Hi everyone - I really hope you enjoy the video! Do let me know what you think, and have a look at the other videos in this Director Project series (bit.ly/2TKkzmk) - there are some amazing essays this month.
Goosebumps man.... Absolutely brilliant video... You made me cry the same way I did while watching the film!! What a fantabulous theme... Can't express the admiration for John Williams in words!
Oh, you just _have_ to talk about Korngold's overwhelmingly beautiful film scores, without whose contributions we'd never have the soaring melodies of John Williams and Howard Shore. I make this suggestion because something about the string tone in particular and the way it's guaranteed to make me cry reminded me of Korngold's music.
I have to say of all the film scores Williams has done, this for me is the best. Without the score, I don’t think the film is half of what it is with it!
Brilliant video, what John Williams does in this score is amazing. Just understanding a little of how he constructed it makes you realise how much more if a genius he is.
Although I'm a music teacher I do not have the gift of creating my own music (maybe because I'm a singer not a pianist). I think the most generous kind of people in the world are composers. Because they can create music of absolute beauty (something priceless to me) and sell it to pay their bills (as Mozart did many times). Fortunatly their music can pass to others and be shared, as in movies. You are so generous as them in sharing your knowledge. Thanks. Do we have a composers international date to honour them? If not, it's time to have. PS. would love to hear you analisis of the entire Conan the Barbarian soundtrack by Basil Poledouris and the Lord of the Rings trilogy. Lots of work isn' t it ?
“Without John Williams, bikes don't really fly, nor do brooms in Quidditch matches, nor do men in red capes. There is no Force, dinosaurs do not walk the Earth, we do not wonder, we do not weep, we do not believe. - Steven Spielberg - 2016
"At the end [of E.T] ILM and I can make those bicycles lift off and get off the ground. We can do that. But John Williams is the only one who can make them truly airborne, because the audience lifts off the ground on John Williams' violins and the audience is carried across the moon or the sun with John Williams' string section." from Spielberg on Spielberg
Good god, I was crying by the end. I've always loved the music to this film but I never knew how brilliantly all of the motives develop and interact throughout the film. And the magic is - you don't have to know - it still hits you at the gut level.
"Then comes... this". Me, a 44, almost 45 yo guy, broke in tears. I watched E.T. in the movies when I was 6, probably the second movie i watched in theatres and one of the 4 that actually made me cry in my whole life. I still get emotional with it. I think every child should watch it. You can learn so many beautiful leassons. Your narrative and analysis is amazing. Thank you.
Also it is remarkable to know that for the chase scene at the end, instead of editing it and then John Williams stepping into it to score it, Spielberg asked him to compose the whole music for the chase scene AND THEN the whole sequence was edited over it. So yeah the music is EXTREMELY important for this movie.
Yup. Williams was having issues hitting the cues correctly at the recording session, so Spielberg told him to just turn off the screens and record the music, and he edited the sequence to match.
Well I'm crying. Definitely Williams' and Spielbergs' best, in my opinion. Love the fact that Spielberg basically did something that not many directors do, and cut the last 15 minutes of the film to Williams' score. Apparently Williams was having a hard time getting the cues exactly right in the recording room, and Spielberg basically went, "I'll turn the movie off, and you just play the piece of music you wrote, because it's so good, and I'll fit the movie to your music." THAT'S INSANE! I think it's why, like you mentioned, the film has such an operatic sense of completion to it.
Indeed. I saw him perform Adventures On Earth" in Carnegie Hall in February, so apparently the E.T theme is something he is proud of. And for good reason! I love it🥰
It's amazing to me that this music, even when I'm studying it intellectually and not participating in the emotion of the movie, makes the hair on the back of neck stand up just the same.
When my aunt died, thats when i first started listening to Adventures on Earth as a whole. The weeks leading up to her passing actually. I had a whole movie in my head of her adventures on earth, and this music told that story to me. Truly heart breaking music this is, what a gift to humanity.
That chord at 13:08 is the sound of my childhood. It's just a Cmaj7, but there's something about the way he voices it with the minor 2nd dissonance at the very top of the brass that makes a single chord contain a whole universe.
Major 7th chords are devastatingly beautiful whether occurring in Bach, "Prelude in C Major" or the final chord of Copland's "Appalachian Spring". Also final chord from "Saturn" by Holst.
BRAVO! You managed to take a movie that already pulled on our emotions and extract even greater meaning from those intrinsic feelings. I cried watching E.T. and I cried during this analysis. Truly a fantastic job. Kudos! -Jake
John Williams is such a genius for his masterpiece .I seen this as a kid and I cry like crazy every time . Especially towards the end 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭 . This movie would be nothing without the music . The music is so authentic and emotional
The score in this movie is so breathtaking and warm, that it's able to make me cry heartfelt tears in spite of the fact that ET's design has scared the crap out of me since I was a child. Boy howdy, was I not a fan of his way-too-long fingers, the huge head on top of the spindly neck, and especially the noises he made. But when I hear that flying theme, it all doesn't matter anymore.
Thank you for making this video. It's a perfect counterpart to the movie itself. I've grown up watching E.T. over and over and over again, as many times as I could. It's still, more than 3 decades after I first fell in love with it, one of my 3 favorite movies ever. And Adventure On Earth, the closing 15-minutes single track, is one of the greatest pieces of music I've ever heard in my life. I listen to a lot of music, from classical to electronic, from opera to hard rock, I couldn't live without it, but I never studied it. But watching this (and more of your videos) brings clarity to the emotions. Astounding, passionate and precise at the same time: music is life and emotions and novelty and experience. This essay sums it up using the best possible example: the perfect union of a genius filmmaker and a genius composer at one of their creative peaks. Since it's been over a year since I put E.T. in my BRD player, I'm gonna watch it again in the next days. And then come back here to watch your video again. Thank you again.
ET is such a wonderful film and this marvellous video is so enlightening - your explanation of the score and the visuals of the music and film together are fascinating. Brilliant.
Wowwww. I just realised I've never seen E.T. before... and just watching this felt like a deeply emotional experience! You really do have a way of retelling stories, don't you! But anyway, I guess with John Williams' music I can't help but feel things...
Cried when I watched the movie….& cried again when you explained just why it made me cry!…. amazing!…. thanks for creating this brilliant presentation …. #Genius
Man, I'm crying... thank you so much for your video... the ending and the music is a masterpiece and everything you put into words for it is perfection. Thank you!
I just stumbled upon your channel in my Recommended section a few hours ago and I haven't stopped watching. You seamless weaving of visual effects and the music you're discussing, along with eloquent interpretations and retelling of beautiful stories are absolutely spectacular -- and, like in this video, often moving. Phenomenal!
Just discovered your channel last night and have binged watched every essay. Your ability to articulate the meaning of music, theory, psychology, and emotion is brilliant. Thank you for sharing your gifts with the rest of us.
This likely comes from Williams' classical training at Juliard. I completely agree with you. The Classical style really teaches a composer to develop theme and not just use scraps
Superb analysis of a magical score that for me, as for other commenters, was the music of my childhood. Those opening piccolo notes never fail to tingle the spine...
My favorite Williams score, and my favorite Spielberg movie! It's a tough choice on both fronts, but still easier than trying to determine my second-favorites.
Excellent work. That film had a profound effect on me when it was released (I was 9) and it became the biggest film of all time at the time. But it wasn’t until I grew up that I realised that the most lasting and memorable element of this movie’s success is it’s musical score. Thanks again for a magnificent video. John Williams is a genius.
hey i had the opportunity to play this full score a while back! don’t mean to correct/take away from the video in any way btw just adding - at 9:29 the cellos are playing the low quarter notes and i heard it described as ET’s heartbeat once 😭 this is seriously one of the best movies ever made
The outline of that motif in Lydian mode is very similar to the opening bars of Dvorak symphonic variations Op. 78. Whether it is a coincidence or not, which I don't think it is, one can safely say Williams is one of the most brilliant composers of our time. Love this!
It's the lLydian chords that truly make ET fly. Williams' uses it again for flight in Jurassic Park's helicopter flight and throughout his movies to lift the spirit. Thank you for noting what I've always noticed: the Lydian mode is used to perfection by Williams in his scores. I heard him touch on the Lydian in the piccolo solo decades ago and am happy other's notice it as well.
I always cry at multiple points during this movie and even during this video!! ET will always be such a special movie for me.....& that music, wow!! ❤️❤️
I cried when I saw this in the theater as a young boy. Even to this day as a grown man, these video and audio essay clips on YT bring those childhood feelings back.
The final reel of this score has never been surpassed by anyone. Simply some of the best music ever created, in any context, for any medium. And this is the best analysis I've ever seen of it--thank you.
When I clicked on this video I never thought I'd come out of it completely emotionally drained! Absolutely fantastic @Listening In. Wow, really, no words.
I knew how I felt in John William's movies, and that the music had thems for characters, but what I didn't realize was William's so skilfully crafted bits and pieces, weaving music like a fine silk cloth. What an incredible analysis of a movie score that not only showed mechanics but emotion that we all experienced. I felt 10 again thanks to you, seen through the wisdom of a 55 year old man. Thank you guys for bringing tears to my eyes in an incredible experience.
The final ten minutes or so of this film is among the most perfectly scored sequences in all of cinema, in my opinion. That climactic fanfair as the spaceship flies off always brings a tear to my eye. Part of why this is undoubtedly one of the greatest kids movies ever made.
This is hands down my favorite film due to the music…but the depth and explanation that you gave in this video has made me appreciate it so much more. Thank you for this!
I once wrote a paper on this movie for English class (one quarter, we wrote about a movie rather than a book). I completely agree with you on the music. My whole thesis on the paper was around two things: cinematography and score. The music especially drives the story forward. It is so captivating that I swear I cry literally everytime I watch the end when E.T. says "I'll be right here" and the music crescendos while he boards... until it begins to diminuendo. Then the ship launches into the sky where the fanfare takes over and leaves us feeling fully satisfied. This is one of the greatest movies ever scored. It was so good, I remember Spielberg saying in an interview about how he loved Williams' score so much, that when Williams had difficulty syncing his score to the edited footage, Spielberg cut the footage off the screen and told Williams to do it his way; the footage would wrap around the score which is quite unusual in filmmaking.
Excellent video. I think E.T. is one of William's finest work. It is simply stunning. The friendship theme on the harp/clarinet is absolutely beautiful. So full of love, and moves me to tears. Please make more videos of the Maestro's work.
Do you think these were the thoughts of John Williams when he scored E.T? These thoughts are truly amazing, if JW didn't actually think them, then how great is his talent in making us feel the way we do when we hear both the music as well as your thoughts. You have my gratitude as well as my amazement.
I recently played Adventures on Earth with a local orchestra, percussion. This is probably my favorite John Williams score. Your video offered a lot of insights on the genius of this music. They just don't make music scores like this anymore.
Thank you so much for this fantastic video. The incredible music and this great film itself are very beautiful and emotional, but in this video, there is also something about your editing, your analysis, and also your narration that gives a lot of emotions, the way you make the music and the images resonate with what you're telling us is brilliant! Great work, thank you!
@@ListeningIn I really did, a lot! By the way, I heard a friend of mine has recently offered you to do french subtitles for some of your videos; it would be great for this one too! ;)
Boy, I know of very few movies that have an ending that can cause one to disolve into tears....the acting, the music, it doesn't get any better than this..
Your videos always make me so emotional. It's one thing to be able to explain musical theory with such clarity, but it's when you explain exactly WHY the music makes us feel the way we do that you truly shine. John Williams is my all-time favourite composer and 'Adventures on Earth' gets me every time. Thank you for the awesome videos!
What an incredible musical journey! Music has been one of the major reasons why I enjoy movies so much. My parents played classical music including operas most of the time. Movies without an excellent music score is meaningless. I never learned to read music, however, your rendition of the score flawing in front of me, made me understand it. Your voice brings another excellent note into the video. Thank you.
I'm so glad i found your channel, i was looking for something exactly like this! soundtracks are a big part of my life and i'm totally invested, but i lack the academic knowledge to analye it like you do, you made so many thoughts that i had about the music come to life by the right terms and phrases, thanks so much!! and you speak like a poet, describing the opening seen. you can write boos, i'll read it! :)
Excellent video! Was surprised, though, that you didn't comment on the music during the ending credits of the film - that wonderful piano solo of rapidly moving triplets then combining with the orchestra - so beautiful.
Besides the astounding music in the beginning, I've always been creeped out on E.T. especially when it's just his hands and he makes some small noises, but always up until the harp codenza. At 2:56, my entire mood changed and my perspective on E.T. for some reason changed as well feeling safe and little bits of harmony, a little warm to have a blanket at my side.
I am obsessed with that score and especially the final few minutes of it. I saw an interview where Williams said he was most fond of that score because the ending truly let him fully develop and resolve the themes. Any jog or walk I take insides the excerpts from "Close Encounters". Ethereal, strange, highly original and the development of themes is pretty jaw dropping. Excellent taste, guy!
Thank you for doing this! Instant subscribe. This is my favorite piece of music ever written and has made me emotional for nearly 40 years. A masterpiece in a career full of them, this music has the greatest emotional impact of any score ever written IMO. I really need to buy a copy and try to unravel some of his sorcery. This stuff is next level genius, especially the last 15 minutes 🤯
Absolutely delightful video and analysis. Your joy examining Jacob’s harmony shines. One of Jacob’s recent collaborator’s is Chris Thile. You could do far worse than take a look at Chris Thile’s solo works or his bands, Nickel Creek or Punch Brothers, have put out in the last decade for some crazy fun harmonic analysis.
Thank you for your videos. You've earned a new subscribe. These are great video essays. Something that has always fascinated me about the score to ET is the fact that we don't hear its most famous part until the second act of the film. I still to this day affectionately call the moment that it finally soars 'The Payoff'. Musical (and film) storytelling at its pinnacle!
Please! make a video on the music from the Christopher reeves superman movies my mom and I always feel so emotional in response to that music especially when the theme builds in triumphant moments!
There's nothing like having "The Flying theme" going in your headphones as you actually fly. It's one of the few pieces that actually captures what it feels like, the only real competitor is the Superman theme.
Hi everyone - I really hope you enjoy the video! Do let me know what you think, and have a look at the other videos in this Director Project series (bit.ly/2TKkzmk) - there are some amazing essays this month.
Goosebumps man.... Absolutely brilliant video... You made me cry the same way I did while watching the film!! What a fantabulous theme... Can't express the admiration for John Williams in words!
Oh, you just _have_ to talk about Korngold's overwhelmingly beautiful film scores, without whose contributions we'd never have the soaring melodies of John Williams and Howard Shore. I make this suggestion because something about the string tone in particular and the way it's guaranteed to make me cry reminded me of Korngold's music.
I have to say of all the film scores Williams has done, this for me is the best. Without the score, I don’t think the film is half of what it is with it!
Brilliant video, what John Williams does in this score is amazing. Just understanding a little of how he constructed it makes you realise how much more if a genius he is.
Although I'm a music teacher I do not have the gift of creating my own music (maybe because I'm a singer not a pianist). I think the most generous kind of people in the world are composers. Because they can create music of absolute beauty (something priceless to me) and sell it to pay their bills (as Mozart did many times).
Fortunatly their music can pass to others and be shared, as in movies.
You are so generous as them in sharing your knowledge. Thanks.
Do we have a composers international date to honour them? If not, it's time to have.
PS. would love to hear you analisis of the entire Conan the Barbarian soundtrack by Basil Poledouris and the Lord of the Rings trilogy.
Lots of work isn' t it ?
“Without John Williams, bikes don't really fly, nor do brooms in Quidditch matches, nor do men in red capes. There is no Force, dinosaurs do not walk the Earth, we do not wonder, we do not weep, we do not believe. - Steven Spielberg - 2016
"At the end [of E.T] ILM and I can make those bicycles lift off and get off the ground. We can do that. But John Williams is the only one who can make them truly airborne, because the audience lifts off the ground on John Williams' violins and the audience is carried across the moon or the sun with John Williams' string section." from Spielberg on Spielberg
Good god, I was crying by the end. I've always loved the music to this film but I never knew how brilliantly all of the motives develop and interact throughout the film. And the magic is - you don't have to know - it still hits you at the gut level.
It is magical, you're right. That's the only way of describing it.
So glad to share the same emotional experience.
"Then comes... this". Me, a 44, almost 45 yo guy, broke in tears. I watched E.T. in the movies when I was 6, probably the second movie i watched in theatres and one of the 4 that actually made me cry in my whole life. I still get emotional with it. I think every child should watch it. You can learn so many beautiful leassons. Your narrative and analysis is amazing. Thank you.
I was gonna say, but yeah
What are the other 3?
@@althealligator1467 The Whole Wide World and 5cm per second.
Williams' best score IMO. Pretty much the main reason I ended up playing French Horn.
completely agree.
Also it is remarkable to know that for the chase scene at the end, instead of editing it and then John Williams stepping into it to score it, Spielberg asked him to compose the whole music for the chase scene AND THEN the whole sequence was edited over it. So yeah the music is EXTREMELY important for this movie.
There’s a few micro edits in the first portion, but once the actual bike chase begins, the entire recording is heard through the end
Yup. Williams was having issues hitting the cues correctly at the recording session, so Spielberg told him to just turn off the screens and record the music, and he edited the sequence to match.
Well I'm crying. Definitely Williams' and Spielbergs' best, in my opinion. Love the fact that Spielberg basically did something that not many directors do, and cut the last 15 minutes of the film to Williams' score. Apparently Williams was having a hard time getting the cues exactly right in the recording room, and Spielberg basically went, "I'll turn the movie off, and you just play the piece of music you wrote, because it's so good, and I'll fit the movie to your music." THAT'S INSANE! I think it's why, like you mentioned, the film has such an operatic sense of completion to it.
Williams once said in an interview, years ago, that the music for E.T. was his favorite of everything he has done.
It was his masterpiece. I don't think it's comparable to anything else he's done . Or anyone else for that matter
Indeed. I saw him perform Adventures On Earth" in Carnegie Hall in February, so apparently the E.T theme is something he is proud of. And for good reason! I love it🥰
It's amazing to me that this music, even when I'm studying it intellectually and not participating in the emotion of the movie, makes the hair on the back of neck stand up just the same.
Man I knew I loved the music from this but you explained the story so well I’m sitting here trying not to cry at work in a chemical plant lol
When my aunt died, thats when i first started listening to Adventures on Earth as a whole. The weeks leading up to her passing actually. I had a whole movie in my head of her adventures on earth, and this music told that story to me. Truly heart breaking music this is, what a gift to humanity.
That chord at 13:08 is the sound of my childhood. It's just a Cmaj7, but there's something about the way he voices it with the minor 2nd dissonance at the very top of the brass that makes a single chord contain a whole universe.
It's super pretty, powerful too.
Beautifully put!
Major 7th chords are devastatingly beautiful whether occurring in Bach, "Prelude in C Major" or the final chord of Copland's "Appalachian Spring". Also final chord from "Saturn" by Holst.
This is by far the best analysis of a John Williams theme that I have seen so far.
BRAVO! You managed to take a movie that already pulled on our emotions and extract even greater meaning from those intrinsic feelings. I cried watching E.T. and I cried during this analysis. Truly a fantastic job. Kudos! -Jake
Thank you so much Jake!
John Williams is such a genius for his masterpiece .I seen this as a kid and I cry like crazy every time . Especially towards the end 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭 . This movie would be nothing without the music . The music is so authentic and emotional
Holy damn that was good!
Thank you so much!
The score in this movie is so breathtaking and warm, that it's able to make me cry heartfelt tears in spite of the fact that ET's design has scared the crap out of me since I was a child. Boy howdy, was I not a fan of his way-too-long fingers, the huge head on top of the spindly neck, and especially the noises he made. But when I hear that flying theme, it all doesn't matter anymore.
The finale part made me cry so hard.
Wow, stunning analysis and John Williams best score in my opinion. His storytelling through music is unrivalled in my opinion and this is the peak.
What a beautiful video essay! Amazingly crafted
Thank you so much!
Thank you for making this video. It's a perfect counterpart to the movie itself.
I've grown up watching E.T. over and over and over again, as many times as I could. It's still, more than 3 decades after I first fell in love with it, one of my 3 favorite movies ever. And Adventure On Earth, the closing 15-minutes single track, is one of the greatest pieces of music I've ever heard in my life.
I listen to a lot of music, from classical to electronic, from opera to hard rock, I couldn't live without it, but I never studied it.
But watching this (and more of your videos) brings clarity to the emotions.
Astounding, passionate and precise at the same time: music is life and emotions and novelty and experience. This essay sums it up using the best possible example: the perfect union of a genius filmmaker and a genius composer at one of their creative peaks.
Since it's been over a year since I put E.T. in my BRD player, I'm gonna watch it again in the next days. And then come back here to watch your video again.
Thank you again.
ET is such a wonderful film and this marvellous video is so enlightening - your explanation of the score and the visuals of the music and film together are fascinating. Brilliant.
Damn it, who’s cutting onions!😭 my childhood was so emotional between this, Star Wars and the Neverending story😭
Wowwww. I just realised I've never seen E.T. before... and just watching this felt like a deeply emotional experience! You really do have a way of retelling stories, don't you! But anyway, I guess with John Williams' music I can't help but feel things...
You have got to watch it Max!
Bruh how you make me cry
Cried when I watched the movie….& cried again when you explained just why it made me cry!…. amazing!…. thanks for creating this brilliant presentation …. #Genius
I'm not crying, you're crying!
Man, I'm crying... thank you so much for your video... the ending and the music is a masterpiece and everything you put into words for it is perfection. Thank you!
I just stumbled upon your channel in my Recommended section a few hours ago and I haven't stopped watching. You seamless weaving of visual effects and the music you're discussing, along with eloquent interpretations and retelling of beautiful stories are absolutely spectacular -- and, like in this video, often moving. Phenomenal!
Thank you so much and welcome to the channel! I’m so glad you’ve found me!
Just discovered your channel last night and have binged watched every essay. Your ability to articulate the meaning of music, theory, psychology, and emotion is brilliant. Thank you for sharing your gifts with the rest of us.
It is truly amazing how everything is connected in some way from beginning to end. It's amazing what emotions can result from it as well. Great job!!
This likely comes from Williams' classical training at Juliard. I completely agree with you. The Classical style really teaches a composer to develop theme and not just use scraps
Superb analysis of a magical score that for me, as for other commenters, was the music of my childhood. Those opening piccolo notes never fail to tingle the spine...
My favorite Williams score, and my favorite Spielberg movie! It's a tough choice on both fronts, but still easier than trying to determine my second-favorites.
Excellent work.
That film had a profound effect on me when it was released (I was 9) and it became the biggest film of all time at the time.
But it wasn’t until I grew up that I realised that the most lasting and memorable element of this movie’s success is it’s musical score.
Thanks again for a magnificent video.
John Williams is a genius.
This mans out here giving me the feels.
I am crying right now. Brilliant! Terrific job!
hey i had the opportunity to play this full score a while back! don’t mean to correct/take away from the video in any way btw just adding - at 9:29 the cellos are playing the low quarter notes and i heard it described as ET’s heartbeat once 😭 this is seriously one of the best movies ever made
My #1 favorite film of all time. Thanks for this fantastic look at its beautiful score.
The outline of that motif in Lydian mode is very similar to the opening bars of Dvorak symphonic variations Op. 78. Whether it is a coincidence or not, which I don't think it is, one can safely say Williams is one of the most brilliant composers of our time. Love this!
It's the lLydian chords that truly make ET fly. Williams' uses it again for flight in Jurassic Park's helicopter flight and throughout his movies to lift the spirit. Thank you for noting what I've always noticed: the Lydian mode is used to perfection by Williams in his scores. I heard him touch on the Lydian in the piccolo solo decades ago and am happy other's notice it as well.
Still has me in tears. It's music, the film isn't real but it hits as hard as reality every time you hear it. Williams at his finest.
I have watched this movie many times and I cry at the end every time. Thank you for this video and analysis of Williams music. A genius for sure.
I completely forgot how great ET's score was. Thanks 😊
I always cry at multiple points during this movie and even during this video!! ET will always be such a special movie for me.....& that music, wow!! ❤️❤️
I cried when I saw this in the theater as a young boy. Even to this day as a grown man, these video and audio essay clips on YT bring those childhood feelings back.
I love the sinister government theme in E.T. as well
Why am I bawling, damn it John Williams! This has to be my favorite score of his.
The final reel of this score has never been surpassed by anyone. Simply some of the best music ever created, in any context, for any medium. And this is the best analysis I've ever seen of it--thank you.
You have a gift for bringing out feelings that I forgot I had. Thank you for your work. Keep it up!
If you've got dry eyes at the end of this movie, you're just not human.
When I clicked on this video I never thought I'd come out of it completely emotionally drained! Absolutely fantastic @Listening In. Wow, really, no words.
I knew how I felt in John William's movies, and that the music had thems for characters, but what I didn't realize was William's so skilfully crafted bits and pieces, weaving music like a fine silk cloth. What an incredible analysis of a movie score that not only showed mechanics but emotion that we all experienced. I felt 10 again thanks to you, seen through the wisdom of a 55 year old man. Thank you guys for bringing tears to my eyes in an incredible experience.
The final ten minutes or so of this film is among the most perfectly scored sequences in all of cinema, in my opinion. That climactic fanfair as the spaceship flies off always brings a tear to my eye. Part of why this is undoubtedly one of the greatest kids movies ever made.
This is hands down my favorite film due to the music…but the depth and explanation that you gave in this video has made me appreciate it so much more. Thank you for this!
I'm sharing your content as much as I can. I, and my family, are music lovers and we simply adore your work! Thank you so much for what you do 💚
Okay... I'm crying now
The horns at 7:41is just beautiful. I don't have any words to describe it except beautiful
I once wrote a paper on this movie for English class (one quarter, we wrote about a movie rather than a book). I completely agree with you on the music. My whole thesis on the paper was around two things: cinematography and score. The music especially drives the story forward. It is so captivating that I swear I cry literally everytime I watch the end when E.T. says "I'll be right here" and the music crescendos while he boards... until it begins to diminuendo. Then the ship launches into the sky where the fanfare takes over and leaves us feeling fully satisfied.
This is one of the greatest movies ever scored. It was so good, I remember Spielberg saying in an interview about how he loved Williams' score so much, that when Williams had difficulty syncing his score to the edited footage, Spielberg cut the footage off the screen and told Williams to do it his way; the footage would wrap around the score which is quite unusual in filmmaking.
I saw ET in the theaters in the 80s. I cried with the amazing music.
I just watched this beautiful essay about ET’e amazing music. I cried again.
Love the decomposition and explanation of the music score juxtaposed over the running film! Brilliant.
12:52 thank you for the sheet music for this fanfare I have been on an endless search for it, that aside, amazing video!
I didn't have the best childhood...but I had this.
Absolutely amazing. THANK YOU. My favorite John Williams score. So happy to have just happened upon your analysis! BRAVO!
Excellent video. I think E.T. is one of William's finest work. It is simply stunning. The friendship theme on the harp/clarinet is absolutely beautiful. So full of love, and moves me to tears. Please make more videos of the Maestro's work.
THANK YOU so much for this beautiful video. I'm gonna go watch ET right now.
What a wonderful analysis! I've been waiting for someone to do this for years. This had me in tears the entire time. Thank you
Do you think these were the thoughts of John Williams when he scored E.T? These thoughts are truly amazing, if JW didn't actually think them, then how great is his talent in making us feel the way we do when we hear both the music as well as your thoughts. You have my gratitude as well as my amazement.
I recently played Adventures on Earth with a local orchestra, percussion. This is probably my favorite John Williams score. Your video offered a lot of insights on the genius of this music. They just don't make music scores like this anymore.
Thank you so much for this fantastic video. The incredible music and this great film itself are very beautiful and emotional, but in this video, there is also something about your editing, your analysis, and also your narration that gives a lot of emotions, the way you make the music and the images resonate with what you're telling us is brilliant! Great work, thank you!
It’s completely my pleasure!! I’m so pleased you enjoyed watching it.
@@ListeningIn I really did, a lot! By the way, I heard a friend of mine has recently offered you to do french subtitles for some of your videos; it would be great for this one too! ;)
Boy, I know of very few movies that have an ending that can cause one to disolve into tears....the acting, the music, it doesn't get any better than this..
Your videos always make me so emotional. It's one thing to be able to explain musical theory with such clarity, but it's when you explain exactly WHY the music makes us feel the way we do that you truly shine. John Williams is my all-time favourite composer and 'Adventures on Earth' gets me every time. Thank you for the awesome videos!
I'm really sad this channel stopped uploading. Criminally underwatched
You made me cry all over again, this music is ingrained and full of wonder ❤
Beautifully done analysis of one of the many highlights in the brilliant career of John Williams!
This is quite extraordinary, emotional, beautifully and eloquently presented. A truly satisfying experience. Thank you for sharing.
What an incredible musical journey! Music has been one of the major reasons why I enjoy movies so much. My parents played classical music including operas most of the time. Movies without an excellent music score is meaningless. I never learned to read music, however, your rendition of the score flawing in front of me, made me understand it. Your voice brings another excellent note into the video. Thank you.
Gosh darn these videos are so darn poetic. So much feels.
I'm so glad i found your channel, i was looking for something exactly like this! soundtracks are a big part of my life and i'm totally invested, but i lack the academic knowledge to analye it like you do, you made so many thoughts that i had about the music come to life by the right terms and phrases, thanks so much!!
and you speak like a poet, describing the opening seen. you can write boos, i'll read it! :)
Excellent video! Was surprised, though, that you didn't comment on the music during the ending credits of the film - that wonderful piano solo of rapidly moving triplets then combining with the orchestra - so beautiful.
I’m really late to the party on this one. Truly beautiful. You get me every time!
Great analysis. I really enjoyed this video. Thank you!
Excellent job. I loved hear you cover Hans Zimmer’s man of steel score due to its great craftsmanship of music .
This is unbelievable! What a great, great video and explanation, could really feel these emotions. :) Great job!
I loved this movie as a kid, but could never appreciate the complexities of its score until now. This movie had no business having music this good 😭
This film will always pull on my heart strings like no other. John William's score has much to do with that. A beautiful score for a beautiful story.
Besides the astounding music in the beginning, I've always been creeped out on E.T. especially when it's just his hands and he makes some small noises, but always up until the harp codenza. At 2:56, my entire mood changed and my perspective on E.T. for some reason changed as well feeling safe and little bits of harmony, a little warm to have a blanket at my side.
You should really do a video on Close Encounters of the Third Kind
I am obsessed with that score and especially the final few minutes of it. I saw an interview where Williams said he was most fond of that score because the ending truly let him fully develop and resolve the themes. Any jog or walk I take insides the excerpts from "Close Encounters". Ethereal, strange, highly original and the development of themes is pretty jaw dropping.
Excellent taste, guy!
Thank you for doing this! Instant subscribe. This is my favorite piece of music ever written and has made me emotional for nearly 40 years. A masterpiece in a career full of them, this music has the greatest emotional impact of any score ever written IMO. I really need to buy a copy and try to unravel some of his sorcery. This stuff is next level genius, especially the last 15 minutes 🤯
Absolutely delightful video and analysis. Your joy examining Jacob’s harmony shines. One of Jacob’s recent collaborator’s is Chris Thile. You could do far worse than take a look at Chris Thile’s solo works or his bands, Nickel Creek or Punch Brothers, have put out in the last decade for some crazy fun harmonic analysis.
This movie is so precious to me because of that score. Amazing video! 🖤
You are the best music analyst channel on RUclips. Please make more!!
It’s a miracle that they didn’t turn ET into a franchise with a ton of mediocre sequels.
Thank you for your videos. You've earned a new subscribe. These are great video essays. Something that has always fascinated me about the score to ET is the fact that we don't hear its most famous part until the second act of the film. I still to this day affectionately call the moment that it finally soars 'The Payoff'. Musical (and film) storytelling at its pinnacle!
Wow. What an amazingly detailed explanation. Thank you for sharing your wonderful musical knowledge.
I love this.
Excellent work, my friend!
Jesus Christ, dude. You had me at "Hello". No need to rip out my soul.
What a wonderful journey through an unique masterpiece! Thanks!
An excellent analysis of the music from this film.
Please! make a video on the music from the Christopher reeves superman movies my mom and I always feel so emotional in response to that music especially when the theme builds in triumphant moments!
There's nothing like having "The Flying theme" going in your headphones as you actually fly. It's one of the few pieces that actually captures what it feels like, the only real competitor is the Superman theme.
Are you a professional pilot? If so, do you work for an airline?
Simply beautiful in every detail.