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EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: COMPOSER CLAUDIO GIZZI
Written by Chris Alexander   
Wednesday, 07 October 2009 19:10

Exclusive Interview with Composer Claudio Gizzi

In Paul Morrissey’s eccentric and utterly unhinged 1974 Eurotrash classic BLOOD FOR DRACULA (often erroneously credited as the brainchild NYC art guru Andy Warhol), the opening imagery of Dracula (played by iconic German weirdo Udo Kier) painting his face kabuki white has always haunted me.  The sequence is the spine and soul of the picture, showing the good Count as a tired, lonely showman who has long been forgotten by time and by the audience he once terrified.

And as eerily gorgeous as that bit of credit crawling business is, it’s the delicate piano waltz playing in the background that truly sells it.

Like Morrissey’s 3D companion film FLESH FOR FRANKENSTEIN the music for BLOOD was composed by Italian musician Claudio Gizzi. It’s orchestral, elegant, full of melancholy mourning and sadness. And truthfully it’s that dichotomy between the excessive gore, sex and general insanity on screen with Gizzi’s sophisticated, sometimes Wagnerian soundscapes that – I firmly believe – have given the two picture’s their enduring and evolving cult status.

Whether it be experimenting with progressive electronica with his fascinating Automat project (check out http://www.geocities.com/automat_br/ for samples) or sculpting oddball stanzas for Roman Polanski’s eccentric and often neglected WHAT?, the music of Claudio Gizzi has always been a sort of secret handshake in cult cinema soundtrack circles.

I caught up with the charming Gizzi recently to see how he’s been keeping himself and to lay some love on his legacy.

Here we go…

Your music is beautiful and a major influence on my own compositions.

Thank you.

Tell me a bit about your childhood experiences with music...your training.... your inspirations to pursue composing...

From my earliest childhood I was very attracted by music. My parents told me that in the earliest days of my life my favourite tune which made me convulse with laughter and made me beat time to the  music, was the Ouverture to William Tell by Rossini. In other words, music had to be lively and jolly for me.  I belong to a family of amateur instrumentalists. In my family I am the only one who has adopted music as a profession. From being a few months old, I listened with pleasure to the violin, the banjo and the accordion and then at school I started to learn to play the piano, so as to continue in the family tradition, my parents  realized that I was really fascinated by music, and so I studied composition, orchestration and everything else.

I know that your first solo credit was Polanski's insane WHAT? How did you become involved in composing for film?

My teachers had noticed that from the beginning, from my earliest lessons, I preferred, when seated at the piano, to improvise rather than to study and that it was easy for me to compose little pieces in a required pattern and so my way of life was indicated. Not as a pianist - even though I preferred piano and it was my favourite instrument- but as a composer.  Anyway, in my way of thinking,  the music more expressive and pleasing to write and to perform for an up-to- date composer is music for films and therefore at the first opportunity that came in my way I was there to collaborate with famous directors and it was incredibly  important that my  first appearance in the cinema was with Luchino Visconti with the film DEATH IN VENICE , a film completely infused by music.

But then Polanski arrived and  wanted me for the sound truck of WHAT?.

What was Roman like at this time? It was I presume, a strange film for him to make at a very volatile point in his life.

For me Roman was like a magician,  a fairy, an elf…a genius, a creator  of a dreamlike atmosphere, lively and a very knowledgeable person about music both entertaining and profound…every moment that I spent with  him (from the very start of the work at Cinecitta' to the eating of spaghetti together at his villa on Appia Antica  is stamped on my memory.

And to think that he immediately  had faith in me, even though  I was then just a young boy.

Your work in FLESH FOR FRANKENSTEIN is incredible. Who really directed the film? Antonio Margheretti or Paul Morrissey?


You know,  the soundtrack for FLESH is due to Roman Polanski. He had listened to some of my compositions  at piano and he introduced me to Paul Morissey. That  meeting was the beginning of  the collaboration with him (followed then by the soundtrack for BLOOD FOR DRACULA). Both the principal themes of this films I had played on the piano and then with my orchestration I was able to create that atmosphere of horror and romance that  I considered necessary for the films...Really,  I was always interested in this style of horror, fantasy and Science Fiction in literature as well as in the cinem so, to be able to work at these two strange films - elegant, witty, intriguing - involved  me and delighted me. I had artistic connections at all times with Paul Morrisey, whom I consider is a most  cultured, refined  and creative person.  I remember that Margheriti  intervened to bring his skill and experience in the splatter scenes and in the tricks of some scenes.

How much freedom were you given with Frankenstein? Were you aware ahead of time that it was a 3D film and did that influence your compositions?

It has been a very good experience because I was not conditioned by Paul, who trusted my musical intuition (especially my collaboration with Visconti). Before writing Frankenstein’s soundtrack Paul had listened to Frankenstein’s theme played on the piano and was very impressed . For the rest  I had been able to present and to realize all my musical ideas as I wished to do and in the style that I had originally chosen. With reference to the 3D, I can remember having been able to see only as far as the end of my work, so I could not have been influenced at the time at all by the gimmick.

With BLOOD, you created one of the most gorgeous pieces of music ever used in a horror film....that overture...haunting. Was that composed while staring at Udo Kier's face in post production or was it composed before the film was edited?

Effectively this theme for Dracula (especially in its version for solo piano) is one of the most complete and efficacious things of my career. This is a demonstration that the simplicity and power of melody makes it superior and the most important thing in the musical world. I remember that this theme was born spontaneously by the magnificent images of the titles of the film while they were being shown on the screen. Udo’s sadness, composure and elegance in front of the mirror really struck me and guided me towards this musical experience…)

Have you recieved letters and love for these scores over the years?

In fact, I received a great number of messages of approval and enjoyment from all over the world, especially from the U.S.A. There were also some people who wanted to have the score and to some of them  I sent a score that I had written and signed. I hope I have made someone among my admirers happy....Basically, music is a wonderful, universal language which unites us and creates friends.

Why did you stop making music for movies?

Italy is a strange country, where both the most marvellous and the most unbearable things occur. As  you know, from the great world of the Italian cinema after the second world war, we have come to a time that was less favourable to our productions.

In these years the so called “cinema of style” has vanished and also the greater part of Italian films have been comedies, or at least entertaining  or dramatic works (obviously apart  from the work of Fellini and other talented people). So, the conditions for being able to write music of international value is greatly reduced and there is space only for the great Italian composers,  above all,  Ennio Morricone. In other ways even my way of life as a musician has not helped me to find a place in my country and so, during these years of my career, I have been working in the world of commercial music… in the world of the TV, easy listening and  music for the theatre.

However, even in this sphere I have been able to achieve international success  under the pseudonym  "Jean-Pierre Posit "(classic- romantic music , dreamy and elegant) or "Automat" (electronic and aggressive)...

I also enjoyed your work in David Gregory’s PLAGUE TOWN. Why did you decide to make that piece for the film?

I have been sorry not to have known sooner David, a man of great experience and knowledge of the cinema-music world who immediately became my dear friend, by then the  work of his splendid film was already completed and the music already recorded...the elegance and the atmosphere created in his film would have been perfect for my way of making  music. Anyway, when David had sent me a rough cut of his film  I was struck immediately by the pictures ( especially the expressiveness and skill of the lead actress Josslyn  DeCrosta and  the sight of that girl with the eyes drawn , the one in the advertisement of the film) and suddenly the theme was born...

I then sent it to David  - once more the piano,  as you can hear – and he liked it and to my great satisfaction has included in his film. I hope to be able in the future  to collaborate again with David Gregory, because I am sure of being able with my music to contribute to his excellent work as a film-maker and because,  with David, I have a great feeling of agreement and also a feeling for filming and for music.

As a lover of music, who are some of the great composers for film that you love?

A great number of them. Often, when I watch a film just about I don’t understand the plot  as I cannot listen to the dialogues, being so involved with the music. However, my favourite, without a doubt, is John Williams, who I consider to be a master because of the strength of his melodic talent and at the same time  an incomparable builder of forms and orchestrations. Here, in Italy I like Nino Rota because no other composer is able to invent simple melodies that are very beautiful and unforgettable.

I always think that the greatest attraction in  music is due to that incomprehensible skill that you don’t study, you don’t learn, but that is born in you...the melody.

Alexander out.


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Last Updated on Tuesday, 20 October 2009 01:00
 
Coming This Fall: CHRIS ALEXANDER'S BLOOD SPATTERED BOOK
Written by Chris Alexander   
Tuesday, 22 September 2009 11:48



Coming this Fall from Midnight Marquee Press (www.midmar.com), CHRIS ALEXANDER'S BLOOD SPATTERED BOOK!
 
The tome is a collection of wild, funny, passionate and dramatic musings on genre films (primarily horror, of course) that I love and that have been forgotten, ignored or, more often than not, slipped through the collective pop culture radar entirely. Some essays have been expanded from entries in my popular online column at www.fangoria.com and many are brand new.
 
Films covered include ALICE, SWEET ALICE, ANTHROPOPHAGUS, CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD, LAIR OF THE WHITE WORM, COUNT DRACULA'S GREAT LOVE, THE SENTINEL, LIFEFORCE, THE DEVIL'S NIGHTMARE, DEMON SEED, RAVENOUS, LAND OF THE MINOTAUR, NOMADS, ANGEL HEART, PSYCHOMANIA and many, many more.
 
Accompanying these essays are a staggering collection of new interviews with such iconic film figures as Mickey Rourke, Richard Matheson, Amanda Donohoe, Michael Winner, Tobe Hooper, Roger Corman, Fabio Frizzi, Mark Damon and Stephen Rea to name just a few.
 
Fleshed out with dozens of rare stills, CHRIS ALEXANDER'S BLOOD SPATTERED BOOK is a love letter to "movies that refuse to behave" and is a must read for insomniac retro horror and eccentric cinema enthuisiasts everywhere!
 
Stay tuned for further details as I get them…
 
WWW.CHRIS-ALEXANDER.CA
WWW.MIDMAR.COM
 

 



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NICOLAS CAGE re-enacts a scene from VAMPIRE'S KISS
Written by Chris Alexander   
Tuesday, 22 September 2009 02:12

Fans of the woefully underrated 1988 satire VAMPIRE'S KISS should give this little audio byte a listen. In it, I ask actor Nicolas Cage to repeat a line from one of my favorite scenes in the film....

                                            

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Last Updated on Tuesday, 22 September 2009 02:27
 
INTERVIEW: Chris Alexander talks to Werner Herzog
Written by Chris Alexander   
Friday, 18 September 2009 03:58

I had the mind blowing chance to sit down with one of my icons, German filmmaker Werner Herzog, to talk about his astonishing redix of BAD LIEUTENANT and the deepley weird David Lynch produced MY SON, MY SON, WHAT HAVE YE DONE. Check it out...


                                          

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Last Updated on Friday, 18 September 2009 04:02
 
SURVIVAL OF THE DEAD: George A. Romero in Toronto
Written by Chris Alexander   
Friday, 18 September 2009 03:18

I had the opportunity to get close to the wild world of George A. Romero last week as the Toronto International Film Festival and The Toronto Zombie Walk honoured George with a deluxe "Special Edition Director's Cut" zombie walk up Yonge Street into Yonge/Dundas Square.

George is now a Canadian, living in Toronto and because of this, programmer Colin Geddes arranged to present him with an award - the CN Tower with a severed hand skerwered throught it.

Then, later that night, the filmmaking legend (his 1978 epic DAWN OF THE DEAD still stands as my personal favorite film) was on hand to introduce his latest zombie romp, SURVIVAL OF THE DEAD.

See below for a little video I made detailing some of the fun...

                                            

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Last Updated on Friday, 18 September 2009 03:31
 
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