Harry Potter and the John Williams Score
There are few franchises in current literature or cinema which have commanded the kind of commercial power and consistency as has Harry Potter. The J.K. Rowling book series about a boy wizard and his epic struggle against the evil Lord Voldemort would be adapted into eight serial films, each of them a major box office blockbuster. It is fully appropriate, therefore, that when directing the initial installment in the series, 2001's Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, Christopher Columbus would collaborate with the score composer famous for overseeing the musical direction of such powerhouse film franchises as Star Wars, Indiana Jones and Superman. In the context of Williams' work alone is a blueprint for scoring classic popcorn cinema.
The reasons for his effectiveness in this capacity are on ready display in the Philosopher Stone. From the whimsical and swirling strings that sweep us up into the "Prologue," Williams meshes an eerie softness with a sense of childhood playfulness perfectly suited to the birth of a great wizard. Indeed, throughout the film, Williams is sensitive to the youth of his characters, spooking without ever horrifying, playing on fear without exploiting terror. This is an important trick of the composer's trade given the intended variation of ages represented in Harry Potter's viewing demographic. Most assuredly, Williams was conscious of this in a score that never coddles the audience with triteness but which also never hammers it over the head with intensity. As is typical of a Williams piece, there is always playful relief in close sight of a dense cluster of darker tones.
A find example of this is found in "Harry's Wondrous World" a triumphant and sprightly piece standing in the midst of more ominous settings. Here, we can appreciate that so many of Williams' compositions have a soaring quality that causes us to take...
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