PDA

View Full Version : Windmills of Your Mind composer Michel Legrand dies aged 86


bots
26-01-2019, 07:11 PM
French Oscar-winning composer and jazz pianist Michel Legrand has died in Paris aged 86, his spokesman has said.

During a career spanning more than 50 years, Legrand wrote over 200 film and TV scores, as well as songs.

In 1968, he won his first Oscar for the song The Windmills of Your Mind from The Thomas Crown Affair film.

Two more Oscars followed in 1971 and 1983 for the best original scores in Summer of '42 and Yentl films respectively.

In the 1960s, he collaborated with French new wave director Jacques Demy on The Umbrellas of Cherbourg - the work which opened the door for Legrand to Hollywood.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-47013214
-----
Fantastic composer

41kF2-JvwPs

oYu6HtUxRJs

6ITvY8sPeWk

Nicky91
27-01-2019, 08:13 AM
Michel Legrand, three-time Oscar winner and composer of such classic film songs as “The Windmills of Your Mind,” “I Will Wait for You,” “You Must Believe in Spring” and “What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?,” along with the groundbreaking musical score for “The Umbrellas of Cherbourg,” has died. He was 86.

Legrand died at his home early Saturday in Paris, his publicist told Agence France-Presse. His wife, French actress Macha Meril, was at his side.

His most recent film score was “The Other Side of the Wind,” composed for Orson Welles’ last film, which was finally completed and released in 2018. Decades ago, after their 1974 collaboration on “F for Fake,” the legendary director had asked for another Legrand jazz score. “I take it as a gift from Orson, through the clouds,” he said early last year.

The Paris-born Legrand was active in all musical fields, composing classical works, stage musicals, arranging and recording albums, playing jazz piano and conducting orchestras in concert, as well as scoring for movies and television. He once said, “I’ve never settled on one musical discipline. I love playing, conducting, singing and writing, and in all styles.”

His approximately 150 scores include Jacques Demy’s 1964 classic “The Umbrellas of Cherbourg,” a landmark film in which all of the dialogue is sung and which is believed to mark the only instance in Oscar history in which a composer was nominated in all three music categories for the same film (best song, best original score, best musical adaptation). The songs “I Will Wait for You” and “Watch What Happens,” both of which became standards, emerged from the “Cherbourg” score.

Legrand earned 13 Oscar nominations in all. He won for the song “The Windmills of Your Mind” (1968), the score “Summer of ’42” (1971) and the song score for “Yentl” (1983). In addition to the three “Cherbourg” nominations, others included score nominations for “The Thomas Crown Affair” and “The Young Girls of Rochefort” (both 1968) and song nominations for “What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?” (1969), “Pieces of Dreams” (1970), “How Do You Keep the Music Playing?” (1982) and two songs from “Yentl” that have also gone on to standard status: “Papa, Can You Hear Me?” and “The Way He Makes Me Feel.”

His best-known scores are from the 1960s and ’70s, including “Ice Station Zebra,” “The Go-Between,” “Le Mans,” “Lady Sings the Blues,” “The Three Musketeers,” Orson Welles’ “F for Fake” and “The Other Side of Midnight.” His 1980s scores included Louis Malle’s “Atlantic City,” the James Bond film “Never Say Never Again” and his sole film as writer-director as well as composer, 1989’s semi-autobiographical “Five Days in June.” In the 1990s he collaborated with trumpeter Miles Davis on the score for “Dingo” and with director Robert Altman on “Ready to Wear.”

https://variety.com/2019/film/news/michel-legrand-dies-dead-oscar-winning-composer-1203119247/

gxK5yvmtejQ

last night there was a tribute to michel legrand at the French national final for eurovision, by host and singer Garou, and one of judges and French esc commentator Andre Manoukian behind the piano



13 oscar nominations, 3 time oscar winning composer wow composed music for more than 200 movies

arista
27-01-2019, 01:50 PM
Yes a Great Movie Composer /Piano player
He had a good run.

Crimson Dynamo
27-01-2019, 01:58 PM
A real talent

bots
27-01-2019, 02:00 PM
http://www.thisisbigbrother.com/forums/showthread.php?t=353812

arista
27-01-2019, 02:43 PM
http://www.thisisbigbrother.com/forums/showthread.php?t=353812


Yes Nicky needs to be Merged to your Better Thread

Nicky91
28-01-2019, 08:22 AM
Yes Nicky needs to be Merged to your Better Thread

how is it a better thread :conf:


and i didn't know there was another thread of this

arista
28-01-2019, 08:26 AM
how is it a better thread :conf:


and i didn't know there was another thread of this

Yes you must search on the first page
to see if its posted already
you are lazy.

Better thread as he posted more video examples
made more effort

joeysteele
28-01-2019, 08:37 AM
Genius of a composer.

R.I.P.

Cherie
28-01-2019, 08:37 AM
Yes you must search on the first page
to see if its posted already
you are lazy.

Better thread as he posted more video examples
made more effort

:laugh:

Nicky91
28-01-2019, 08:41 AM
Yes you must search on the first page
to see if its posted already
you are lazy.

Better thread as he posted more video examples
made more effort

ok, i'll learn from this then