Details for this torrent 


Alexandre Desplat - The King\\\\\\\'s Speech (Original M
Type:
Audio > Music
Files:
14
Size:
89.56 MB

Tag(s):
Soundtrack Alexandre Desplat Orchestral Music
Quality:
+0 / -0 (0)

Uploaded:
Dec 5, 2010
By:
Anonymous



Tracks
1.  Lionel And Bertie (2:10)
2.  The King\\\\\\\'s Speech (3:54)
3.  My Kingdom, My Rules (2:51)
4.  The King Is Dead (2:06)
5.  Memories Of Childhood (3:36)
6.  King George VI (3:05)
7.  The Royal Household (1:43)
8.  Queen Elizabeth (3:35)
9.  Fear and Suspicion (3:24)
10.  The Rehearsal (1:42)
11.  The Threat Of War (3:56)
12.  Speaking Unto Nations (Beethoven Symphony No.7 II) (5:02)
13.  Epilogue (Beethoven Piano Concerto No.5 Emperor II) (3:56)




The drama in ΓΓé¼┼ôThe KingΓΓé¼Γäós SpeechΓΓé¼┬¥ stems from the inability to communicate. The challenge, then, for French composer Alexandre Desplat was to keep his score from saying too much. 

ΓΓé¼┼ôThis is a film about the sound of the voice,ΓΓé¼┬¥ Desplat says. ΓΓé¼┼ôMusic has to deal with that. Music has to deal with silence. Music has to deal with time.ΓΓé¼┬¥ 

First, the score to the Tom Hooper-directed film could not sound too perfect. The sleuthing skills of Abbey RoadΓΓé¼Γäós chief engineer, Pete Cobin, helped Desplat find the tone he needed for the historical drama. Digging through the EMI archives, Cobin, says Desplat, recovered vintage microphones owned by the British royal family.

ΓΓé¼┼ôAt that time, the royal family had microphones made to order,ΓΓé¼┬¥ Desplat says. ΓΓé¼┼ôWe recorded the score with these microphones. It allowed the sound to have a dated feel --  a purely dated feel.ΓΓé¼┬¥ 

Desplat averages between seven and 10 films a year, and his work on ΓΓé¼┼ôThe KingΓΓé¼Γäós SpeechΓΓé¼┬¥ may be his warmest and most restrained effort to date. Much of the score centers on a piano, chosen to match the filmΓΓé¼Γäós use of Beethoven and Mozart. As string melodies drift and cascade in the background, the piano tends to lag just behind, save for the romantic swing that accompanies Colin FirthΓΓé¼Γäós King George VI as he rehearses in Westminster Abbey.

Desplat wanted a score that would mirror, rather than amplify, the drama of the story. \\\\\\\"The King\\\\\\\'s Speech\\\\\\\" is based on the true story of the relationship between Lionel Logue, an Australian speech therapist, and Albert, the Duke of York, who was forced to confront his debilitating stammer in the years leading up to his 1936 ascent to the throne as King George VI.

Says Desplat, ΓΓé¼┼ôThe king stammers, so how can you say that in musical terms without being didactic or obvious? I suggested to Tom that we could maybe give this idea that music is not going forward. How do you do that? I suggested one note, repeated ΓΓ鼪 ItΓΓé¼Γäós almost like a sad movement of a Schubert quartet.ΓΓé¼┬¥

If not purely minimalist, as Desplat worked with a small choir, \\\\\\\"The King\\\\\\\'s Speech\\\\\\\" can, at moments, have a sort of suspended animation feel -- \\\\\\\"the music just floats,\\\\\\\" Desplat says. Tightly wound strings, for instance, allow the piano only to flirt with a melody.

\\\\\\\"This man cannot talk,\\\\\\\" says Desplat,  a three-time Academy Award nominee, including for his work on  \\\\\\\"The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.\\\\\\\" \\\\\\\"He cannot speak. ItΓΓé¼Γäós not only because of his handicap, but he cannot articulate his pain. He cannot even name them until therapy helps him. The music must respect the dramaturgy. ThatΓΓé¼Γäós the main lesson IΓΓé¼Γäóve learned from working in the theater: respect the dramaturgy. I donΓΓé¼Γäót want to overwhelm everything with music.\\\\\\\"

In fact, Desplat had to persuade Hooper to use more music. The director initially wanted the rehearsal for King George\\\\\\\'s coronation to be filmed sans music. Desplat disagreed. What Desplat orchestrated,  and  what Hooper ultimately used, is something of a moment of release. The wind instruments strike a more playful tone, and the stammering sensation that Desplat played with earlier feels more celebratory than tense.

\\\\\\\"Tom said no music, and as I was watching, I thought, ΓΓé¼╦£No, no, no, no. There has to be something there.ΓΓé¼Γäó It is the climax. Dramatically, you would think that the climax is before this moment, but his story is a story about friendship, which is really rare. Mostly, you have love stories. Friendship with two men or two women is not too easy to do well. The moment they learn to trust each other for the good and the bad is the rehearsal. So that, I believe, is the climax.\\\\\\\"

With no action and all dialogue, Desplat\\\\\\\'s music takes on a defining role. Yet despite having plenty of silence to work with, Desplat didn\\\\\\\'t view the assignment as one with near creative freedom.

\\\\\\\"If I wanted an open space, I could do a documentary about fishes,\\\\\\\" he says. \\\\\\\"Then I would have an open space to play my music. ThatΓΓé¼Γäós not how I visualize the work IΓΓé¼Γäóm doing. IΓΓé¼Γäóm there to tailor something very precisely and something very subtly to dialogue and the actorΓΓé¼Γäós energy. IΓΓé¼Γäóm there to bring out something that isnΓΓé¼Γäót spoken. ΓΓé¼╦£KingΓΓé¼Γäós SpeechΓΓé¼Γäó is the perfect film to do it.\\\\\\\"