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cinemediapromo
10-04-2006, 03:35 PM
For a free preview of the CD, visit http://www.serenadaschizophrana.com/mediaplayer

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

DANNY ELFMAN’S FIRST CONCERT WORK
SERENADA SCHIZOPHRANA
IN STORES OCTOBER 3rd ON SONY CLASSICAL

Grammy-winning, Oscar-nominated composer of music for over 100 films and tv series – Batman, Spiderman, Good Will Hunting, Edward Scissorhands, “The Simpsons”

Work premiered at Carnegie Hall in 2005 – music later featured in IMAX’s Deep Sea 3D


Adding another facet to an already brilliant life in music, Danny Elfman steps out from his career-defining role as a Grammy Award-winning, Oscar-nominated composer of original music for film (Batman, Spiderman, Beetle Juice, The Nightmare Before Christmas) and television (“Pee-Wee’s Playhouse,” “The Simpsons,” “Desperate Housewives”) with the release of Serenada Schizophrana, his first orchestral composition written specifically for the concert hall.

The world premiere of Serenada Schizophrana at Carnegie Hall on February 23, 2005 drew ecstatic reviews across-the-board from both classical music and pop culture critics. It subsequently received worldwide exposure as the featured music in the soundtrack to the IMAX film Deep Sea 3D which was narrated by Johnny Depp and Kate Winslet. The Sony Classical recording is conducted by John Mauceri, best known for his sixteen years as conductor of the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra.

The genesis of Serenada Schizophrana was a commission from the American Composers Orchestra (ACO), a new honor for Elfman and a challenge that he welcomed. Without the usual visuals to drive his orchestral music, he writes, “I began composing several dozen short improvisational compositions, none of them related. Slowly, some of them began to develop themselves until I had six separate movements that, in some abstract, absurd way, felt connected.”

Serenada Schizophrana was scored for large orchestra, electronics, two pianos, and female voices. “With six movements, rolling piano solos … and the charming hoots and chirps of eight female voices,” wrote Bernard Holland in the New York Times, “Mr. Elfman gave us music comfortable in its own world and highly professional in its execution … The composer of this piece has an ear for symphonic colors and how to balance them.”

“In keeping with the piece’s title,” Mac Randall also noted at the time in the New York Observer, “the music veered madly from Ellingtonian whimsy to Bernard Herrmannesque agitation … The tortured swing of the third movement conjured up the image of a jazz band on a storm-tossed raft, with trash-can cymbals acting as the crashing waves. And the furious horn-stoked climax and surprising last-second resolution of the closing movement made for a rousing finish.”

For Elfman, a self-taught musician who had never heard any of his orchestral music performed live on stage, it was a “thrilling experience.” Highly influenced by the work of such mid-20th century film composers Bernard Herrmann, Nino Rota, Dimitri Tiomkin, Max Steiner and Erich Korngold, among many others, Elfman’s music is also tempered by Prokofiev, Stravinsky, Orff and Bartók, as well as early Duke Ellington. “I am forever attached to the music of the early 20th century,” Elfman writes. To this mix, he adds his recent discoveries of Harry Partch, Philip Glass and Lou Harrison.

Serenada Schizophrana is a ‘gumbo’ of all these styles and influences, as conjured up by the imaginative and often surreal pen of Danny Elfman. A prolific composer for more than a quarter-century, Elfman has written music for over a hundred films and tv series. He is well-known for his collaborations with equally eccentric director Tim Burton on a partnership that began in 1985 with Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure, and went on to include Beetle Juice (1988), Batman (1989, whose theme won the Grammy for Best Instrumental Composition), Edward Scissorhands (1990), Batman Returns (1992), Mars Attacks! (1996), Sleepy Hollow (1999), Planet Of the Apes (2001), Big Fish (2003), Charlie and The Chocolate Factory (2005), and Corpse Bride (2005).

For most of this time (until about a decade ago) Elfman was a mainstay of the beloved Los Angeles-based group Oingo Boingo, which was originally assembled in the late-’70s by his older brother, writer-director Richard Elfman, to provide the music for his first movie Forbidden Zone (1980). The group flourished (over the course of eight albums) but also became ubiquitous on movie soundtracks through the ’80s: Fast Times At Ridgemont High (1982), Bachelor Party (1984), Weird Science (whose title song became a pop hit, 1985), Something Wild (1986), to name a few.

Meanwhile, as his working friendship with Burton grew in the ’90s (and Oingo Boingo eventually disbanded), Elfman focused on what turned into a string of some 50 signature movie soundtracks, among them: Dick Tracy (1990), Sommersby (1993), Dolores Claiborne, Dead Presidents, and To Die For (all 1995), Mission Impossible (1996), the Men In Black franchise (1997, 2002), Good Will Hunting (1997), Chicago (2002), and Nacho Libre (2006). Upcoming projects include Disney’s animated Meet the Robinsons, Paramount's adaptation of Charlotte's Web.

Sony Classical, RCA Red Seal and deutsche harmonia mundi are labels of SONY BMG MASTERWORKS. For e-mail updates and information regarding Sony Classical, RCA Red Seal and deutsche harmonia mundi artists, promotions, tours and repertoire, please visit www.sonybmgmasterworks.com.

CONTACTS: cinemediapromo@yahoo.com

Penfold
10-04-2006, 04:57 PM
I know you've got the permission of the admins to do this, and that's cool. Being a film music fan myself, I like hearing different things about new CDs that are coming out. Sometimes, though, I think the advertising nature of your posts turn some people off from looking. Don't really know what you could do about it, however.

That being said, this is a CD I'm pretty interested in. I'm subscribed to a film music podcast that was discussing this in their latest. They were very psyched about, said they thought it was the best premiere concert work by a film composer that they had ever heard. I heard some clips, and it's a work I'm looking forward to hearing in its entirety.

jayce78
10-07-2006, 04:01 PM
I actually didn't know He did "Housewives" . . .That having been said I'm looking foward to this peice of music . . .

Jakester
10-08-2006, 07:12 AM
Including pictures of hot nekkid chicks would help.

cinemediapromo
10-11-2006, 06:30 PM
I'd rather be honest about the fact that it is.a promotional message then pretend it's not. That's why I post the press releases, and designate them as such (that's what the PR in the subject line stands for, in case you weren't aware),

musicp
11-29-2006, 04:20 AM
Hey,

Information, details and reviews on the Danny Elfman - The Nightmare Before Christmas (http://www.musicpearl.com/detail-danny-elfman---the-nightmare-before-christmas-44.html) album. Check it out.

Have fun!

Jakester
11-30-2006, 06:21 AM
Hey, I'm down with what you do, Cine-promo person. I think it's a nice little service.