The bit I was refering to in the Capital Ship video can be heard around 50 seconds in to it, it's not much or long however it does remind me very much of this.
Those who think it is out of order to make a soundtrack a bit like Star Wars ought to bear in mind that John Williams actually 'borrowed' much of that tune himself.
Yup, sorry to shatter those illusions, but the Star Wars theme - brilliant though it undoubtedly is - has many musical motifs (very obviously when you hear it) based on the soundtrack from a film dating from 1942 called Kings Row (don't bother watching it by the way, among its stars is Ronald Reagan, which will give you an idea of how cack it truly is).
Nevertheless the Kings Row soundtrack, written by Erich Wolfgang Korngold, who is probably more famous for having scored the brilliant 1938 Errol Flynn/Olivia de Havilland film version of The Adventures of Robin Hood, is where Williams got his 'inspiration'. And it's not the only time John Williams has done that either, compare his Jaws soundtrack with Dvorak's ninth symphony too.
Nothing wrong with being inspired by other stuff of course, but it's interesting to check out where things originate. Some links below if you want to hear the similarities:
Star Wars versus Kings Row: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V47enEvsafQ
Jaws versus Dvorak's Ninth: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UPAxg-L0xrM
On one of the film courses I teach, I also use the framing and shot comparisons between the 1955 Michael Anderson movie The Dam Busters, and 1977's Star Wars as an example of the art of framing shots for directorial visual tricks such as saccades and the rule of thirds. Specifically the attack sequence on the dams and the trench run on the Death Star. In many places, Star Wars is virtually a shot for shot remake in terms of editing, lighting and framing. You should check those side by side too some time if you get the chance. Even the soundtrack sort of matches:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-q47GIgmQWo
I'll be honest, I think people are reading too much into it.
You may as well compare Elite Dangerous to bumble bees for the difference it makes, after all, bees are black and yellow, shouldn't be able to fly, have to warm themselves up before take off, and fly from system to system, I mean, flower to flower collecting bounty (nectar).
As to the Jaws comparison, it's based around a semi-tone, people. Any idea how many times a semi-tone has been used as a musical interval throughout history?
Modern composers too, for example, Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones...
and that ladies & gentlemen is the perfect description of why not to ever listen to teh stones.
thanks chock i finally have a sound stones put down![]()
I'll be honest, I think people are reading too much into it.
You may as well compare Elite Dangerous to bumble bees for the difference it makes, after all, bees are black and yellow, shouldn't be able to fly, have to warm themselves up before take off, and fly from system to system, I mean, flower to flower collecting bounty (nectar).
The bloke who decided bumble bees shouldn't be able to fly didn't fully understand bumble bees OR aerodynamics but somehow the myth has persisted despite it being shown to be wrong.
The Jaws theme is not based around a semitone, it's based around an ostinato of a raised semitone and lowered tone, either side of the root note.
Besides, if ED does resemble Star Wars from place to place, who cares? Star Wars is a classic of cinema history, didn't you know?
I really like the main menu music. It has its own style and is really great in my opinion. However, the music for the actual dogfighting is dreadfully similar to Star Wars - so I agree with OP. I got the same vibe from the Battleship video that was shown a few months back.