Kilar: Bram Stoker's Dracula / Death and the Maiden / King of the Last Days
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Wojciech Kilar (b.1932) Film Music Bram Stoker's Dracula 1992 Konig der letzen Tage 1993 Death and the Maiden 1994 The Beads of One Rosary 1980 Pearl in the...
Wojciech Kilar (b.1932)
Film Music
Bram Stoker's Dracula 1992
Konig der letzen Tage 1993
Death and the Maiden 1994
The Beads of One Rosary 1980
Pearl in the Crown 1972
Born in Lvov, formally Poland, now Ukraine, on 17th
July, 1932, Wojciech Kilar studied at the State Higher
School of Music in Katowice, moving to Paris in 1959
to study under Nadia Boulanger at the Conservatoire.
The recipient of numerous international awards,
including the Lili Boulanger Memorial Fund Award in
1960, and two awards from the Polish Minister of
Culture in 1967 and 1976, Kilar scored his first film in
1960, and went on to write music for Poland's most
acclaimed directors, including Krzysztof Kieslowski,
Krzysztof Zanussi, Kazimierz Kutz and Andrzej
Wajda.
Kilar had worked on over a hundred Polish films
before scoring his first American film, Francis Ford
Coppola's Bram Stoker's Dracula, followed by
acclaimed scores for Roman Polanski's Death and the
Maiden and The Ninth Gate, and Jane Campion's
Portrait of a Lady, typified by expressive themes and
minimalist harmonies. As well as his film work, Kilar
continues to write concert music, including a Horn
Sonata, a Wind Quintet, the epic cantata Exodus
[Naxos 8.554788] used as the trailer for Schindler's
List, and a Piano Concerto. Kilar's first film score in
the 1960s, The Debutant, coincided with the radical
heyday of the Warsaw Autumn Festival. In 1974, the
musical simplification of the orchestral work Krzesany
[Naxos 8.554788] was anticipated by a series of scores
for Krzysztof Zanussi's films. In this way, the two
main strands of Kilar's creative output can be seen to
have penetrated and influenced each other.
Kilar's film music is, by necessity, one of
limitation. Given the medium, the composer cannot
have a creative free hand. Film music must be discreet,
occurring only where it deepens the psychic states of
characters or intensifies the dramaturgy of a given
moment, conveying the essence of the work in the
process. Put another way, good film music should not
try to dominate the viewer's perception. It cannot
create a parallel narration and, because of this, the
composer has consciously to limit his creative
potential. From this perspective, one can admire the
strength of expression of Kilar's film scores: clarifying
and deepening those scenes which cannot be expressed
either in pictures or words, and where music can
function with all its power.
Thanks in part to its powerful music, Bram
Stoker's Dracula (1992) was acclaimed as one of the
most authentic versions of the Dracula story, and won
Kilar the ASCAP Award. Beside the horror element, it
has some evocative music surrounding the more
'gothic' aspects. One instance is the Prokofiev-like
'The Brides', passionately thrusting strings over
moody piano and percussion, which opens the suite.
By contrast, 'The Party' is awash in delicate tracery
for violins and glockenspiel, almost make-believe in
its air of fantasy. A depiction of the two heroines in the
film, 'Mina/Elizabeth' is a fine example of Kilar's
melodic gift, recalling composers as different as
Khachaturian and Arnold in its scoring for strings and
harp. Over a relentless, Mars-like rhythmic ostinato,
'Vampire Hunters' conjures up an air of foreboding.
'Mina/Dracula' underscores the denouement of the
film, strings rising from the depths, to be joined by
wistful cor anglais and flute in an atmosphere of calm
inevitability. Then 'The Storm' bursts in with
Herrmann-like jabbing violins and a steady march
rhythm, over which the chorus intones a menacing
chant which vividly evokes the forces of darkness.
Konig der letzten Tage (The King of the Last
Days) tells of the rise and fall of the false prophet John
of Leyden, who, as leader of the Anabaptists, set up a
short-lived New Jerusalem in Münster during 1534.
The opening 'Intrada', opulently scored for strings,
graphically invokes biblical imagery and religious
intrigue. 'Sanctus' depicts the intense emotions of the
Anabaptist zealots, with another of Kilar's
characteristic choral chants. 'Canzona' is an elegiac
interlude in the drama, cor anglais and harpsichord
combining poignantly with strings. Over pounding
timpani and slashing percussion, 'Miserere'
underlines the emerging conflict between the religious
establishment and the rebels. Music of a more
prayerful nature is to be heard in 'Agnus Dei', sung
unaccompanied in the tradition of medieval choral
writing. The final defeat of the rebels is depicted in the
'Gloria', which effectively draws together aspects of
mood and music from across the film score.
Death and the Maiden (1994), directed by Roman
Polanski, is a psychological thriller based on the
acclaimed play by Ariel Dorfman, in which Paulina
Escobar, a political torture victim, identifies the man
who gives her husband a lift home as the person who
raped her fifteen years earlier. She then sets about
exacting revenge on her torturer in her home. The
three-person, single-set drama makes for an
emotionally-wrenching experience. Of the three
numbers presented here, 'The Confession', in which
sections of the string orchestra are laid simply but
emotively over each other, underscores the scene of
emotional recognition between Paulina and Roberto.
With its sad cor anglais melody, contrasting with more
dissonant elements, 'Paulina's Theme' evokes the
persona of a woman who has been forced to endure
much sorrow. 'Roberto's Last Chance' strikes a mood
of Shostakovich-like aggression as the film's
emotional climax is reached.
The Beads of One Rosary (1980), directed by
Kazimierz Kutz and adapted from his own novel, is set
in a provincial Polish town. Habryka is an old miner
who has won many worker's medals and has now
retired. In order to build new apartments, old houses
are being cleared away, and the residents given flats in
the new high-rise complex. Habryka, however, thinks
his house has too much history, and refuses to leave,
only giving in when the irate head of the mine bribes
him with a new house. Unfortunately, this is in a
remote location and the old couple are lonely. Habryka
dies in his sleep, and - a touching irony - receives a
hero's funeral as a homage to one of the oldest miners
in the district. Much of the film's poignancy of
atmosphere and emotion is distilled into the short
mood-piece featured on this disc, where the piano
evokes a sense of time passing, with trumpet and high
woodwind joining in a wistful waltz for times past.
Pearl in the Crown (1972), also directed by
Kazimierz Kutz, is among the lesser known of Kilar's
film scores. Made in the aftermath of industrial unrest
across Poland in 1970, it looks back to similar troubles
during the 1930s. The owners of an unprofitable
Silesian coal-mine decide to close it down by flooding,
and the miners' union responds by occupying the pit.
What begins on a note of hope and high spirits,
however, is eventually broken by government
indifference, starvation and despair. The film reflects
past and present through its tribute to the power of
collective action and individual commitment. As taken
from the original score, cue numbers 26-27 depict an
encroaching revelation with particularly effective use
of untuned percussion, while cue number 28 is a
further example of the emotionally-charged string
writing with which Kilar has become synonymous in
the domain of film music.
Richard Whitehouse
with thanks to Stanislaw Kosz and Eddie Stewart
Bram Stoker's Dracula (more info)
-
Brides - 4:24
-
The Party - 2:26
-
Mina / Elizabeth - 4:18
-
Vampire Hunters - 3:03
-
Mina / Dracula - 4:45
-
The Storm - 4:11
Konig der letzten Tage (King of the Last Days) (more info)
-
Intrada - 3:16
-
Sanctus - 3:54
-
Canzona - 4:05
-
Miserere - 2:39
-
Agnus Dei - 2:31
-
Gloria - 3:41
Death and the Maiden (more info)
-
The Confession - 4:55
-
Paulina's Theme - 3:43
-
Roberto's Last Chance - 3:29
Paciorki jednego rozanca (Beads of 1 Rosary) (more info)
-
The Beads of One Rosary - 4:04
Perla w koronie (Pearl in the Crown) (more info)
-
Cue numbers 26-27 - 1:43
-
Cue number 28 - 2:14