"The People who build our instruments, I see them as much as artist as I see them as scientists" - Well spoken! Many people forget that behind an instrument is always a builder who supply the talented people
@@AmarKumar-vz3gb tell Hans Zimmer to compose for lagaan Jodha Akbar only songs and make it hit then i will worship him Rahman captured Hollywood tell Zimmer to conquer Bollywood
@@ajaysabarish9645 India is not on anyone's Radar. Noone is dying to come here and work. Don't be so dillusional. Besides AR Rahman's greatest works are for Indian cinema not Hollywood barring Slumdog Millionaire.
Cool to hear him praise Williams' CE3K score as "one of the great pieces of 20th century music." I'm inclined to agree. A pity that Williams lost out on the Oscar... to himself, for his 'Star Wars' score of the same year (1977). Just unreal.
@@folklore2630 Take a course in composing, then follow it courses in harmony and counterpoint. Also, you may wish to purchase one of the books on Counterpoint, Harmony and Orchestration written by Walter Piston.
John Williams, Thomas Newman & Hans Zimmer are my top 3 but I do appreciate any array of composers. I love films & music from films. What’s happening now though is great composers are rising from within the gaming industry. If you’re not a player of video games, here are some recommendations from me, a person who does: Koji Kondo - he has made the music for Mario but his music from The Legend of Zelda is my favourite. Check out the soundtracks for Battlefield 1 & Battlefield V. I promise you that they are beautiful. It’s the same composer for both instalments too: Johan Söderqvist … ‘Dawn Of A New Time’ is one my favourites. Check Austin Wintory’s music. He did the soundtrack for the profoundly beautiful video game, ‘Journey.’
My top: Hans Zimmer Howard Shore Jerry Goldsmith Alan Silvestri Brad Fiedel Yashuharu Takanashi I’m lost because I have many others, but those composers and musicians have touched my soul and heart.
Here's my Top 10: 1. Hans Zimmer 2. Vangelis 3. John Williams 4. TIED: - Ennio Moriconne - Elmer Bernstein - Vince DiCola 5. Basil Poledouris 6. Jerry Goldsmith 7. James Horner 8. Randy Newman 9. TIED: - Alan Silvestri - Michael Giacchino 10. Ludwig Gorannson Honorable Mentions: *A.R Rahman (Jai Ho, All Is Well, Maa, Kholo Kholo, Taare Zameen Par damn my favorite) *John Debney (mostly for The Passion of the Christ) *Bill Conti (Rocky Balboa) *John Barry (007) *Howard Shore (The Lord of the Rings/The Hobbit) *Steve Jablonsky (mostly for Bayverse Transformers) *Trevor Rabin (for Armageddon) *Harald Klosser (Disaster movies like The Day After Tomorrow and 2012) *Charlie Clouser (SAW franchise) *John Carpenter (Halloween franchise)
Howard shore? The music to lord of the rings in literally monumental to the success of those films. Which also is one of the best selling trilogy’s of all time.
😁 Why do you consider Ennio Morricone one of the greatest music composers ever? He's unique, he could be atonal one minute then sound like Mozart at his most melodic on the other, plus he was a master at thinking out the box. A score for just a string quartet? Why not! A Jazz Septet? Done that! He could get the most powerful orchestrated sound from just 25 players, yet give him 90+ players to play with and he could knock it out the park. If that's not mastery of your art, then I'd love to know what is…
In alphabetical order A.R. Rahmann, Ennio, Harold Faltermeyer, Hans Zimmer , James Horner, Jan Hammer, Jerry Goldsmith, Vangelis(Evangelos Odysseas Papathanassiou), Yanni (Yiannis Chryssomallis), the others not my preference. And for Baroque old Haendel & Arcangelo Corelli . Its good when everybody likes different so there is variety.
இளைய ராஜா எப்பவும் ஒரே jonaur ல த music pannitu இருந்தாரு அது india முழுக்க மட்டும் த pochu but ARR different types of jonaur la music panni மொத்த world yaum india பக்கம் திரும்ப vecharu
@@AlexRooneyComposer tbh Hans is more like Jack in the Box since Jack tends to make so much goddamn weird food while still having typical plain-ass burgers and same old fast food. McDonald's would be like Brian Tyler or Steve Jablonsky
No not really. Hans Zimmer is a lot more creative than John Williams, and music essentially involves a lot of creativty and one's own intuition to create their art. John Williams is more complex than Zimmer, yet both create the same quality of music.