Rome’s
city council voted on Friday to rename one of its concert halls after
Oscar-winning composer Ennio Morricone, who died last week in the Italian
capital.
The Music Park Auditorium will now be called the Ennio
Morricone Auditorium.
Morricone won a lifetime achievement Academy Award in 2007
as well as an Oscar in 2016 for the score he wrote for “The Hateful Eight.”
At Rome’s
City Hall ceremony, director Giuseppe Tornatore, whose “Cinema Paradiso” won an
Oscar as best foreign language film and featured Morricone’s sentimental music,
struggled against tears as he paid tribute to the composer.
Tornatore recalled how Morricone liked to say that “in
silence, one finds the key to music ... the silences, the intervals."
Referring to the 91-year-old composer's death on July 6, Tornatore added: ”So,
maybe the silence that he initiated a few days ago is what will be the hardest
for us to listen to, because it will be a silence that's too, too long."
Among Morricone's memorable music for movies was the
coyote-howl theme for the iconic Spaghetti Western “The Good, the Bad and the
Ugly” and the haunting songs in the epic “Once Upon A Time In America.” Both
films were directed by his former elementary school classmate, Sergio Leone.
The Orchestra of Santa Cecilia plays under the direction of
Andre Morricone, center, son of Oscar-winning composer Ennio Morricone, who
died last week in the Italian capital, on the occasion of a special council at Rome's city hall, Friday,
July 17, 2020. Rome’s
city council voted on Friday to rename one of its concert halls after the
Oscar-winning composer, the Music Park Auditorium will now be called the Ennio
Morricone Auditorium
No comments:
Post a Comment