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MOTP: Lyrics??
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Topic: MOTP: Lyrics??

SFT

OscarŪ Winner

I was wondering if anyone knows what the choir is singing in the Main Titles of Shirley Walker's "Batman: Mask of the Phantasm" score? I was listening to it just now and got curious. Is it a real language, or something they made up? And, if not - translation?Thanks!
SFT
NP: Pee Wee's Big Adventure, Danny Elfman *****/*****
(although I really should be playing The Omen. Appears this is my 666th post
)[Message edited by SFT on 10-23-2001]
posted 10-23-2001 08:00 AM PT (US) 
dgoldwas

OscarŪ Winner

(from cinemusic.net's review of Mask of the Phantasm)quote:
For those who want the "Latin" lyrics used in Mask of the Phantasm, there is an amusing and fascinating anecdote. Shirley Walker tells the story."As you know, the music team is rushing to the finish line as a film is in its final dub phase. Even the known orchestrators are not always given the credit they so justly deserve for insuring the timely execution (so to speak) of the score. I've become tired of fighting for credits for the support team that helps pull me through the final throes of recording and mixing my scores.
The choir for Masks gave me the opportunity to rectify this terrible situation. I made a chart by number of syllables of every music persons name backwards to use in creating the language you hear. 'Oh Nahlim Mot!', the phrase the score begins with, is Tom Milano, the music editor of most of my features, whom I originally worked with doing the Flash TV series.
You get the idea. It was working so well, I realized that I would need to include some of the film producers and executives at Warner Bros. After all, they were paying for my little inside joke. People do like to be included in these sorts of things. I had to lie to the Warner Bros. legal department person who called to ask me what the language was and what was being said.
They certainly didn't want to be a party to me saying "screw Warner Bros." in Danish. I told them it was an obscure nonsensical choral language that existed only in out of print orchestration books.I think I actually spent more time on my plot than I did on the score during the week I was preparing the choral cues. It was quite fun to see the looks on peoples faces, as they realized what they were hearing. Only two people had deciphered the puzzle by the time we recorded the choir. It was very difficult for the singers to sing the strange words. I'm sure they would
have had more fun doing it, had I been able to include them in the joke too.While I was mixing the score, I had Bobby Fernandez (Zed-nahn-fur E-Bob) record the choir accappella onto a seperate DAT, ostensibly for my sample reel. The look on Tom's face as he began to suspect what I had done was well worth the whole deception. He finally turned to me and said "You didn't do what I think you've done, did you?".
The rest is history. Everyone on the music team has a tape of the singing of their names (we transfered to 1/4" tape and played it backwards; the old "back-masking" trick)."
Dan
posted 10-23-2001 08:18 AM PT (US) 
SFT

OscarŪ Winner

What a great story, Dan. Thatīs really hilarious! Puts the entire score in whole new light for me.Thanks for sharing!
SFT
posted 10-23-2001 08:45 AM PT (US) Old Infopop Software by UBB
