Writing for a Hundred Years and Then Stopping: Tornadore Talks to Morricone

Writing for a Hundred Years and Then Stopping: Tornadore Talks to Morricone

by (italian) Ennio Morricone And Others

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About This Novel

"Write for a Hundred Years and Stop: Tornatore Conversations with Morricone" is not only a high-level cross-border dialogue between a director and a composer, but also a time-consuming and long-lasting spiritual dialogue between two business partners who have similar aesthetic pursuits in art and trust each other. These two leaders in the art world explored and discussed aspects such as soundtrack creation, film shooting and director collaboration, memories of their mentors, understanding and expression of artistic works, the process of art learning, childhood experience and family, self-analysis of personality and daily life. They showed us how each great work was born, the artistic life behind the work and the confusion and tests experienced by the master. In a career spanning more than 70 years, Morricone wrote scores for more than 500 films and television shows. Morricone is a diligent genius, but he has long lived with low self-esteem and contradiction: continue to score movies or return to his role as a pure music composer. Throughout his life, he boldly innovated, broke boundaries, used music to express human nature, and gave the film scoring industry unprecedented professional dignity. This lengthy interview sheds considerable light on the term "composer."

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