Difference between revisions of "DD151310"
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− | [[DD151310]] is a letter dated 1st September 1971 from [[ | + | [[DD151310]] is a letter dated 1st September 1971 from [[Jeffery Boswall]] to the Radiophonic Workshop, the first letter about [[Wildlife Safari to the Argentine]]. |
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=Transcript= | =Transcript= |
Latest revision as of 18:18, 31 May 2016
DD151310 is a letter dated 1st September 1971 from Jeffery Boswall to the Radiophonic Workshop, the first letter about Wildlife Safari to the Argentine.
Transcript
From: Jeffery Boswall, Natural History Unit, Bristol 1st September 1971 Subject: RADIOPHONIC MUSIC FOR "WILDLIFE SAFARI TO SOUTHERN SOUTH AMERICA" To: Head of Radiophonic Workshop, Maida Vale Copy: Barry Paine, Bristol Could I enquire whether it might be possible please to compose some radiophonic music for this series? It is being shot October 1971 to March 1972; edited April 1972 to October 1972; and transmitted October 1972 to December 1972. I imagine you like to be brought in as the earliest stage? In mind at present is openeing and closing title sound only. It would be difficult I think to emplot radiophonic music in the middle of the films, though I am open to suggestion. The "Great Zoos" composition was superb, and as with that we should perhaps also bring in the graphics people at an early stage too? I'm hoping that if you agree to the idea at all, that you will also agree only to use natural sounds from the relevant geographical area: Tropic of Capricornm to the Antarctic circle. Come recordings already exist. Others can be obtained on safari. The kind of species we might use are: Hummingbirds humming Sea elephants growling Bellbirds sounding like hammers on anvils The Giant Potoo, which has one of the most beautifully mournful cries of any bird in the world Braying penguins Bill-clicking albatrosses Screaming Crested Screamers Gulls mewing Howler monkeys howling Enough? Perhaps I sould briefly try to outline my attitude to music in the "Wildlife Safari" series. With the Ethiopian ones I successfully resisted pressure from the cameraman, film editor and assistant film editor to use western style music, even that composed and resorded in Addid Ababa. We used only traditional music indigenous to the country, and little of it at that. My feeling about the next series is to avoid human instrumental music altogether, for reasons it would take a long time to explain. One _might_ use some AMerindian music if it exists, but to have this in the "middle" and radiophonic either end might easilt not work. So this brings us to the possibility of radiophonic in the "middle", which again is somehow rahter difficult accompanying "real" pictures as opposed to the slightly "Conventional" title pictures. But enough of this rambling. What do _you_ think? J F Billington jfb for Jeffery Boswall