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Classically-trained composer whose film scores have
become part of the musical landscape for an entire generation. His original intent was to write
classical music and he studied under avant-garde composer Gyorgy Legeti at London's Royal
College of Music. It was a
tutelage that would continue to shape his variegated musical style for years
to come. Horner is known for
drawing on a wide array of influences, including his self-professed love
for Irish music, and for using unusual instruments, such as the shakahuchi. His penchant for the electronic synthesizer
helped him gain the early reputation as someone who could write quickly and
with minimal instrumentation, which must have been attractive to B-movie mogul
Roger Corman, who gave him his first shot at scoring
a full-length motion picture entitled Humanoids
of the Deep, followed by Battle Beyond
the Stars. Although the films
were drive-in movie fodder, the soundtracks were good enough to attract the
attention of other filmmakers. Oliver
Stone hired him to work on The Hand,
a cheesy Michael Caine horror film from 1981. The fledgling director said he wanted
something that was a cross between Jerry Goldsmith and John Williams, which
Horner reluctantly did, even though he later admitted he had not heard of either
of them at the time. He was in
no position to turn down work or question the caprices of directors, even
an unestablished one like Stone, and he was
beginning to get a reputation as a sci-fi/horror
composer. That same year he got
a chance to work on Albert Finney's comeback film, Wolfen, which
unlike most horror films actually garnered critical praise. It was an effective springboard for
him to land his biggest film assignment to date, Star Trek II: The Wrath
of Khan. This is regarded
as the film that put him on the musical map. (He even made a cameo in the movie
as a crew member.) Other
mainstream films followed, including the mega-smash 48 Hrs. and such diametrically opposed films as Gorky Park
and Brainstorm. No longer pigeon-holed as a sci-fi
guy, Horner was impressing audiences and directors alike with his
versatility. In 1986, he
composed scores for Ron Howard's Cocoon,
Don Bluth's An American Tail, and James Cameron's Aliens. Cameron only gave him ten days to
complete the score, including re-writes, and Horner avowed never to work
with him again, words he would later eat. When Cameron directed Titanic, Horner approached him after
reading the script. Cameron had
been admiring Horner's work from afar, particularly Apollo 13 and Braveheart, and both men were
willing to sweep their old disagreements under the rug. It was a lucrative
collaboration. Titanic won the Oscar for Best
Picture, Cameron for Best Director, and Horner for Best Original Score and
Best Original Song, "My Heart Will Go On", which he co-wrote
with Will Jennings. The Titanic soundtrack became the
third-best-selling soundtrack in motion picture history, with only The Bodyguard and Saturday Night Fever in front of
it. The financial success of Titanic has allowed Horner to pick
and choose his assignments, and he has passed over big films like The Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter franchises in favour of projects he deems more interesting, like 2003's
House of Sand and Fog and Mel
Gibson's Apocalypto. You can also hear his work every
afternoon, Monday through Friday, on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric, for
which he wrote the theme.
Linda Ronstadt and James Ingram recordings
Somewhere Out
There (James Horner/Barry Mann/Cynthia Weil)
Sources:
- http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000035/bio
- http://www.google.com/musica?aid=T6tlC7cjAbF&sa=X&oi=music&ct=result
- http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000035/
- http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000035/awards
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Horner
- http://www.answers.com/topic/james-horner?cat=entertainment
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hand_%28film%29
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