Tag Archives: hans zimmer

Am Sad. Have Zimmer.

5:35 is heartbreakingly beautiful.

James Horner vs. Hans Zimmer

So I’ve mentioned on here like forty times (INCLUDING YESTERDAY) that James Horner is my favorite composer. However, Hans Zimmer is a close second.

Today I’m going to talk about why these two are my favorites using a song of each of theirs to demonstrate, and I’m going to contrast one feature across both songs: buildup.

Let’s start with Horner, and we’re of course going to talk about The Launch from Apollo 13.

(Shocking, huh?)

I think this song is an excellent demonstration of how Horner handles buildup/anticipation. Let’s start at 3:25 minutes into the song. This is where he starts building up to the climax. The buildup is very…obvious. It’s clear. You can hear that anticipatory snare drum throughout and things keep getting added on top of it to gear up the emotion. Once you get to the horns’ entry around 5:08, it really starts to ramp up, but still in a very methodical way. There’s layering and chord progression, all still with that very audible snare in the background.

I think Horner does buildup in a very structured way, and this structure really works to build the tension. You can tell it’s structured, so you know what to anticipate and what to expect as it builds, but the rigidity of the structure holds back the payoff, making it even more worthwhile once it happens. He builds with drums and horns and bells.

And, of course, the payoff is what makes this song. I love Horner’s use of pauses after we hit the big moment at 6:05. He’s not afraid of adding these little microseconds of silence between the swells in the music, and that makes it all the more impactful.

So in short: Horner (at least in my opinion) does structured, reserved buildup, and the structure is what amplifies the anticipation.

Now onto Zimmer!

Let’s use No Time for Caution from Interstellar.

This demonstrates what I think is Zimmer’s hallmark approach to buildup: chaos. Starting at 0:45 in, there’s already a lot of stuff going on. He’s got that persistent, prominent beat in the background, but I think that’s pretty exclusive to the Interstellar soundtrack to indicate the passage of time. Other than that, though, there’s just a lot of sounds. Lots of low strings and low brass. It’s driving forward towards something, but I think it sounds a lot more chaotic in that drive than Horner. More and more motifs get added and things sound more and more muddled (in a good way). You get this feeling that something’s going to have to give because there’s just so much sound.

Then we get to 2:35, where the climax begins. But it’s not alone – we still hear that chaos behind it in the form of the piano and organ. Zimmer also uses pitch change a lot more obviously than Horner does, I think. Everything gets higher and higher and higher until right before the peak of the song (when you start hearing that low, building organ chord) when he starts bringing you down with lower pitches.

I know I said I was just going to compare one Horner to one Zimmer, but you can also really hear this pitch progress in Red Sea with those FREAKING FRENCH HORNS, OH MY GOD (2:10-2:29). I love how he uses them to audibly represent the parted walls of the Red Sea rising. You can see it because of those horns.

So in short: Zimmer (also just in my opinion) does chaotic, loud, “messy” buildup, and that chaos is what amplifies the anticipation.

Anyway.

Hans Zimmer, You Magnificent Bastard

What the hell is THIS

Ugh, this makes the song so much better. Dan Smith has a great voice and everything is better with an orchestral backing. Fight me.

EXCUSE ME, HANS ZIMMER…

What gives you the right to make the Interstellar soundtrack so frisson-inducing?

What gives you the right.

Nate and I watched Interstellar the other night. It was the first time either of us had seen it. The movie itself was quite good, but the soundtrack?

HOLY.
GALACTIC.
BALLS.
BATMAN.

It’s Hans Zimmer, so of course it’s going to be good, but JEEBUS.

I listened to the following song (No Time for Caution) on my cheap-ass $5 walking headphones and I got frisson so badly at the 2:35–minute mark that I felt it in my groin.

The STRINGS. They BURN SO GOOD.

I’d heard Mountains before ever watching the movie, but No Time for Caution is so much better.

HNNNNNNNG.

COMPOSE YOURSELF

Heyo BUTTBOMBS, let’s spend today’s blog talking about my favorite film and video game composers, huh? Because I’ve been Sennheiser-ing it out at night and listening to my favorite scores and it’s hot on my brain at the moment.

Let’s do a ranking, as always. My top 5, starting with the 5th most favorite and ending with my most favorite.

5. Alan Menken
Menken is kind of the “hidden” composer on this list in the sense that I don’t know if many people know who he is (as compared to the two dudes at the top of this list). But I’m putting him as my #5 because he is responsible for many of the classic Disney songs. And those are so connected to childhood that they’re going to forever be important.

Here’s a video showing a lot of his best songs.

[Edit: God, even just listening to those Little Mermaid songs at the start bring back so many memories, haha]

[Edit again: I haven’t watched Beauty and the Beast in forever and HOLY SHIT THE ANIMATION SLKDFJSLKFJSLF]

4. John Murphy
Murphy is on here because of Sunshine. I don’t know any of his other works, but the music in Sunshine is so heartbreakingly beautiful and stressful and haunting all at the same time, making the movie one of my favorites just because of the music alone. Like…listen to Adagio in D Minor and tell me it doesn’t make your heart hurt and soar at the same time.

3. Christopher Tin
Among other things, Tin has done music for the video games Civilization IV and for Civilization VI. Baba Yetu, the song from Civ IV, won a Grammy. But I think Sogno di Volare (Civ VI) is one of the most epic, frisson-inducing songs I’ve ever heard. I’ve posted it here before, but here it is again. Get some Sennheisers and crank this; you won’t regret it.

2. Hans Zimmer
C’mon. Do I really have to explain? Zimmer’s music is so phenomenal that it can’t be explained anyway. I think my favorite thing about Zimmer that is fairly consistent across his work is how so many of his songs swell to an insanely beautiful peak around the 5/6th mark of the song. Here are just a few of what I consider to be his absolute best songs.

3:00 and onwards is stellar.

4:21 and onward.

1. James Horner
Horner and Zimmer are basically tied, but if I HAD to pick a #1, it would be Horner. The main reason is because he is behind the music for two of my favorite movies (Apollo 13 and Titanic). And I’m pretty sure a huge reason why I like these two movies so much is because of their scores. I just really like everything about his style. He uses TUBULAR BELLS, for god’s sake. Examples:

(This is probably my favorite piece from any movie)

The other reason is because of the music in An American Tail: Fievel Goes West. As a kid, this was the first movie where I remember consciously paying attention to the music. It was enthralling. I think it’s what really got me into music.

I LOVED this part as a kid.

An accurate depiction of what Hans Zimmer does to all of us:

That is all.

Claudia’s Semi-Regular Music Dump

Yo.

So this year is still going strong as being an exceptionally good year for music, so you get some tracks ‘cause I’m a nice person who just happens to have absolutely nothing else to blog about today.

GO!

  • It’s been a long while since I’ve picked up a Fireflies remix.
  • Electronica Green Day? This one works.
  • Have some Holst.
  • HANS ZIMMER, WHY YOU GOTTA MAKE SUCH HEART-WRENCHING MUSIC???? Beyond 1:40, I cranked it so loud that I think I almost blew out my headphones. And, you know, my eardrums.
  • And finally: I’ve already given this song its own blog post awhile back, but there are five-star songs, and then there are Five Star songs. This is the latter. I just love this song.