Swashbuckler
Captain Blood - Erich Wolfgang Korngold
The King's Thief - Miklos Rozsa
The Three Musketeers - Max Steiner
Scaramouche - Victor Young
It is entirely appropriate that this recording of
music for epic adventure films should include Captain Blood (1935)
because it was with that greatly successful swashbuckler that the age of
romantic symphonic movie music in Hollywood began. Erich Korngold, acclaimed
for his operas and concert works, had arrived from Vienna the previous year to
arrange and conduct the Mendelssohn score for the Warner Brothers filming of A
Midsummer Night's Dream and they were so impressed with his work they asked
him if he would be interested in writing an original score for Captain
Blood. Korngold was intrigued with the idea and accepted, and thus began
one of the most influential careers in film composition.
Based on Rafael Sabatini's 1922 novel, Captain
Blood is set in the brutal reign of England's King James II (circa 1688)
and tells of a young physician who is falsely accused of treason and shipped
off to Jamaica as a slave. Peter Blood (Errol Flynn) leads a revolt among his
fellow prisoners and after seizing a ship at Port Royal becomes a pirate, also
by this time having fallen in love with Arabella (Olivia de Havilland), the
niece of the Jamaican governor. Blood and his crew plunder shipping in the
Caribbean until such time as Blood receives a commission to serve in the navy
of King William, James having been ousted, to fight in England's war against
France. After defeating a French attack on Jamaica Blood is elected the
governor, with Aarabella his obvious bride-to-be.
Captain Blood was an immediate success and made an overnight star
of young Errol Flynn, and with his sweeping score, full of romantic melodies
and exciting descriptive music, it also made Korngold a Hollywood star. He
signed a contract with Warner Brothers and over the next dozen years wrote
fifteen scores that proved film to be an avenue for serious composition. In the
case of both Flynn and Korngold it was a matter of being in the right place at
the right time with the right talents.
Like Korngold, the Hungarian-born Miklos Rozsa was
able to maintain his reputation as a composer of concert and chamber works
while also becoming a master of film composition. R6zsa wrote some ninety film
scores of every kind but it was with historical and biblical vehicles like Quo
Vadis (1951), Ivanhoe (1952), Ben-Hur (1959) and El Cid (1960)
that he excelled. In 1955, while under contract to MGM, he scored The King's
Thief, which proved to be yet another example of a score being better than
the picture for which it was written. Loosely based on the adventures of
Captain Thomas Blood, the man who managed to steal the crown jewels from the
Tower of London in 1671, the hero (Edmund Purdom) elects to serve the cause of
King Charles II (George Sanders) when he realizes the king's chief minister,
the Duke of Brampton (David Niven) intends to gain control of England. Such
plans are, of course, foiled but not with the flair that might have made The
King's Thief a memorable film. Be that as it may, R6zsa provided a perfect
period setting and a suggestion of the excitement that might have been.
Alexander Dumas' The Three Musketeers is the
most filmed of all classic novels with some fifteen European and American
versions to date. The 1935 RKO production is not among the best, largely owing
to the miscasting of the unexciting Walter Abel as D' Artagnan and character
actors too old to be musketeers. The costuming and the swordplay, however, were
both splendid, although what makes this film really worthwhile is the music
score by Max Steiner. The spirit of the musketeers and their 'All for One and
One for All' gallantry is in the music, along with the romance and adventurous
action invented by Dumas. Steiner, who had won an Oscar for his landmark
scoring of The Informer in 1935, realised this filming of the durable
classic needed all the help it could get. Just how well he succeeded is
cheerfully apparent in this suite expertly put together by John Morgan after a
thorough study of the Steiner score. It is doubtful if any composer will ever
capture the elan and bravado of Dumas' musketeers better than did Max
Steiner with this music.
No apology needs to be made for MGM's handsome 1952
production of Scaramouch, which has the most important of all qualities
needed for swashbucklers - a sense of flair -in this case buoyed by a lilting
music score by Victor Young. MGM purchased the film rights soon after the
Sabatini novel was published in 1921. A year later the public flocked to see
the popular Ramon Novarro in a silent filming of this spectacular tale of the
adventures of a dashing nobleman in the years of the French revolution. A
generation later they lined up to see an even more splendid Technicolor version
with Stewart Granger as the hero and Mel Ferrer as the villain. The hero, Andre
Moreau, is a lighthearted playboy, supported by the stipends of his unknown
father. When the payments cease he finds he is the son of the deceased Duc de
Gavrillac, which is a complication because he is in love with the beautiful
Aline de Gavrillac (Janet Leigh). He retreats, assuming her to be his sister
and she in turn is courted by the elegant Marquis de Maynes (Ferrer), reputedly
the finest swordsman in France. The two men run afoul of each other in an
argument, with Andre forced to make his escape because he cannot fence. He vows
one day to have revenge. In the meantime he hides out with a theatrical troupe
and assumes the disguise of a masked clown called Scaramouche, all the while
taking fencing lessons from a master swordsman. The troupe's leading actress,
Lenore (Eleanor Parker), falls in love with Andre but finds his heart is set
only on Aline. Eventually Andre challenges the Marquis to a duel and beats him,
but for some reason hesitates to kill him. It turns out the Marquis is his half-brother,
that Andre is not a Gavrillac and can therefore marry his adored Aline.
A beautifully balanced film of romance and heroism, Scaramouch
is supported all the way by the music of Victor Young. In Hollywood since
1936 Young had had plenty of experience scoring such costumed epics as Reap
the Wild Wind (1942) and Samson and Delilah, along with adventure
films like For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943) and Around the World in
Eighty Days (1956). He was a master melodist and it takes only one hearing
of his music for Scaramouch to know that this was a film for which he
was the perfect choice.
Tony Thomas
A Note on reconstruction:
Most of the music in this album was reconstructed
from piano/conductor scores especially for this recording. The sad fact is many
of our classic American film scores no longer exist in their fully
orchestrated, original versions. Luckily, multiple copies of the original piano
reductions were made for purposes of conducting, copyright, and timing
considerations. At best, however, these piano scores (on three or four line
staves) are only an approximation of the full scores. Wrong notes and missing
harmonic and melodic material abound. It is an extremely tedious task to
re-orchestrate this music and, with the audio of the original sound track as a
guide, come as close as possible to the composer's original intentions. In some
cases the "conductor score" merely consisted of a violin part! It is
our sincere aim to present this music as authentically as possible.
John W. Morgan