Blessed are those who hear a sound in their minds and have the ability to pass it on to others so he can share it and give so much enjoyment to the rest of us.
Super émouvant,,cette musique me donne des frissons d'émotions. Comme dans Hitchcock, les musiques sont primordiales, et les compositeurs, bravo. Mais revenons à la série c'est dommage que l'acteur principal est changer de visage.
Fugue is one of my favourite episodes of Endeavour, and it’s made more enjoyable by the music of Barrington Pheloung. How wonderful it is to see him conducting the orchestra playing his compositions.
The first time I have ever seen a professional use a "Mollard - Brite Stix" baton. Always interesting to see a rehearsal process with the composer conducting his own work.
Hi there @SPrescott2611, I'm actually Barrington Pheloung's daughter, and it wasn't a baton that he bought pink; when I was around 3 I went to the studio with Dad, and he coloured one of his batons in with pink highlighter for me to play with. From then on, he'd often use the coloured pink baton even if I wasn't there :,) You can see the colour has smudged off a little around the grip, and he'd recolour it with a highlighter every few sessions
@@adelmonica8552 ah that's even more cool, very sweet and a proper Dad move! Thanks for the info, genuinely thought it was a Mollard Brite Stix baton which you don't often see in the wild but I'm delighted to have been corrected. Thanks for sharing.
Sadly, "they" lay too much music, and too loudly, over the dialogue. I do not understand this. That diminishes the dialogue. Barrington was not composing for silent movies. Also, I'm determined that British television microphone recording standards for television are substantively different than US standards, or practices. Oh, well, as of this writing the final season ( (in US) has only 2 more episodes to go. If I sound like an old fogy, just look at the old Inspector Morse episodes. Little soundtrack intrusion there.