with the eighth pick in the twelfth round of the 2013 Desert Island Music Draft, i select...
Vangelis - Blade Runner [Original Film Score] (??/??/94):
01 Main Titles
02 Blush Response
03 Wait for Me
04 Rachel's Song
05 Love Theme
06 One More Kiss, Dear
07 Blade Runner Blues
08 Memories of Green
09 Tales of the Future
10 Damask Rose
11 Blade Runner (End Titles)
12 Tears in Rain
Genre: electronica, ambient, film score
my father was slightly irresponsible when i was a child. my mother had to work a lot of saturdays, and pops would use that time to introduce me to all sorts of great movies on VHS and Betamax (yup, my dad still had Beta tapes through the early 90's), even those with an R rating. he couldn't do much about inappropriate language, but if there was a particularly violent sequence or overly sexual content in a movie that we were watching, he would tell me to close my eyes and fast forward through the scene. that said, i didn't grow up on saturday morning cartoons like the other kids i knew. i grew up on Alien, Predator, Terminator 2, Die Hard, Lethal Weapon, and Beverly Hills Cop. occasionally pops would let me pick the movie i wanted to watch. those were my favorite days. i would rifle through his impressive collection until i found a film title or cover image or tag line that struck me...
one day, i'm scanning through shelf after shelf of my dad's movies, and i see the words "Blade Runner" on the spine of a VHS tape.
Blade Runner. it sounded interesting. i pulled it out and saw that Harrison Ford was on the cover. i instantly recognized him as Indiana Jones and Han Solo, and i was delighted. i loved those movies, as most little boys do. we put in the movie and, even though it's rated R, pops doesn't really fast forward through too much of it. now, i'm not more than, i dunno, maybe six or seven years old at this time. but i'll never forget what i said to my dad when the end credits rolled: "that was weeeeiiird." and it is, indeed, a pretty weird film. it's dystopic and existential and quite unlike any other science fiction film before it, as well as a great many after it (even many of those it would go on to influence). it's also not the kinda movie that a child is readily able to digest. i didn't like it. Harrison Ford was almost unrecognizable to me. he wasn't the exciting smart-*** of a hero i recognized from his more famous action movies. that said, i [rather foolishly] would fail to revisit Blade Runner again until i was a sophomore in college...
if you're unfamiliar with the history of Blade Runner, it's about as fascinating as the film itself. to be brief about it, the production company compelled Ridley Scott to make a great many changes to his original cut of the film in order to craft a more palatable experience for summer movie goers. Scott was forced to compromise on his vision, and even in his acquiescence to the money people, the film was still poorly received upon its initial release in 1982. E.T. was the biggest blockbuster of that summer, and it's safe to say that people were much more interested in the comfort that E.T. provided than they were in the terrifying view of the future that Blade Runner supplied as an alternative. but, as is often the case with films considered to be "ahead of their time," Blade Runner gained a considerable cult following in the years after. various unedited bootlegs would eventually hit the streets, including an unauthorized director's cut. i was not privy to any of these versions as a child, nor would i have cared to begin with...
but, in 2007, Blade Runner was re-released to theaters as a version referred to as "the final cut." it was meant to coincide with the film's 25th anniversary, and Ridley Scott considers it to be the definitive cut of Blade Runner. a buddy of mine said we should check it out. he had never seen the movie. i had seen it many, many years prior, and i distinctly remembered not liking it, but i figured "why not?" it's safe to say that my opinion changed considerably. given that this isn't a movie draft, i won't provide a review, but Blade Runner has become one of my favorite films of all time. "the final cut" has since been released to Blu-Ray/DVD, and i would highly recommend that you seek out this particular version if you've never seen it, or have never seen Blade Runner altogether. it is a superior piece of art, and absolutely worth your time/money. i've probably watched it thirty times since catching its re-release in theaters...
anyway, on to the film score. this pick is in deep conversation with my 11th round pick, M83's Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts. i caught wind of that album in 2006, and as i noted in my explanation of that pick, it sounded like the score to a movie in my head. but, as i sat in the theater in 2007, and found myself amazed by a Blade Runner film i hardly remembered and wouldn't have recognized if i could have, what stuck out to me most, perhaps, was the score. it was as weird as the movie: bluesy and [retro-]futuristic. i recognized the analog synthesizers as something you might find in an M83 track. it occurred to me in that instant that M83 was as influenced by the music of Blade Runner as anything else. there was not a doubt in my mind. and, given my desire to discover new music by way of my favorite artists' influences, i had to know who composed the score. as the end credits began to roll this time around, i told my buddy that i wanted to stay for a few more minutes. towards the end of the credits, i got my answer: "
Vangelis. weird name. okay, got it, now we can get outta here."
i scoured my favorite record stores in the days that followed. i couldn't find the soundtrack on CD, but i did find it on vinyl, only to discover that it was an orchestral version, and not Vangelis' original score. the original score was, in fact, never actually released on vinyl, which was soooooooooo disappointing for a vinyl junkie like me to find out. so i succumbed to the inevitable, and downloaded it online. the 25th anniversary edition of the film score was released on CD in conjunction with the Blu-Ray/DVD. there are two bonus discs that accompany the first disc, which is the original score as it was released in 1994 (well after the movie's 1982 release date, and only after it had started gaining traction as a cult classic). there's still no vinyl copy out there, but i continue to hold out hope that somebody will think it's a wise investment to press it on wax. in the meantime, i love listening to the original Blade Runner score while i write. it's a beautiful piece of ambient music, the kind of synth-washed dream that helps fuel my poems in a forward-thinking direction...
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