This is a marvellous piece of work. Most film music when presented for the concert hall is little more than a suite of short separate movements. What you have achieved here is the creation of an extended tone poem with a symphonic structure. The only things like it are Richard Strauss' programmic pieces such as Till Eulenspiegel and Don Quixote. In my opinion, the quality of the music deserves such respectful treatment. And as with "I Know where I'm Going", to have disassembled the original sound track in order to create this extended piece shows superlative editing skills. Thank you, again!
You're welcome Adrian and thank you for the compliments on the editing. Always nice to hear from someone who understands and appreciates what goes into these projects. Glad you like it. Cheers!
One of my favourite films thanks Fish Man... Could you let me know what program you use to remove voices? I have a short tv track with a voiceover (mono) and have tried Audacity to remove it with no success.
You're very welcome. I don't use any program or software to remove voices or dialogue. I use Audacity as well. And as you know the voice removal function on that software is useless. There are only two ways to remove dialog when extracting music from a video file. 1, as in the case of this video, is to manually cut out the dialogue one word or sentence at a time. 2, if you are lucky enough to have a video file that is in 6 Channels with an isolated music score. This can be done using Audacity as well. When you drag and drop a multichannel video file into the audacity window it well show up as six separate tracks. Then you can simply mute the dialogue track and collect the isolated music tracks.
My favourite movie I like to watch at Christmas every year as a rule.
Such a wonderful story & very ahead of its time.
Great movie and really nice music. Thank you.
👍🙂
Great music and as David Niven sayz, The Moon Is A balloon" a book read by Jeffrey Archer when he was in clink.
This is a marvellous piece of work. Most film music when presented for the concert hall is little more than a suite of short separate movements. What you have achieved here is the creation of an extended tone poem with a symphonic structure. The only things like it are Richard Strauss' programmic pieces such as Till Eulenspiegel and Don Quixote. In my opinion, the quality of the music deserves such respectful treatment. And as with "I Know where I'm Going", to have disassembled the original sound track in order to create this extended piece shows superlative editing skills. Thank you, again!
You're welcome Adrian and thank you for the compliments on the editing. Always nice to hear from someone who understands and appreciates what goes into these projects. Glad you like it. Cheers!
@@fishman3786 I wish I knew how you do it!!
Here's my thanks for your splendid work much appreciated by me.
Thank you Edwina. It's comments like these that really make the efforts worthwhile. Cheers!
6:45 Technicolor!
Anyone know if there’s a title to the track that begins at 4 minutes? 4:00
One of my favourite films thanks Fish Man... Could you let me know what program you use to remove voices? I have a short tv track with a voiceover (mono) and have tried Audacity to remove it with no success.
You're very welcome. I don't use any program or software to remove voices or dialogue. I use Audacity as well. And as you know the voice removal function on that software is useless. There are only two ways to remove dialog when extracting music from a video file.
1, as in the case of this video, is to manually cut out the dialogue one word or sentence at a time.
2, if you are lucky enough to have a video file that is in 6 Channels with an isolated music score. This can be done using Audacity as well. When you drag and drop a multichannel video file into the audacity window it well show up as six separate tracks. Then you can simply mute the dialogue track and collect the isolated music tracks.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allan_Gray_(composer)
Gray's "Swing Doors" is featured in the 2008 American video game Fallout 3.