I remember having a short conversation with a film producer over a very famous composer who doesn't score like they used to.
We both agreed, if he doesn't feel it anymore, then why does he even do it? It's certainly not a lack of money -- he's got enough to retire right now and live very confortably.
While that's a large part, I think that composer, and others are simply not inspired. What's inspiring about insiped, one-dimensional cliched characters? Leads that have no presence? Plotless funbling around? Extremely poor dialogue? Movies with half or more made of songs (unless a Disney or Pixar work)? Films that constantly go through editing, then re-shooting because of poor testing?
OR films with too many cooks in the kitchen , each trying to cook them film his way (want a new example? See, if you dare, "Men In Black 3"), and occassionally mutiple parties each telling a composer how the score should be, thus no direction and a parilous journey on a tightrope of producer/director idiocy.
Many director's today don't even know how music works, have any musical knowledge, and don't have trust in their composer. They seek not by how a composer scores, but rather who's "new", "hip", scored a recent film like his or hers, and even ventures out into non composers like popular bands
(meanwhile countless composers, many working in the industry for two decades or more, languish waiting for the phone to ring).
Don't get me wrong, we've gotten many great compsoers from musical bands, song bands, etc., like Henry Mancini, I think John Williams did some work like that, too; Christophe Beck (pretty sure he still has the band); the sword-swallowing, fire-breathing boobie honkin' redheaded going deaf Danny Elfman (how many film composers today have THAT resume?); Nile Rogers (if he'll score anything ever again), etc.
But many of the ones chosen today aren't displaying the same promise. They lack compositional knowledge, know how.
I'm reminded of one composer whom had never scored before and was asked if he was interested. He said "Yes" without knowing how, realized his error, and started calling around to orchestrators, etc., to get a crash course (ultimately he was passed on), while it sounds like today's newbies just muddle together their band friends and improvise. At least Masterdon called upon John Powell to help with "Jonnah Hex" (rejected, but still).
And so many Hollywood studios don't want to shell out for the big orchestra unless your a "name" (like Brian Tyler or Hans Zimmer), and claim they have no money; they reject one score, pay the composer; they reject a second score, pay the composer, then claim they have no money -- but they made that claim the previous two composers, too. Then you got a rush job. They have no problem plopping down money for actors who call us racist, say they voite for a President based on skin color, or actresses who've shaked hands and hung around with the bad guys who shot and killed Americans, or fly over and hang out with dictators, but for the composer -- no money for you!.
I remember one composer telling me about how some studios now are offering "package" deals wherein they give you a certain amount of money and that's it -- you got to do the score within that budghet. So, the composer, desperate to spread his wings and contribute something good when needed, has to shell out of his own pocket to get extra players, staff, recording time.
I think I've gone on too long. The atmosphere is counterproductive to scores of the passed. Hollywood makes films that we're saying are going to suck, meanwhile they are editing the trailers in fruitless efforts to make it look goo, appealing, or recapturing the "'80's", but blow just like we all knew they did (though there's always some member who think that stiming pile of Hollywood guano is a "go0d moviee!!1 !").
Well, aren't we lucky? There's hundreds, and hundreds of scores from the 1980's and lower on CD to go sample. One never has to delve into today's scoring. One could spend years and years just finding and listening to Morricone scores.
Need a break? Here's some old goodies (most never on CD) to enjoy and bring back the nostalgia of scores passed:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a22yrRNB11shttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkyiI3CJjb4http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r_NgXw6lrkwhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ytZztvoH7khttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxZFOHc8Ll4http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MopIS80fvjwhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHAQ7pfaxJAYou're welcome.