

Song? What Song?
It could be that I was so negatively astonished because I've always been under the impression that songs were supposed to have more than a dozen words, rather than the same ten repeated endlessly. Or it could be that I believe that they're supposed to have melodies longer than a commercial jingle, and that those melodies should be better than those of a commercial jingle.
Of the three "nominees," I don't think any single one had a phrase longer than about four bars [maybe six?], before repeating. All had simplistic and droning repetitive rhythms, as well as equally simplistic lyrics. All three "songs" were the song-writer's equivalent of classical music minimalism crossed with repetitive rhythm... and people claim opera is boring? Compared to what I heard on Sunday night, I'm not so certain I'd rather not sit through all sixteen hours of Wagner's "Ring" cycle than spend fifteen minutes listening to such so-called songs... and supposedly these were the "best" of 2008?
In this light, one of the most ironic aspects of the ceremony was the music number performed by Hugh Jackman and a hundred or so others that proclaimed that "the musical is back." Oh... virtually all the lyrics were from older musicals, cannibalized or perhaps zombie-ized, for the production. No... it appears that musicals may be resurrected by
Now, I've seen a number of very good new movies over the past year, with a number of good songs as part of the soundtracks, or even performed. BUT...none of those songs were new or original. Where are the modern equivalents of Love is a Many Splendored Thing, White Christmas, Over the Rainbow,
Just what happened to actual song-writers? The ones who knew what melody and lyrics were and who could move listeners without the aid of gyrating dancers and near-lethal percussion?
The fault for the lack of decent listening material in movies rests just as much on the backs of movie producers as it does song-writers. While there may have been a dearth of material from which to choose, the producers made the decision to use music that made the movie work better (despite the fact that it was unoriginal), or as you stated, songs which were new, but which were audio pablum, rather than taking a risk that a more complex new song would be well received. As hard a time as the movie industry is currently having, that's hardly surprising.
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