

Pingback: Brian Tyler conducting and scoring Now You See Me 2 (2016) | Film Music Central Pingback: Brian Tyler conducts The Mummy (2017) | Film Music Central Pingback: Brian Tyler “Dragonball Evolution” scoring session (2009) | Film Music Central Pingback: Brian Tyler scoring session for Iron Man 3 (2013) | Film Music Central Pingback: Brian Tyler scoring Partition (2007) | Film Music Central Pingback: Brian Tyler talks Rambo (2008) | Film Music Central Pingback: Brian Tyler talks The Expendables (2010) | Film Music Central *poster image is the property of Paramount Pictures Predator: Requiem” scoring session (2007)īrian Tyler “Law Abiding Citizen” scoring sessions (2009)īrian Tyler “Dragonball Evolution” scoring session (2009)īrian Tyler “Battle: Los Angeles” (2011) scoring sessionīrian Tyler “Power Rangers” scoring session (2017) You can become a patron of the blog at /musicgamer460Ĭheck out the YouTube channel (and consider hitting the subscribe button)īrian Tyler scoring session for Iron Man 3 (2013)īrian Tyler conducting and scoring Now You See Me 2 (2016)īrian Tyler “Alien vs. As I said, I thought I would try something new 🙂 Enjoy the music! I also dare you to listen with your eyes closed (by far the best way to listen to film music) and see what you think/feel. This selection is only three minutes long, so if you have a spare minute this weekend, sit back, pop the headphones on, and give this a listen. He’s already composed for a handful of MCU films (his score for Thor: The Dark World is half the reason I love that film so much) and he’s scheduled to compose the score for the live-action Power Rangers film due out next year. If Brian Tyler’s name is not familiar, then I think it will be in the next five years, he’s a very prolific film composer with an extensive filmography already. Tyler’s style has clearly evolved since his work on Alien vs Predator: Requiem (yes, I actually sat through that movie, no I don’t know what I was thinking). The music here is energetic, dynamic and surprisingly symphonic (I found myself reminded of Howard Shore’s style in some places) for an action film produced in 2014. This is partly why I chose to study film music: when you separate the music from the film, you can hear some very beautiful and wonderful things, and these are things I think everyone should hear at least once. I thought I would share this clip with you because, even though I have never seen Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, I immediately found myself drawn into the music (it helps that Brian Tyler is a very energetic composer). As a general rule the finished film (or nearly finished in some cases) is playing on a screen in front of the conductor, with the current scene corresponding to the music being recorded. However, for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2014), I found a sound-only clip showing composer Brian Tyler conducting a scoring session.īrian Tyler scoring “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles” (2014)Ī scoring session is when the composer and the orchestra sit down and record the music piece by piece for the film. Normally, when I post about a scoring session for a particular film score, there’s an interview accompanying it. Today I’m going to try something a little different.
