Jerry Goldsmith

Jerrald King "Jerry" Goldsmith (February 10, 1929 – July 21, 2004) was an American film composer and conductor.

Goldsmith is considered as one of the prominent film composers in the 20th century. He won five Emmy Awards, an Oscar for The Omen, and was nominated for 17 other Oscars. He worked in various film and television genres, but is noticeably associated with action, suspense science fiction, and horror films.Contents [hide] 1 Biography 1.1 Childhood and education 1.2 1950s and 1960s 1.3 Genres for which Goldsmith composed scores 1.4 Innovation and adaptation 1.5 Final scores 1.6 Notable scores 1.7 Awards 2 List of movies and series (chronological) 2.1 1950s 2.2 1960s 2.3 1970s 2.4 1980s 2.5 1990s 2.6 2000s 3 Star Trek 4 Awards nominations 4.1 Academy Awards 4.2 Emmy Awards 4.3 Golden Globes 4.4 Grammy Awards 5 Miscellaneous 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External links

[edit] Biography [edit] Childhood and education

Goldsmith was born in Los Angeles, California, the son of Tessa (née Rappaport), an artist, and Morris Goldsmith, a structural engineer.[1] He learned to play the piano at age six. At fourteen, he studied piano, composition, theory and counterpoint with teachers Jakob Gimpel and Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco. Goldsmith attended the University of Southern California, where he attended courses taught by veteran composer Miklós Rózsa. Goldsmith developed an interest in writing scores for movies after being inspired by Rózsa. [edit] 1950s and 1960s

In 1950, Goldsmith found work at CBS as a clerk in the network's music department. He began writing scores for radio (including CBS Radio Workshop; Frontier Gentleman, for which he wrote the title music; the Suspense episode " Eyewitness" broadcast on December 16, 1956 where he wrote and conducted the score; and Romance) and CBS television shows (including The Twilight Zone). He remained at CBS until 1960, after which he moved on to Revue Studios, where he would compose music for television shows such as Dr. Kildare and The Man from U.N.C.L.E.

In 1963, Goldsmith was first nominated for an Oscar for John Huston's film Freud. Shortly after, he met Alfred Newman, who was instrumental in Goldsmith's hiring by 20th Century-Fox. Goldsmith went on to collaborate with many big-name filmmakers throughout his career, including Robert Wise (The Sand Pebbles, Star Trek: The Motion Picture), Howard Hawks (Rio Lobo), Otto Preminger (In Harm's Way), Roman Polanski (Chinatown), Steven Spielberg/Tobe Hooper (Poltergeist), and Ridley Scott (Alien and Legend). But his most notable collaboration was arguably that with Franklin J. Schaffner (for whom Goldsmith scored Planet of the Apes, Patton and Papillon). Opening theme

Of Star Trek: Voyager composed by Jerry Goldsmith. Problems listening to this file? See media help.

[edit] Genres for which Goldsmith composed scores

Goldsmith provided tailor-made scores for many genres, including war films (The Blue Max, Patton), film noir (Chinatown), action movies (Rambo: First Blood and the next two sequels), erotic thrillers (Basic Instinct), sports pictures (Rudy, Hoosiers), family comedies (The Trouble with Angels, Dennis The Menace), westerns (Breakheart Pass, Lonely Are the Brave), comic book adaptations (Supergirl), animated features (The Secret of NIMH, Mulan), fantasy (First Knight, Legend) and science fiction (Total Recall, Alien, five Star Trek films). His ability to write terrifying music won him his only Academy Award for his violent choral/orchestral score for The Omen. He also was awarded with Emmys for television scores like the Holocaust drama QB VII, and the epic Masada, as well as the theme for Star Trek: Voyager.

Goldsmith composed for The Waltons TV series (including its theme), a fanfare for the Academy Awards presentation show and the score for one of the Disneyland Resort's most popular attractions, Soarin' Over California. Goldsmith did not like the term "film composer", as he felt the term "composer" was more than sufficient. He wrote "absolute" music for the concert hall (such as "Music For Orchestra", which was premiered by Leonard Slatkin and the Minnesota Orchestra in 1970). [edit] Innovation and adaptation

Goldsmith loved innovation and adaptation, and using strange instruments. His score for Alien featured an orchestra augmented by shofar, steel drum and serpent (a 16th century instrument), while creating further "alien" sounds by filtering string pizzicati through an echoplex. Many of the instruments in Alien were used in such atypical ways they were virtually unidentifiable. During the '80s, with the development of more sophisticated synthesizers and technology such as MIDI, Goldsmith started to abandon acoustical solutions to create unusual timbres, and relied more and more on digital instruments. He continued to champion the use of orchestras however (to which, for him, electronics were merely an adjunct). He remained a studious researcher of ethnic music, using South American zampoñas in Under Fire, native tribal chants in Congo, and interwove a traditional Irish folk melody with African rhythms in The Ghost and the Darkness. His penchant for creation and innovation often intimidated his peers. Henry Mancini, another film-music composer, admitted that Goldsmith "scares the hell out of us." [edit] Final scores

Goldsmith's final theatrical score was for the 2003 live action/animated film Looney Tunes: Back in Action. His score for the Richard Donner film Timeline the same year was rejected during the complicated post-production process; however, Goldsmith's score has since been released on CD, not long after his death. [edit] Notable scores

A list of his distinguished film scores, most of which were Oscar nominated, include Freud, A Patch of Blue, The Blue Max, The Sand Pebbles, Planet of the Apes, Patton, Escape from the Planet of the Apes, Papillon, Chinatown, The Wind and the Lion, The Omen, Logan's Run, Islands in the Stream (acknowledged by Goldsmith as his own personal favorite), The Boys from Brazil, Capricorn One, Alien, The First Great Train Robbery, Star Trek: The Motion Picture, Poltergeist, Twilight Zone: The Movie, Lionheart, The Russia House, First Blood, Rambo: First Blood Part II, Rambo III, Total Recall, Medicine Man, Basic Instinct, Hoosiers, The Edge, The 13th Warrior and The Mummy. Goldsmith's Oscar-nominated score for Under Fire (1983) prominently featured solo guitar work by Pat Metheny. Of all the scores he wrote, Goldsmith has said that Basic Instinct was the hardest and most complex, according to a mini-documentary on the special edition DVD.

One of Goldsmith's least-heard scores was for the 1985 Ridley Scott film Legend. Director Scott had commissioned Goldsmith to write an orchestral score for the movie, but was initially heard only in European theatres, and replaced with a synthesizer score by Tangerine Dream and pop songs for the American release due to studio politics (it has since been restored for DVD release).

Many of Goldsmith's scores from the 1980s and 1990s (such as the aforementioned Legend and the J. Lee Thompson remake of King Solomon's Mines) were performed with the National Philharmonic Orchestra and Hungarian State Opera Orchestra.

It is said that the prologue to the 1965 movie The Agony and The Ecstasy, written in the days when he was lesser-known, remained up until the very end of his career one of Jerry Goldsmith's personal favourites.[2] [edit] Awards

Goldsmith received a total of 17 Academy Award nominations, making him one of the most nominated composers in the history of the Academy Awards. Despite this Goldsmith only won the Oscar on one occasion, for his score to the 1976 film The Omen. This makes Goldsmith the most nominated composer to have only won an Oscar on one occasion.

He also received 9 Golden Globe nominations but never won the award. Similarly, he received five Grammy nominations but again never won. [edit] List of movies and series (chronological) [edit] 1950s Black Patch (1957) Face of a Fugitive (1959) City of Fear (1959) The Twilight Zone (1959) [edit] 1960sStuds Lonigan (1960) Adam Harding (1960) The Spiral Road (1962) Lonely Are the Brave (1962) Freud (1962) The Prize (1963) The List of Adrian Messenger (1963) The Stripper (1963) Take Her, She's Mine (1963) Lilies of the Field (1963) A Gathering of Eagles (1963) Shock Treatment (1964) Rio Conchos (1964) Seven Days in May (1964) Fate Is the Hunter (1964) The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964) The Satan Bug (1965) Von Ryan's Express (1965) The Agony and The Ecstasy (1965) A Patch of Blue (1965) In Harm's Way (1965) Morituri (1965) Stagecoach (1966) The Trouble with Angels (1966) Seconds (1966) The Sand Pebbles (1966) To Trap a Spy (feature film expansion of The Man from U.N.C.L.E.'s pilot) (1966) The Blue Max (1966) Our Man Flint (1966) In Like Flint (1967) The Flim-Flam Man (1967) Warning Shot (1967) Hour of the Gun (1967) Sebastian (1968) The Detective (1968) Planet of the Apes (1968) Bandolero! (1968) Room 222 (1969) Justine (1969) The Chairman (1969) The Illustrated Man (1969) 100 Rifles (1969)

[edit] 1970sThe Travelling Executioner (1970) Tora! Tora! Tora! (1970) The Ballad of Cable Hogue (1970) Rio Lobo (1970) Patton (1970) Wild Rovers (1971) The Mephisto Waltz (1971) The Last Run (1971) Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971) The Homecoming: A Christmas Story (1971) (basis for The Waltons) The Other (1972) Anna and the King (1972) The Waltons (1972) Ace Eli and Rodger of the Skies (1972) Pursuit (1972) (TV movie) The Red Pony (1973) (TV movie) Shamus (1973) Police Story (1973) (theme and pilot score) One Little Indian (1973) The Don is Dead (1973) Papillon (1973) Hawkins on Murder (1973) (TV movie and series theme) Barnaby Jones (1973) (theme and pilot score) Winter Kill (1973) (TV movie) A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1974) (TV movie) Chinatown (1974) SPY*S (1974) High Velocity (1974) QB VII (1974) (miniseries) Take a Hard Ride (1975) A Girl Named Sooner (1975) (TV movie) Ransom (1975) Breakout (1975) Breakheart Pass (1975) Babe (1975) (TV movie) The Reincarnation of Peter Proud (1975) The Wind and the Lion (1975) Logan's Run (1976) The Omen (1976) Islands in the Stream (1976) Twilight's Last Gleaming (1977) The Cassandra Crossing (1977) MacArthur (1977) Coma (1977) Damnation Alley (1977) Contract on Cherry Street (1977) (TV movie) Capricorn One (1978) The Swarm (1978) Damien: Omen II (1978) The Boys from Brazil (1978) Magic (1978) The Great Train Robbery (1979) Alien (1979) Players (1979) Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)

[edit] 1980sCaboblanco (1980) Omen III: The Final Conflict (1981) Masada (1981) (TV miniseries, first half only - second half scored by Morton Stevens) Inchon (1981) Outland (1981) Night Crossing (1981) Raggedy Man (1981) The Salamander (1981) The Challenge (1982) Poltergeist (1982) The Secret of N.I.M.H. (1982) First Blood (1982) Psycho II (1983) Twilight Zone: The Movie (1983) Under Fire (1983) Gremlins (1984) Supergirl (1984) Runaway (1984) Legend (1985) Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985) Baby: Secret of the Lost Legend (1985) Explorers (1985) King Solomon's Mines (1985) Poltergeist II (1986) Amazing Stories (1986) (TV series: episode "Boo!") Link (1986) Hoosiers (1986) Star Trek: The Next Generation (theme only, re-arranged by Dennis McCarthy) (1987) Extreme Prejudice (1987) Lionheart (1987) Innerspace (1987) Rent-A-Cop (1988) Rambo III (1988) Criminal Law (1988) Alien Nation (rejected) (1988) The 'Burbs (1989) Leviathan (1989) Warlock (1989) Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989)

[edit] 1990sThe Russia House (1990) Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990) Total Recall (1990) H.E.L.P. (1991) (TV series theme) Not Without My Daughter (1991) Sleeping with the Enemy (1991) Mom and Dad Save the World (1991) Medicine Man (1991) Basic Instinct (1992) Forever Young (1992) Mr. Baseball (1992) Gladiator (rejected) (1992) Hollister (1992) (TV movie theme) Love Field (1993) The Vanishing (1993) Dennis the Menace (1993) Rudy (1993) Six Degrees of Separation (1993) Malice (1993) Matinee (1993) Angie (1994) Bad Girls (1994) The Shadow (1994) The River Wild (1994) I.Q. (1994) Congo (1995) First Knight (1995) Star Trek: Voyager (1995) (TV series theme) Powder (1995) City Hall (1995) Executive Decision (1996) Two Days in the Valley (rejected) (1996) Chain Reaction (1996) Star Trek: First Contact (1996) (additional music by Joel Goldsmith) The Ghost and the Darkness (1996) Fierce Creatures (1996) Air Force One (1997) (additional music by Joel McNeely) L.A. Confidential (1997) The Edge (1997) Deep Rising (1998) U.S. Marshals (1998) Small Soldiers (1998) Mulan (1998) Star Trek: Insurrection (1998) The Mummy (1999) The Haunting (1999) The 13th Warrior (1999)

[edit] 2000s Hollow Man (2000) Along Came a Spider (2001) The Last Castle (2001) The Sum of All Fears (2002) Star Trek Nemesis (2002) Looney Tunes: Back in Action (2003) Timeline (rejected) (2003) Kingdom of Heaven (2005) (Uncredited; Reused score "Valhalla" from The 13th Warrior) Basic Instinct 2 (2006) (Uncredited; Reused score "Main Title" from Basic Instinct) [edit] Star Trek

Goldsmith is often remembered for composing the scores for five Star Trek films — Star Trek: The Motion Picture, Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, Star Trek: First Contact (with son Joel), Star Trek: Insurrection, and Star Trek: Nemesis — and the title theme for the Star Trek: Voyager television series. The theme from Star Trek: The Next Generation was adapted from the main title of Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Gene Roddenberry initially wanted Goldsmith to score Star Trek's pilot episode, "The Cage", but the composer was unavailable.

The score for Star Trek: The Motion Picture is regarded by many as the composer's most impressive. Goldsmith was charged with depicting a universe with his music, and so it is extremely expansive. But Goldsmith's initial main theme was not well-received by the filmmakers (director Robert Wise felt, "It sounds like sailing ships" [3]). Although somewhat irked by its rejection, Goldsmith consented to re-work his initial idea and finally arrived at the soaring, majestic theme which was ultimately used (and which remains instantly recognizable today). The core of the main theme bears some resemblance to that of The Man from U.N.C.L.E., scored by Goldsmith in 1964.

Yet there are many other facets to this score. The opening sequence features a theme for the Klingons, a clarion call introduced by woodwinds, accompanied by angklungs (bamboo rattles from Indonesia). Goldsmith would reprise this Klingon theme in Star Trek V: The Final Frontier and for Worf in the subsequent scores. The love theme for Ilia was used for the overture. Goldsmith also came up with a signature sound for V'Ger by using Craig Huxley's "Blaster Beam" (a long, narrow metal box, equipped with low, electronically amplified piano strings, which the player strikes with an artillery shell casing and mallet). Goldsmith also utilized a large pipe organ, which required the score be recorded at 20th Century Fox (which had the only scoring stage in Los Angeles equipped with such an organ).

Alexander Courage, who composed the theme for the original Star Trek television series, was a friend of Goldsmith's, and served as his orchestrator on several scores. Courage also provided a new arrangement of his theme from the original series for use in Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Another of the original series' composers, Fred Steiner, provided a few minor cues based on Goldsmith's original material (as deadlines prevented Goldsmith from completing every last scene). A considerable portion of the score for Star Trek: The Motion Picture was conducted by an uncredited Lionel Newman; Goldsmith, owing to the unusual instrumental blends, preferred to monitor the balance in the recording booth. [edit] Awards nominations [edit] Academy Awards

Eighteen nominations, one win 1962-Freud: The Secret Passion (Music Score—substantially original) 1965-A Patch of Blue (Music Score—substantially original) 1966-The Sand Pebbles (Original Music Score) 1968-Planet of the Apes (Original Score—for a motion picture [not a musical]) 1970-Patton (Original Dramatic Score) 1973-Papillon (Original Dramatic Score) 1974-Chinatown (Original Score) 1975-The Wind and the Lion (Original Score) 1976-The Omen; also, "Ave Satani" (Original Song) from The Omen [music and lyrics by Jerry Goldsmith] 1978-The Boys from Brazil (Original Score) 1979-Star Trek: The Motion Picture (Original Score) 1982-Poltergeist (Original Score) 1983-Under Fire (Original Score) 1986-Hoosiers (Original Score) 1992-Basic Instinct (Original Score) 1997-L.A. Confidential (Original Dramatic Score) 1998-Mulan (Original Musical or Comedy Score)(shared nomination with song writers Matthew Wilder and David Zippel) [edit] Emmy Awards

Six nominations, five wins 1961-"Thriller" (Outstanding Achievement in the Field of Music for Television)(shared nomination with Pete Rugolo) 1973-"The Red Pony" (won) (Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition - for a Special Program) 1975-"QB VII (Parts 1 & 2)" (won) (Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Special Program) 1976-"Babe" (won) (Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Special) 1981-"Masada (Episode 2)" (won) (Outstanding Achievement in Music Composition for a Limited Series or Dramatic Special) 1995-"Star Trek: Voyager" (won) (Outstanding Individual Achievement in Main Title Theme Music) [edit] Golden Globes

Nine nominations, no wins 1965-Seven Days in May 1967-The Sand Pebbles 1975-Chinatown 1980-Star Trek:The Motion Picture 1980-Alien 1984-Under Fire 1993-Basic Instinct 1998-L.A. Confidential 1999-Mulan [edit] Grammy Awards

Six nominations, no wins 1966-The Man From U.N.C.L.E. with the Hugo Montenegro Orchestra (Best Original Score Written for A Motion Picture or TV Show - Composer's Award)(shared nomination with Lalo Schifrin, Morton Stevens and Walter Scharf) 1975-QB VII (Best Album of Original Score Written For a Motion Picture or TV Special - Composer's Award) 1976-The Wind and the Lion (Best Album of Original Score Written For a Motion Picture or TV Award - Composer's Award) 1977-The Omen (Best Album of Original Score Written For a Motion Picture or TV Special - Composer's Award) 1980-Alien (Best Album of Original Score Written For a Motion Picture or TV Special - Composer's Award) 1981 - "The Slaves" (track from Masada soundtrack (Best Instrumental Composition - Composer's Award) [edit] Miscellaneous Lists of miscellaneous information should be avoided. Please relocate any relevant information into appropriate sections or articles. (September 2008)

His score for Islands in the Stream remained his personal favourite.[citation needed] Goldsmith's daughter, Carrie Goldsmith, went to high school[4] with famed Titanic composer James Horner, who also composed music for Star Trek's second and third movies: Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan and Star Trek III: The Search for Spock. And contrary to Horner's comments on the subject, Joel Goldsmith states "Jamie" was at a few of his father's sessions. On the Planet of the Apes DVD commentary track, he explains why he didn't score the final scene: "Charlton Heston was a bit over the top by himself," and didn't need any score to accompany him. He considered Total Recall (1990) one of his best scores.[citation needed] He considered his score for The Secret of NIMH one of his best. He asked for another three weeks to refine the score and make it perfect, which he was not under contract to do. He said it was one of his hardest to compose, due to the full film not yet being completed when he started to score it. With help from fellow composer Joel McNeely, he composed and recorded the score to Air Force One in just three weeks (after replacing a score by Randy Newman). Goldsmith later said he would never again take on a replacement score with such little time available, but in spite of that, took on five films where he replaced a composer/composers, including doing a new score in a short amount of time—two years after the vow—to The 13th Warrior (replacing a score by Graeme Revell). In 1997, he composed a new theme for the Universal Studios opening logo (first heard in The Lost World: Jurassic Park). He also composed the music for the Carolco, Cinergi and C2 Pictures logos, due to his friendship with producer and head of all three companies Andrew Vajna (the Carolco and Cinergi logo themes were included on the expanded CD soundtracks for Extreme Prejudice and Tombstone respectively; the C2 music is only heard at the beginning of Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines). He was also the composer of the Phoenix Pictures logo music. Goldsmith used the 1939 Novachord in several of his early scores. Goldsmith lived with his wife, former teacher and singer Carol Heather Goldsmith, in Beverly Hills. She composed lyrics for, and sang in the additional track "The Piper Dreams" for the soundtrack of The Omen, as well as a song from the film Caboblanco. Ellen Edson, a daughter from his first marriage, who supposedly played on his theme to The Waltons, is a teacher and composes folk music. He died after a long struggle with colon cancer. His oldest son, Joel Goldsmith, is also a composer and collaborated with his father on the score for Star Trek: First Contact, composing approximately twenty-two minutes of the score. Jerry Goldsmith also conducted Joel's theme for The Untouchables and composed the theme for the pilot Hollister, scored by Joel. His daughter, Carrie Goldsmith, is working on a biography of her father, the first chapter of which can be read on her younger brother's website. Update: the book has been suspended indefinitely, for unspecified reasons.[5] Throughout the '90s, he sported long hair that he pulled back into a neat ponytail. This became his signature look. In concert, Goldsmith often would recount a story of how Sean Connery copied Goldsmith's hairstyle for the 1992 film Medicine Man. In the film's closing credits, Goldsmith is listed as "hair designer". He cut his hair in 2002, after more than a decade with the ponytail. Goldsmith is also credited with writing the original score to Soarin' over California at the Disneyland Resort and Soarin' at the Walt Disney World Resort

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jerry_Goldsmith