BBC Radiophonic Workshop, Doctor Who: The Music (BBC Records, 1983).
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BBC Radiophonic Workshop, Doctor Who: The Music (BBC Records, 1983).
Enlightenment soundtrack my beloved
Soldiers in Hiding (1985). A grim portrait of Vietnam War Veterans, living out their lonely lives in the American wilderness, unable to cope with the lasting effects of their traumatic war experiences.
Insightful and heartwrenching look at the lives and trauma of Vietnam War veterans. Wish they'd gone a little deeper into the psychological component, but the way it utilises character studies to tell its story is both effective and haunting. 7/10.
Incidental Music
Every time I handle dangerous chemicals or raw meat I hear Malcolm Clarke’s danger motif from Doctor Who playing in my head.
Fans’ fury as 22 FA Cup matches moved for TV
Fans’ fury as 22 FA Cup matches moved for TV
Fans and their representatives were left furious when it was announced that only 10 of the 32 FA Cup third round games will kick-off at 3pm on a Saturday after 22 games were moved to accommodate the wishes of TV companies. Fury Arsenal pick up the FA Cup in 2017
Arsenal’s game against Solihull or Blackpool has been moved to Saturday 5 January with a 5pm kick-off so it can be shown live on BT.…
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Malcolm Clarke and Nicholas Reed win the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short for The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life (2013) - presented by Kate Hudson and Jason Sudeikis
In a ceremony filled with emotional speeches, here’s one of those speeches that year that flew under the radar of most in its brevity.
The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved My Life is a biographical short film on Alice Herz-Sommer, a centenarian woman who, at the time of filming, was the world’s oldest Holocaust survivor. Herz-Sommer, who lived in a small apartment in North London and played piano to the delight of her neighbors every day, had survived the Holocaust because of good luck and her musical talents, having been transferred to Theresienstadt to play music for Nazi officers along with other musically gifted Jews and other persecuted groups.
This Oscar win was Malcolm Clarke’s second from three nominations having previously won Best Documentary Short for You Don’t Have to Die (1988); this is Nicholas Reed’s first win and nomination. As stated in the speech, Herz-Sommer passed away one week before the 86th Academy Awards at the age of 110.
“Malcolm Clarke operating the Emulator 2 in Studio C, in 1985. Note the BBC Micro, attached to the Workshop's Syncwriter device, which allowed music to be correctly synchronised with original video recordings via MIDI.”