Saturday, March 3, 2012

Must see, must hear

I happened across the soundtrack from this movie today online, and listening to it again brought tears to my eyes. I excerpted these remarks from an article by Brian Vaszily on IntenseExperiences.com. The article is about the music, and I have cut out much of the heart of his message, which is get the music and hear it before you see the movie. Whatever. If you have not seen this heartbreakingly beautiful movie, run out and get it. When I saw it during its original theater run, at the end of the movie, no one got up and left during the titles. We all waited until the last credit had run and the last note in the music had ended. Then we sat in stunned silence for a few minutes until people began to drift out quietly.

See it and you will understand why.

The Mission Soundtrack:
The Most Powerful Music of the Last 21 Years?

by Brian Vaszily, founder of IntenseExperiences.com



If you seek hope, peace, beauty, and clarity -- especially during a time of apparent confusion, ugliness, strife or hopelessness – there are few things I recommend as much as music. And there is absolutely no music I recommend more than this:

The Mission Soundtrack by the great film score composer Ennio Morricone.

If you appreciate music and how it can move through you like nothing else can (aside from possibly nature itself), how it can transform you so completely, do your heart and soul a favor and let them experience this uplifting masterpiece.

The late Italian Ennio Morricone, who composed more than 300 motion picture scores over his 45-year career including the soundtracks for The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Bugsy and Cinema Paradiso, and who received an Honorary Award for his lifetime of work at the Academy Awards in February 2007, composed this 47-minute score for the 1986 film, The Mission.


The Mission movie was nominated for the Academy Awards for Best Picture, Directing, Costume Design, Film Editing, and Musical Score in 1986, and it won the Academy Award for Best Cinematography.

That film, about the physical, emotional and spiritual experiences of a Spanish Jesuit missionary in eighteenth century South America that stars Jeremy Irons, Robert De Niro, and Liam Neeson, was excellent and is definitely worth watching. But in its power, beauty, and timelessness, The Mission Soundtrack-- which many consider Morricone’s crowning achievement to date, and which itself was nominated for an Academy Award in 1986 -- far transcends the movie it supported.

...

Like only the immortal music can, the soundtrack’s Spanish guitars, chorales, native drumming, solo oboe and other perfectly woven sounds, and its softly recurring themes, will plumb to the depths of you and gently pull forth the hope, peace, beauty and clarity that, though they may be hidden, are already yours. Every time. This is the type of music through which you endlessly discover, forgive, love and glimpse the greater glory in everything.

...

With a positive force that few other works of art can match, ... it still moves me now. In its strange and wonderful mixture of sorrowful and uplifting sounds, it moves me when things feel bad to a bigger and beautiful place. And it moves me when things feel good to an even better place.

Will it be that profound for you? Well, that’s hard to say for sure as music is such a subjective thing, but that said I still think so. This one, The Mission Soundtrack, feels about as universal as it gets.

2 comments:

Carmelite Candle said...

THE BREATH OF NATURE

When great nature sighs, we hear the winds.
Which, noiseless in themselves,
Awaken voices from other beings,
Blowing on them.
From every opening
Loud voices sound.
Have you not heard this rush of tones?

There stands the overhanging wood
On the steep mountain;
Old trees with holes and cracks
Like snouts, maws, and ears,
Like beam-sockets, like goblets,
Grooves in the woods, hollows full of water.

You hear mooing and roaring, whistling, grumblings,
Deep drones, sad flutes.
One call awakens another in dialogue.
Gentle winds sing timidly,
Srong ones blast on without restraint.
Then the wind dies down. The openings empty out their last sound.
Have you not observed how all then trembles and subsides?

Yu replied: "I understand.
The music of earth sings through a thousand holes.
The music of man is made on flutes and instruments.
What makes the music of heaven?"

Master Ki said:
"Something is blowing on a thousand different holes.
Some power stands behind all this and makes the sounds die down.
What is this power?"

The Way of Chuang Tzu
Thomas Merton

Seems all sound sounds without sound in the palace of nowhere, where all the many things are one.

Kristin said...

Listening to it now...