![]() Johnny Depp as Jack Sparrow in "Pirate of the Caribbean"
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The Kentucky Symphony Orchestra’s live accompaniment Saturday to Disney’s “Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl” at Florence Baptist Church at Mt. Zion came as the perfect foil to the Cincinnati Pops’ “Superheroes” concert Friday night.
Both were devoted to film music. The Pops at Music Hall had “Batman” and “The Avengers” and composers Danny Elfman and Alan Silvestri. The KSO had Capts. Jack Sparrow and Barbossa, and composers Klaus Badelt and Hans Zimmer. Both came just in time for Halloween.
KSO music director James R. Cassidy has led live accompaniment to films before, mostly silent, including “Ben-Hur,” “Phantom of the Opera” and “The Freshman.” (The one talkie was “The Wizard of Oz” in 2007.) “In silent films you attempt to hit precise visual cues marked in the score and you don’t have dialogue that you may risk covering,” he said.
![]() KSO music director James R. Cassidy conducting "Pirates of the Caribbean" (photo by Jim Fausz)
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![]() photo by Jim Fausz
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It was a costly undertaking for the KSO, said Cassidy, “the most expensive production we have undertaken in 21 seasons. Normally, the KSO builds its big shows using friends, collaborators and resources to cut down on costs. When you bring in a show like this, you pay the sticker price.”
All totaled, it will be upward of $40,000, he said.
It is a rollicking, action-packed score with lots of atmosphere – and, for the performers, a maddening number of tempo and meter changes. “There is rarely a steady tempo," Cassidy said. "Such tiny fluctuations are not marked and really can’t be. You just have to be on top of it.” The opening “Fog Bound” set the mood with a spooky wash of winds, percussion and special effects. With Johnny Depp (Jack Sparrow) on the scene, the familiar swashbuckling theme began to thread through the score.
For the battle scenes, there was plenty of hell-raising by the pounding, fully-armed KSO, as the swaggering Sparrow and glowering Barbossa (Geoffrey Rush) pursued their conflicting ends, and Elizabeth and Will ( Keira Knightley and Orlando Bloom) pursued each other. It was a thoroughly delightful show, and everyone went home happy to the tune of “He’s a Pirate.”
The event was potent witness to the importance of film music. “There is no language that can convey the full spectrum of human emotion like music,” Cassidy said.
“Without a film’s score, there probably is no audience connection with the mood, feelings, atmosphere of the characters or their settings. The score is an integral part of our cinematic experience.”