As a part of its one hundredth anniversary celebration, Warner Bros. showcased its historic musical legacy with — of all issues — a chamber-music live performance Thursday evening at its Steven J. Ross Theater on the WB lot in Burbank.
An estimated 700 followers attended the 2 reveals, through which a string quartet performed well-known film and TV themes amid lots of of synthetic candles. Not like most film-music live shows today, there have been no photos screened. The music itself took heart stage.
Almost half of the 16 items performed had been from post-2000 movies, maybe a nod to up to date audiences anticipating music they might simply acknowledge. However by way of reflecting the wealthy Warner Bros. historical past of songs and scores, it was disappointing to seek out so few from the studio’s first 50 years.
4 of the primary 5 tunes weren’t even from Warner Bros. tasks: “Over the Rainbow” from “The Wizard of Oz” and the title music from “Singin’ within the Rain,” each MGM movies; “Scooby-Doo, The place Are You” from the Hanna-Barbera cartoon manufacturing unit; and “Pure Creativeness” from “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Manufacturing unit,” a Paramount launch. Purists will understandably carp about this, however Warners now owns these titles and thus claims them as their very own.
The Orchid Quartet, whose members usually play on L.A. studio classes, carried out newly organized variations of those tunes, and predictably, those who had been initially written as orchestral works fared greatest when lowered for smaller forces. The musicians captured the drama in Danny Elfman’s “Batman” theme, the folk-based origins of Howard Shore’s music from “The Fellowship of the Ring” and the internal thriller of Hans Zimmer’s “Time” from “Inception.”
Different moods ranged from romantic (“As Time Goes By” from “Casablanca”) to minimalist (“Tubular Bells” from “The Exorcist”), offbeat (Prince’s “Purple Rain”) to fiery (Zimmer’s “Marvel Girl 1984”). Tracks from “Harry Potter and the Goblet of Hearth,” “Man of Metal” and the latest “A Star Is Born” (the Oscar-winning “Shallow”) had been additionally featured.
The finale was a TV traditional – Michael Skloff’s theme from “Buddies” (with the viewers inspired to offer the hand claps) – and the encore was a shock, an Elfman motion cue from “Justice League.”
But the dearth of something by classic-era WB stalwarts Max Steiner (“A Summer time Place”) and Erich Wolfgang Korngold (“The Adventures of Robin Hood”) or, from later years, John Williams (“Superman,” the unique “Harry Potter” themes) appeared like obtrusive omissions for a 70-minute compilation of Warner Bros.’ best hits.
Stay-entertainment discovery platform Fever (“Stranger Issues: The Expertise”) staged the occasion, a part of its “Candlelight” sequence of chamber live shows celebrating every thing from Vivaldi to Radiohead. It introduced that “Candlelight: 100 Years of Warner Bros.” will probably be carried out in 99 different cities world wide, together with April 20 in Chicago and April 29 in New York Metropolis.
Different cities, with dates to be introduced, will embrace Boston, Dallas, San Francisco, Philadelphia, London, Paris and elsewhere. Isabel Solano, world vice chairman of Fever originals, advised Selection in a pre-concert interview that the varied venues will probably be distinctive, from church buildings to palaces to libraries, with the emphasis on creating “a magical environment… a journey via a number of the most iconic film soundtracks” of the studio.
Peter van Roden, senior VP of worldwide themed leisure for Warner Bros.-Discovery, launched the night as commemorating “100 years of storytelling at Warner Bros. The historical past and the musical library of the studio is huge, and making an attempt to choose an hour or an hour and a half of music is a problem, however an exquisite one at that.”