ironpony wrote:
naturalplastic wrote:
What the heck is a "duduk"? And WTF is a "Xiao"?
If you're an avant garde progressive rock star doing your own thing you can go with what you like.
But if you're scoring for a film you cant be so self-indulgent, and you have go with what communicates to the public, and communicates fast. So if it's between one or the other I would go with what works, and not with what you instrument you like.
Oh well, when it comes to scores I have heard before, I will pick out instruments I like, and two of the ones I like just so happen to be a duduk and a xiao.
But when you say I should do what works, how does one know what will work and what will not? If I think it sounds good, it sounds like safe bet, but how do you know if it is?
Your loyalty should be to the story, not to your own taste. So I would play it safe and use the language of American movies -and go with the cliche things that go with what you're trying to communicate during the moments of the movie.
And thanks for not answering my question. Just now googled them. A duduk is a traditional wooden flute from Armenia (or it could be the unrelated flute they play in northeast Bulgaria that coincidentally has the same name), and a xiao is a traditional bamboo flute in China.
Anyway... do what you want. But if you're doing a cowboy movie set in the old west I dont think that scoring it with exotic instruments from parts of Asia makes much sense. The music just wouldnt convey what you're trying to convey.
Movies have been scored with exotic instruments successfully but they usually are movies with strange storylines in which the strange exotic instruments fit well. Indian sitar ( a traditional plucked string instrument unlike anything in the west) music was in vogue in the psychedelic late Sixties, and the movie "Charly" (kind of a semi sci fi drama) was scored entirely with Indian sitar music played by Ravi Shankar. And it worked well. At about the same time George Harrison of the Beatles scored the now largely forgotten movie called "the Wonderwall". Though set in England the Beatle used a whole crew of Asian Indians playing various traditional Indian instruments (plucked string instruments like sarods, and sitars, and tablas for the percussion) for most of the soundtrack. Again the wierd music kinda went with the movie's weird story. But even this movie had segments that had to be scored with western instruments playing very conventional and indeed cliche tunes. There is a dude ranch scene with folks on horseback, and Harrison had a cliche clip cloppy slow cowboy tune playing for that scene- with no Asian Indian instruments anywhere in sight.