film/tv scoring and you’re NOT watching Battlestar Galactica, well, then you need to get your butt in gear.  Last night’s episode, “Someone to Watch Over Me,” reminded me again why I seriously want to write a book, if not my dissertation, on the show’s music.  Anyway, that is to come.  Also, I will also be writing a post based on the paper I will be giving at the American Musicological Society, Rocky Mountain Chapter Meeting on 18 April.  It’s on aural structures in Akira Kurosawa’s Rashomon.  Anyway, just a preview of the Shape of Things to Come.

Anyway, on to part II of 2 of my YouTube series.  One of the most popular things to post on YouTube are videos of video games.  High scores, fast runs through an entire game (like 10 minutes to beat Super Mario Bros. 3) or performances of songs in Guitar Hero.  But another subset are videos of video game music.  Either fans performing them, remixes, etc.  There are even entire series of videos devoted to game music.  For today’s video based installment of ‘The Temp Track,’ I give you Mega Man III.

I’m choosing this game because of a recent flurry of comments on Facebook between me and an old high school friend where we were debating the merits of Mega Man games, specifically II vs. III.  The theme to MMIII is, in my opinion, one of the best game themes ever written.  Judge for yourself:

I love the slow, kinda jazzy intro that leads into the more rocking main section that will loop for as long as you want, until you eventually start a game.

So from this beginning, let us explore YouTube.  First up is from the series “The Music of Video Games.”  This series is pretty simple: various tracks from the game set against game footage.  From the users page, it looks like there are at least 450 entries in the series.  I must say, as a researcher, it would prove to be a great resource for game music.  Especially since it seems like the poster has done research already on composers.  Mega Man III is entry 34 in the series.

Next up is a video of a rock band playing the music.  For those of you not steeped in geek culture, there are actual bands who perform game music.  Guess it’s part of the 80s retro cool thing, but really, it’s all nostalgia.  As my generation, the Nintendo generation, gets older, we yearn for those things from childhood that remind us that things were not always so complicated.  Ya, nothing new here, but the fact that we’ve latched onto Nintendo music as a reminder is something that I find fascinating.  This is the band “The Advantage” playing at a video game convention.  They actually go on for over 7 minutes…feel free to not watch the whole thing.  Though a few minutes before the end they fade out to almost nothing and then build it all back up.  Kinda cool.

There are also many people who just tape themselves playing music at the piano and what not, so here is a guitar version and piano version:

Next, and finally, are two videos from YouTube user brentalfloss.  This man is some sort of crazed genius of YouTube and video game music.  Check out his videos here sometime.  The first video is a fully orchestrated midi he did…he tells you all about it in the video:

Secondly is part of his “With Lyrics” series where he takes vg music and puts lyrics to it.  This is the extended version of his Mega Man III theme with lyrics.  Warning, the second half of this video is not Work Safe:

Also, in the “With Lyrics” series, check out the Tetris theme version.  Also his Gregorian Chant version of the Mario Bros. theme is interesting, though I don’t think that it is technically chant.

So, I’ve overloaded you with Mega Man III music so I’ll leave you with a video that has other music with it.  This is brentalfloss’s version of Louis Armstrong’s What a Wonderful World called, what else, Super Mario World.

Enjoy.

YouTube is an amazing thing, Part I

So these next two posts might be light on content, but heavy on the video.

YouTube is an amazing thing, and one of the most remarkable creations of the digital age.  More than anything else, it allows people to just marvel at the creative talent (or lack thereof) of…well…just about anyone.  From the Star Wars Kid to crazy/stupid drunk people doing crazy/stupid drunk things, the width and breadth of content on YouTube is sure to allow for hours of unending amusement.  We’ve all be sucked into a YouTube tornado, in which, like its cousin the Wikipedia Abyss, you start out looking for one thing and before you know it an hour has gone by and you wonder what the hell you have just wasted your time doing.  This just happened to me.

So what does this have to do with Film Music, or its child TV Music, or its young cousin Video Game music?  Well, I’m getting to that.  I stumbled onto this video earlier, a re-edited opening for Star Trek: Voyager set to the theme from Battlestar Galactica:

And in short order I had watched many other alternate openings to Voyager set to many different TV themes:

Stargate: Atlantis

Buffy: The Vampire Slayer

Angel

and my personal favorite, Monk

For reference, here is the original opening and theme, with music by the one and only Jerry Goldsmith:

So what is the point of all this?  Besides the creativity of YouTube user Bloempje721, it is how a theme really does set the tone of the show.  All of the above examples, through the use of careful clip selection and video editing effects that closely mirror the originals, give us what would, in theory, be very different shows.  Yet the material, besides the theme, are all drawn from the same show!

Many people may not notice just how much music and a good theme song can set the mood of a show (though I sure none of my loyal blog readers are among those people), but if you doubt it, look no further than these videos.

p.s. – the Word Press spell-checker highlights ‘blog’ as not a real word

Referential Music in ‘Chuck’

  Chuck, in my humble opinion, is a great example of how to use pop and pre-composed music very well in a television series (not to mention being a fun show).  Created by many of the same people who did The O.C., the show carries on the same geek chic that was a part of that series, but extends the pop culture references into the aural sphere.  The last two episodes (‘Chuck vs. Santa Claus’ and ‘Chuck vs. the Third Dimension’) are great examples of how they do it.

  Some basic plot is in order.  The series is a spy-spoof/fish out of water in which the title character, Chuck, is thrown into the international spy world when all of the U.S. government’s secrets are downloaded into his head.  He will occasionally ‘flash’ on a person or object, which leads him and his protectors (the stunning Sarah, who is also his cover girlfriend, and the hard-ass John, who poses as a co-worker) to run down the bad guys of the week.  This is all juxtaposed against Chuck trying to maintain his normal life which involves living with his sister and her fiancee and working his job at the Buy More (a thinly veiled Best Buy) with his friends and co-workers. 

  The last episode prior to Christmas hiatus, ‘Chuck vs. Santa Claus’ is an extended homage to Die Hard.  You have a hostage crisis at the Buy More, but, just as in Die Hard, the hostage taker’s real reasons are not those which he states to the police (one of whom is Reginald VelJohnson, reprising his Die Hard role of Sgt. Al Powell).  The Die Hard musical homages are most striking in the scene when Chuck is locking down the Buy More and the music is similar to the analogous scene from the movie as the terrorists lock down Nakatomi Plaza (in fact, the previous episode deals with the sale of Nakamichi Plaza, itself a sideways reference to Die Hard).  The cue, like much of Michael Kamen’s score, is based upon the Ode to Joy from Beethoven’s Ninth.  An astute listener, at this point, will have put the pieces together and figured out what was coming.  The reference comes out full at the end as Sgt. Al Powell and his cousin, store manager ‘Big’ Mike, run to embrace each other at the end, and we are treated to a clip from an actual performance of the Ode to Joy.

  This week’s episode, ‘Chuck vs. the Third Dimension,’ has three major musical references: 80s rock anthem ‘The Final Countdown’ by Europe, ‘Sul Aria’ from Mozart’s Marriage of Figaro, and a coy musical allusion to John Williams’ March from Raiders of the Lost Ark.  The first two are used during the episode’s back up story which involves a series of contest to determine who will accompany Morgan (a co-worker and friend of Chuck’s at the Buy More) to the back stage of a rock concert.  Taking part in this competition is a new employee and friend of ‘Big’ Mike’s who has just been released from prison.

  ‘The Final Countdown’ accompanies the challenge scenes and obviously, thanks to the 80s synth driven sound, harkens back to the multiple montage and other scenes from sports films.  The song has also enjoyed renewed interest in this decade thanks to its inclusion in the show Arrested Development as the intro music for a character who was a (terrible) magician (also of note is that an actor from Arrested Development is currently starring on Chuck).

  After the competition is won, Morgan rethinks his decision and decides to give the ticket to the man who is just out of prison.  In wonderfully overdone scenes involving him discussing how the ex-con should enjoy his new freedom, we hear Mozart’s duet from Marriage of Figaro, which was most famously used in The Shawshank Redemption, where it was played to the prisoners and we hear Morgan Freeman narrate:  “I have no idea to this day what those two Italian ladies were singing about. Truth is, I don’t want to know. Some things are best left unsaid. I’d like to think they were singing about something so beautiful, it can’t be expressed in words, and makes your heart ache because of it. I tell you, those voices soared higher and farther than anybody in a gray place dares to dream. It was like some beautiful bird flapped into our drab little cage and made those walls dissolve away, and for the briefest of moments, every last man in Shawshank felt free.”

  Finally, the end of the episode, as the team leaves for another mission, we hear the familiar chords and rhythms of the Raiders March, though it has been altered so that after the familiar opening it doesn’t exactly mimic the piece (probably due to copyright or costs or whatever).  Just as at the end of the Indy films, he mounts up or leaves to go on his next adventure, so do our heroes.  Chuck, after some trauma at the end of the previous episode, is back in a better head-space, and all is, mostly right with the world.  And as the episode closes, we have a visual reference to Back to the Future, as the words ‘To Be Continued’ are shown on screen in the same font as from the closing of those films.

  As I have hopefully shown, Chuckis a pop culture savvy show, whose numerous allusions, both visual and aural, help to enrich a viewer’s appreciation of the show, and the geek culture embodied by the title character.