Ugo
Group: Members
Posts: 5495
Joined: April 2000 |
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Posted: Dec. 19 2004, 18:45 |
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I think I already stated this somewhere else, but I'm repeating it here: I think that Claudio Simonetti (the mastermind behind Goblin) got a huge influence from the TB piano theme being used as a horror movie theme - the main theme from Deep Red, built on a keyboard riff with repeated notes and an irregular time signature, does indeed sound similar. But I don't think that his intent was to blatantly plagiarize TB - he just was very much influenced by it. This is why I think this:
1) Judging from Simonetti's bass riff, he knew much, much more of TB than just the opening theme... TB's bass riff doesn't feature in The Exorcist at all. If Simonetti really wanted to plagiarize TB's piano theme "used as a horror movie theme", he'd just have done a similar tune of his own [which he did, of course ] and stop there... he'd never have based one of his themes on the bass riff from TB, had he just been influenced by The Exorcist. So, IMHO, the fact that he somehow used TB's piano theme and that bass riff to build something scary (or meant as scary), owes much more to his style being influenced by TB, indipendently from The Exorcist, than by the use of TB in the William Friedkin movie. 2) Mike and TB were completely unknown in Italy in 1975 [and maybe they still are... every time I mention TB as "the Exorcist theme" to someone, they think that Mike plagiarized Deep Red!! ], but at that time Mr. Simonetti lived in London - and, being into prog rock, he may have got quite a good knowledge of the whole of TB a fairly long time before The Exorcist made it popular all over the world. Dario Argento himself, while making the movie, was not aware neither of The Exorcist nor of the fact that TB was in it.
Anyway, as I stated in another topic ("Influence of TB theme on horror movie themes"), Simonetti was just the first one in a long series of people who were influenced by TB as a horror movie theme. Nowadays it's really hard to hear a horror movie theme which doesn't feature a tinkling piano.
-------------- Ugo C. - a devoted Amarokian
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