The Herald (South Africa)

Top composer Morricone dies

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Ennio Morricone, one of the world’s best-known and most prolific film composers, died in Rome yesterday at the age of 91.

He composed the music for about 500 films, including his old childhood friend Sergio Leone’s 1966 spaghetti western

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly and Quentin Tarantino’s The Hateful Eight, for which he won an Oscar in 2016.

Morricone died in hospital where he was being treated for a fractured femur after a fall, according to a statement from a lawyer and family friend.

Giorgio Assuma said Morricone “passed away in the early hours of July 6 with the comfort of his faith”.

He remained “fully lucid and with great dignity right until the end,” the statement said.

Tributes began pouring in for the composer soon after his death was announced.

“We will remember forever and with infinite gratitude the artistic genius of maestro Ennio Morricone,” Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte said.

“He made us dream, he moved us and made us think, writing unforgetta­ble notes that will remain forever in the history of music and cinema,” he said on Twitter.

Italian health minister Roberto Speranza wrote in a tweet: “Adieu maestro, and thank you for the emotions you gave us.”

Gilles Jacob, the former head of the Cannes film festival, described him as the emperor of film music.

Born on November 10 1928, Morricone began composing at the tender age of six, and at just 10 he enrolled in a trumpet school at prestigiou­s Saint-Cecilia conservato­ry in Rome.

His film career began in 1961, when he was 33, with a collaborat­ion with director Luciano Salce in Mission Ultrasecre­te, before going to gain fame with the score for A Fistful of Dollars starring Clint Eastwood in 1964.

Before winning the Oscar for best film score in 2016, the Rome-born son of a trumpeter had been nominated no fewer than five times before the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences — embarrasse­d that such a talent had not been recognised sooner — presented him with a lifetime achievemen­t award in 2007.

Morricone’s previous nomination­s were for Days of Heaven (1978), The Mission (1986), The Untouchabl­es (1987), Bugsy (1991) and Malena (2000).

Though he is most closely associated in the public mind with Leone’s westerns starring Eastwood, Morricone’s compositio­n for Roland Joffe’s Jesuit drama The Mission is considered by many critics to be his cinematic masterpiec­e, an epic and eclectic reflection of South America’s musical melting pot.

 ?? Picture: TIZIANA FABI/AFP ?? ENNIO MORRICONE
Picture: TIZIANA FABI/AFP ENNIO MORRICONE

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