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Art of the Score

Episode 13: Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone

Art of the Score

Nicholas Buc

Education, Tv & Film, Music

5 • 624 Ratings

🗓️ 13 November 2017

⏱️ 113 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

From Hedwig’s theme to Quidditch matches, the musical world of Hogwarts may be one of the most iconic musical contributions to the film world this millennia. John Williams worked orchestral magic and brought us a unique contribution of fantasy, off-beat fanfares, and even a bit of jazz harmony. But what makes this great score tick? Join us as we dissect the power, the charm, and the enchantment of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone. Episode notes: 07:00 – a brief history of the franchise 10:45 – Harry Potter, one of the largest franchises of the 21st century 11:22 – John Williams on how he came to be involved with Harry Potter 15:00 – Hedwig’s Theme 16:42 – the celeste and its use in other films and, famously, Tchaikovsky’s Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy 18:15 – Andrew drops a bombshell 20:10 – Breaking down Hedwig’s Theme 26:20 – a recounting of the day the musicians first encountered the score 28:00 – Hedwig’s Theme and its variations 31:25 – is Hedwig’s Theme the last John Williams melody to enter pop culture? 33:00 – The Flying Theme or the Nimbus 2000 Theme 44:15 – Harry’s Theme or the Family Theme 50:27 – the appearance of the tri-tone 52:30 – Harry’s Wondrous World Theme 1:00:08 – the Hogwarts School Song 1:02:00 – we apologise for what is about to happen… 1:04:50 – Philosopher’s vs Sorcerer’s (Stone) and some of the localisations 1:08:10 – The Stone motif 1:16:00 – the Voldemort motifs 1:23:00 – the music of Diagon Alley 1:31:10 – some banquet music from Harry Potter and other films 1:36:50 – the Quidditch Fanfare and its similarity to other “arena” cues 1:40:30 – John Williams’ use of synthesizer for the Invisibility Cloak 1:43:10 – the diegetic (harp) music of Harry Potter 1:47:00 – the action music compositional style of early 2000s John Williams We love to hear from our listeners – get in touch via Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook, and if you like The Art of the Score, please take a moment to subscribe, rate and comment.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This episode of Art of the Score is proudly supported by the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra.

0:05.3

Head over to www.m.m.com.com.org for more information on their upcoming season of live

0:13.4

movie score presentations. Welcome to Art of the Score, the podcast that explores, demystifies and celebrates some of the greatest soundtracks of all time from the world of film, TV and video games.

0:38.8

I'm Andrew Pogson, and in each episode we'll be joined by Daniel Golding and Nicholas Buck

0:43.2

as we check out a soundtrack we love, break down its main themes, explore what makes the score tick,

0:49.2

and hopefully impart our love of the world of soundtracks.

1:08.3

Music impart our love of the world of soundtracks. In episode 13, we explore the music from the wondrous world of Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone,

1:15.6

directed by Chris Columbus and score by the one and only John Williams.

1:20.6

Although Williams only composed music for the first three Harry Potter films, his themes have endured as a fundamental element of the Harry Potter

1:27.8

world. And it's hard to think about this series without also hearing Williams' magical and

1:33.5

haunting melodies. To say that Harry Potter captured the imagination of an entire generation

1:38.4

would be an understatement. And for many of this series fans, it is their Star Wars, with new

1:44.0

iterations to the franchise continuing to be released to this day.

1:47.9

And joining me on Platform 9 and 3 quarters, having just received his letter to Hogwarts,

1:53.0

his composer, arranger, orchestrator, conductor, the music kind, not the train kind,

1:57.8

and guy who is happy to run at brick walls just in case they're magic, it's Nicholas Buck.

2:02.9

It's Leviosa.

2:06.2

Hi guys, how you going?

2:07.6

Yeah, I'm great.

2:09.2

I'm excited to get into this Harry Potter score because it's a bit of an iconic one this one.

2:16.0

It is.

2:16.4

It's, I mean, like you said, it is this generation Star Wars.

...

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