Sir Mustapha
Group: Musicians
Posts: 2802
Joined: April 2003 |
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Posted: Sep. 11 2008, 13:47 |
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Chromemax, I listened to the clip you provided on the first post, and I couldn't hear any apparent connection between it and Music of the Spheres. If anything, the mood of the piece was somewhat reminiscent of Harmonia Mundi, but even still, it's just a superficial resemblance. What called my attention there is the use of a very familiar 4-note descending tune, which I've heard in MANY places - including, if memory serves me right, on the soundtrack of the 1994 PC game Little Big Adventure.
What caused the scepticism here is not that people don't like you - but if you search the forum, you'll find previous instances of people finding "similarities". Off the top of my head, I remember discussion regarding a very similar theme used both on Incantations and on The Remembering, from Yes's Tales from Topographic Oceans; and even a similarity between the main theme of Tubular Bells and the piano figure of Tay Zonday's Chocolate Rain!! Also, there's a Stereolab song called Cosmic Contry Noir that has a melody very similar to the one on the Sigur Rós song Gobbledigook. Those are just examples - and things like that happen because, even though music is virtually infinite, there's a very small fragment of it that people consider "pleasant", so a certain degree of recurrence is always bound to happen. And it happens often.
What aggravated the discord is the material you picked: the Star Wars game soundtrack follows very closely the cliché formula of Hollywood orchestral soundtrack, and Music of the Spheres sometimes veers close to that path. The chance of coincidences is even higher in that case.
All we're left here with is just speculation. There's no way to find a reliable source to either confirm the theory or prove it wrong. We can't even agree if the songs are indeed similar; you AFFIRM the connection is there, but I can't even hear any similarity. Note, I'm not saying it isn't there. It might be, but then it comes again: I've seen similarities before which are purely coincidental, and don't have the slightest trace of connection or plagiarism. Think about it: if Mike were indeed inspired by THAT game's soundtrack, wouldn't he try to make the connection a little more clear and more coherent? Wouldn't it be better to him to say it's in fact there, to avoid being sued by LucasArts for plagiarism? Oldfield readily showed all the sources of inspiration for the tracks on Light + Shade - even the FruityLoops demo tune that spawned Slipstream. Why would he make such an obscure, barely noticeable reference and hide it so well?
I'm hoping to hear your answers to that. I don't want to sound like I'm calling you a liar, or like I'm disdaining your arguments. I'm just hoping that you'll provide more conclusive, specific arguments. You say you provided evidence; well, you did, but I personally don't think it's very strong evidence. If LucasArts used that to sue Mike, for example, it'd be a more than hopeless case. "Harbinger" is a rather common word, isn't it? You can find it in hundreds of places. I believe that, if Mike meant to make that connection, it would have been far more obvious: Tubular Bells II's references to Arthur C. Clarke aren't hard to spot. Please, don't get worked up by this issue - life is wonderful, far grander than a mere discord on a Star Wars game soundtrack. I assure you, if we were rude and mean, we'd just laugh you out of the forum without regards. The fact that someone took his time to give you an educated reply only means we care.
-------------- Check out http://ferniecanto.com.br for all my music, including my latest albums: Don't Stay in the City, Making Amends and Builders of Worlds. Also check my Bandcamp page: http://ferniecanto.bandcamp.com
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