A great film score can hit you over the head, punch you in the gut or creep up on you, inching up your neck. Sometimes, the score makes the scene. Think of the bicycle flying through the sky in "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial," John Williams' music so integral to the moment that Steven Spielberg cut the film to fit the orchestra track. Or Adam Sandler tap dancing, to spastic rhythms, in the supermarket aisle in "Punch-Drunk Love."
This week the Minnesota Orchestra launches a new season of movie-music pairings with its live performance of "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban." (Which, it so happens, is one of conductor Sarah Hicks' favorite scores. Read on.) Across the nation, orchestras are luring new listeners with live renditions of classic and popular movie scores. Sales of live music and film concerts have skyrocketed thanks to the ever-expanding set of movie titles available to orchestras, a Minnesota Orchestra spokeswoman said. "Harry Potter" films sell out each year.
It got us thinking: Where can a music-loving viewer discover even more great soundtracks? And what are the undercelebrated triumphs in nearly 100 years of musical movie moments? We posed these questions to eight talented Minnesotans representing the worlds of music, movies and theater. Their answers have been edited for length.
Priti Gandhi
Chief artistic officer, Minnesota Opera
Her pick: The original "Star Wars" trilogy (1977-83) by John Williams
Why it's a favorite: "Though I saw it before I knew I would enter the world of opera, I was struck by the operatic scope and modern mythology. The subject of mythology is very personal and deep in my culture — Hindu traditions are largely based on the storytelling in our texts, and I find them to be comforting in how I relate to the world. I know that 'Return of the Jedi' isn't high on some people's favorite in the trilogy, but the music in the Battle of Endor always made me smile. It's whimsical and chaotic, and I loved how it encompassed all the crazy sequences just perfectly."
Sarah Hicks
Principal conductor of Live at Orchestra Hall
Her pick: "Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban" (2004) by John Williams