Silverado
Product Details
Description
Westerns had been nearly left for dead by the early 1980s. That all changed when the Lawrence Kasdan production of Silverado was released in 1985. Kasdan assembled an all-star cast of actors whose careers were just beginning. It was released at the same time as Back to the Future, which means it had to compete against the summer blockbuster. While not an overwhelming success, it found increasing fans because of home video and cable. Its success can largely be attributed to the classic score by composer Bruce Broughton.
Broughton wrote music that was more akin to the Western scores of the 1940s & 50s as opposed to the minimalist approach espoused by composers of the genre in the 1970s. For his efforts, the composer was awarded an Academy Award® nomination for best score. Central to the score is the famous theme which is divided into two parts: the beginning fanfare and the actual melody. There's a secondary “settler's theme” which can be heard most prominently in the End Credits and the concert suite that's so often performed by orchestras.
The composer's in-depth knowledge of each section of the orchestra is put to such good use that there's an endless variety of orchestral combinations. The film is scored for a large orchestra that utilizes explosive brass, dizzying string passages, and a percussion section that boasts no fewer than 40 individual instruments, many of which are non-typical in a Western score, like ang klungs and flapamba. Peppered throughout are steel-string guitar, 12-string guitar, and tack piano; all subtly reminding the audience of the location and time of the film.
Now musicians, music students, conductors – any music lover – can study Silverado in this durable, high-quality edition, carefully reproduced and edited from the original handwritten manuscript.
