Music from CROSSING the LINE

Music from CROSSING the LINE

  • 流派:World Music 世界音乐
  • 语种:英语
  • 发行时间:1995-01-01
  • 类型:录音室专辑
  • 歌曲
  • 歌手
  • 时长

简介

17 - 21 years ago… Ten years after his graduation, an old high school student called and began, "You know how you do something in high school and you think it's cool… but then 10 years goes by, and you realize… man, that really wasn't so cool?" I braced myself for the oncoming wallop. "Well, Mr. Mel… what we did in high school… that... was really cool." Whew! And that is the setup for this CD, the function of which was simply to supply a film score for one of the greatest Martial Artists I have ever known. As I write this note to you, Derek Davodowich is taking a 9-hour drive to finally reconnect and to lay down some guitar tracks for the new Stormworks Project, Chapter 21: WON WAY. I haven't seen Derek since we recorded this Music from CROSSING The LINE, so I decided to listen to the recording again. Listening, I am torn. "Man, I should resurrect this stuff… at least resurrect it using the new virtual orchestras!" The other voice says, "No… this was a snapshot in Time when all we had access to were $50 dollar synth modules and some good Musicians." Because it is a "Film Score," it can span many genres. In this one Score, you will find everything from Fugue to Funk! So "the stuff making the Music" aside… the Music itself is a tour de force "historic" document, from that Time… 17 years ago. Using meager equipment, I wrote the Music for this film starring Calasanz as a gift to him… but I also studied with him, acted in his movie, did stunt-work in his movie, built some props… and wound up doing all of the sound, from ambience to punches. So with me on keyboards, Derek on Guitar, Brian Kornfeld on Drums, and for the song, Sarah Brooks, and with recording engineers, John Mozzi and Keith Chirgwin, this "historic" document is up to share. I hope you'll listen to it that way. As a "recording" of that Time. And that opening song? I can still hear that being a part of just the right film even today. Any heroic filmmakers out there? Also on the CD you'll find Music that was written in the late 80s, and some from 1990, 21 years ago. Enjoy & Godspeed! Steve BIO / STEPHEN MELILLO Susan Corrotto Lieux With organizations in 28 countries, the Music of 21st Century Composer, Stephen Melillo has been played and recorded by some of the World's finest ensembles and conductors. More than 950 works span from the IBM Thinkpad® Demo to the Concerto for Violin & Orchestra. Currently 117 commissions for Wind & Percussion Ensembles of the 3rd Millennium comprise the body of recorded work called STORMWORKS. Since 1995, ASCAP continues each year to recognize Mr. Melillo's work with Special Awards in Concert Music. In 2005, his "Documentary in Music, " KAKEHASHI: THAT WE MIGHT LIVE was nominated for the prestigious PULITZER PRIZE IN MUSIC. This composition marking 60 years since the end of WW II, involved an unprecedented gesture in music-making and made International History. KAKEHASHI, inspired by and dedicated to the Survivors of the Bataan Death March, was recorded by an ensemble of 2 American Choruses and 143 Japanese Military Musicians specially appointed for this historic occasion by the Japanese Ministry of Defense. In 2006, The World Historic recording, STORMWORKS Chapter 5:8, Writings on the Wall, was nominated in 4 categories in the 1st round of the 49th Grammy Awards. In 2008, the "visually scored", DVD version of THAT WE MIGHT LIVE was nominated in the 50th Grammy Awards in the Long Form Documentary caption, and won 2 Telly Film Awards for History/Biography and Music Concert. In 1992, Mr. Melillo's innovation in self-publishing and digital music dissemination, known as STORMWORKS, established a modern precedent in international Music publishing. STORMWORKS is now represented online and via store dealerships in the United States and throughout Europe and the Orient: stormworld.com You will find Mr. Melillo's scoring work in 13 feature films , 28 network television programs and the 1991 Academy Award-nominated movie 12:01PM starring Kurtwood Smith. In the early 1990’s Stephen composed game music for Nintendo, Sega-Genesis and others through his affiliation with Absolute Entertainment. His work in this field, presented at the 1993 NAMM convention positioned him as a pioneer for a complete new generation of "film-scoring" approaches to game-music. During the scoring of 12:01PM, Mr. Melillo authored and implemented Music To Picture, a hands-on curriculum establishing, in 1991, the film-scoring program at the State University of New York at Purchase. The 1992 premiere of Stephen Melillo's S-MATRIX Symphony # Numberless, conducted by Maestro Gerhardt Zimmerman with the North Carolina Symphony Orchestra, received the first standing ovation in the 40-year History of the Meymandi Concert Hall in Raleigh. During intermission, a delighted Maestro Zimmerman commissioned Stephen's; Symphony 2: At Life's Edge, which premiered in 1996. At present, Maestro Zimmerman and the Canton Symphony Orchestra are engaged in planning a CD of Melillo symphonic works that will include his Concerto for Violin, composed for virtuoso violinist, Anne Akiko Meyers. As creator of MIDIMAST, (MIDI-Music, Mathematics & Science) sponsored by the Ford and Carnegie Foundations and the New York Academy of Science in the early 1980s, Mr. Melillo trained 275 New York City Mathematics and Science teachers while demonstrating a quantifiably improved understanding of mathematics and science via musical composition. Case studies included numerous classes with K-6 students from Harlem, Spanish Harlem, Brooklyn, Bronx and Queens. His scoring techniques, orchestration, recording practices and implementation of new sonic forces in the modern Wind Ensemble have been the subject of several Doctoral dissertations in America, Europe and the Orient. Many of the World's finest ensembles and conductors continue to employ his innovative strategies and instrumentation. Many of Stephen’s students now enjoy musical careers as professionals in an eclectic range, employed as teachers, recording artists, television and studio musicians and members of major symphony orchestras. With 17 years in the public schools, more than 30 years as an international guest conductor, and more than 35 years as a practitioner of the Chinese martial art, Mr. Melillo's ability to communicate musically comes from an extensive knowledge base. From beginning instrumental students to Musicians employed by the Rotterdam and Vienna Philharmonic Orchestras, Mr. Melillo has worked with a vast array of multinational students aged 4-87. Such diverse experience includes teaching Braille-reading music students at Perkins School for the Blind in Massachusetts to teaching close-quarter defense techniques to an 11-man detachment of Green Berets stationed in Mansfield, Connecticut during the late 1970s. Stephen studied conducting with Jens Nygaard and Atilio Poto, a student of Arturo Toscanini. Varied educators, conductors and commissioning parties have termed Stephen Melillo's work "a new voice in the direction of music.” In addition to film work with New York and Los Angeles based studio orchestras, 112 live concert premieres include: Last World Standing: HEROES of PEACE, rendered by the Sinfonischen Blasorcehesters Ried in the Brucknerhaus, Linz, Austria. Karl Geroldinger & Stephen Melillo conducting. STORMWORKS Chapter 1: Without Warning, rendered by combined Musicians from the US Army, Navy and Air Force, Stephen Melillo conducting. STORMWORKS Chapter 2: WENDE, rendered by The Rundfunk Blasorchester Leipzig in Leipzig's Gewandhaus, Stephen Melillo conducting. STORMWORKS Chapter 3: WAIT of the WORLD, rendered by The Marine Band of the Royal Netherlands Navy in Amsterdam's Concertgebouw, Maurice Hamers conducting. STORMWORKS Chapters 5 & 8: WRITINGS on the WALL, rendered by 143 Musicians of the Japanese Military and The Central Band of Japan Self Defense Force with choruses from Shenandoah & Old Dominion Universities in Tokyo, Japan, Stephen Melillo conducting. STORMWORKS Chapter 0: WALK on the WATER, rendered by The Dutch Royal Military Band in Rotterdam, Stephen Melillo conducting. MUSASHI, rendered by The Patriot Symphonic Band, Harry Pfingsten conducting and by The Ried Blasorchester in Shladming, Austria, Karl Geroldinger conducting. MUSASHI & WAIT of the WORLD rendered by The Tokyo Kosei Wind Orchestra in Tokyo, Japan, David Bostock conducting. The Concerto for Violin, rendered by The Sudwind Orchester from Germany, Stephen Melillo conducting. S-MATRIX & Symphony 2: At Life's Edge, rendered by The North Carolina and Canton Symphony Orchestras, Gerhardt Zimmerman conducting. Stephen Melillo's 1976 composition, After the Storm, was played to a television audience of over 2 million as the concluding work in Singapore's 2005 salute to "Building a New Future." In addition to numerous guest conducting assignments around the world, Stephen has also made Music with the following US All-State Bands: Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, North Dakota (2x), New Mexico (2x), and New York in 2006. Mr. Melillo attended the University of Connecticut at Storrs in 1976, the Manhattan School of Music in New York in 1979, and holds a Bachelor of Music Education from the Boston Conservatory of Music, Massachusetts in 1980 and a Masters in Music and Conducting from Columbia University, New York in 1982. Accolades: "He could become the Leonard Bernstein of this age... Everything he creates has many layers, ranging from synchronicity to the significance of numbers, from visceral emotions to the brotherhood of mankind." John S. Sweeney, Music Critic "His S-MATRIX Symphony was fabulous, full of childlike wonderment as the composer intended and marvelous sounds. And they worked to maximum effect - a brilliant, original use of orchestral resources for a sophisticated, sensational, beautiful and satisfying experience."Nancy R. Ping-Robbins, Music Critic "Melillo is to wind music what Beethoven was to the symphony orchestra, and he follows a Beethovenesque design of increasing the musical tension almost to the breaking point, receding, and then reaching again. It is superlative musical craftsmanship and inspiring to hear." Marvin Sosna, Special to The Tribune. "...a new voice in the direction of music, his sound ? a bridge between the serious and the immediately visceral." Maestro Gerhardt Zimmerman, Conductor "... his ability to create a mood, find precisely the right touch of drama and create the needed effect was manifest... the sustained chords in the choir, the timpani's roar, the harp's glissandos. Melillo used them all with a sense of absolute rightness and the result was fresh, joyful and exciting... each measure scored with an unerring ear for drama and emotion." John S. Sweeney, Music Critic "I sit back in a studio. There are others around me. Our eyes are focused on a viewing screen and our ears poised. The two tapes roll. A video and a film score from you. What takes place has to be called a miracle. We are pulled here, then yanked back, thrown into despair then lifted back on to our feet and beyond, far far beyond. The score is beautiful Steve. More than I could have hoped for. What a triumph! I thank you." Rogers Follansbee, Director

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