Brilliant composer Ennio Morricone has passed away. A friend and collaborator, his talent was inestimable. I will miss him.
— John Carpenter (@TheHorrorMaster) July 6, 2020
With great sadness, we say goodbye to a big master of cinema. His music will keep playing in our memories. Rest in peace #EnnioMorricone. pic.twitter.com/KWwJbfHzRx
— Antonio Banderas (@antoniobanderas) July 6, 2020
Where to even begin with iconic composer Ennio Morricone? He could make an average movie into a must see, a good movie into art, and a great movie into legend. He hasn't been off my stereo my entire life. What a legacy of work he leaves behind. RIP. https://t.co/qZX6qE10ke
— edgarwright (@edgarwright) July 6, 2020
What's so incredible about The Good, The Bad & The Ugly score is that 'Ecstasy Of Gold' is the penultimate track. Ennio drops one of the most amazing cues of all time and then immediately follows another all timer. https://t.co/00VCCYwfD2 https://t.co/1nNK7wrkRX
— edgarwright (@edgarwright) July 6, 2020
RIP And now Ennio Morricone. One of the greatest composers of all time. You can hear our tributes to him in Africa Dawn on the Lilyhammer Score, and the new arrangement of Standing In The Line of Fire on Soulfire & Soulfire Live. Like Nick, another tragic loss to our culture.
— Stevie Van Zandt (@StevieVanZandt) July 6, 2020
Addio Ennio - geniale compositore. https://t.co/mbDgF3XdXa
— Massive Attack (@MassiveAttackUK) July 6, 2020
"I saw with great sadness that one of my musical heroes, Ennio Morricone has passed away today. His music introduced me to albums and the first album I ever bought was one of his. He made beautiful emotional music and was the master of melody."
— New Order (@neworder) July 6, 2020
- Bernard Sumner pic.twitter.com/yBBK5GYDLe
Thank you for your music, Maestro pic.twitter.com/glZyvAJjH7
— Duran Duran (@duranduran) July 6, 2020
Sitting on the pavement having my coffee, I notice the building opposite is rather uselessly called Empire House. Since we’re going through a bit of a rethink right now, we could do better. What about Ennio House? After Morricone. pic.twitter.com/O2N68YpEIO
— stuart murdoch (@nee_massey) July 6, 2020
I remember well being blown away by Ennio Morricone’s music on so many films. We would then spend hours trying to get that guitar sound - on Elegia & Sunrise specifically - and of course, he was the inspiration for the Blue Monday bassline. Thank you Ennio & rest in peace.
— Peter Hook (@peterhook) July 6, 2020
Ennio Morricone a unique sound magnificent melodies,a major influence & constant source of inspiration: Love and respect.
— Jean-Michel Jarre (@jeanmicheljarre) July 6, 2020
Ennio Morricone un son unique, des mélodies magnifiques, une influence majeure et une source d’inspiration constante: avec amour et respect.#EnnioMoricone pic.twitter.com/H9oiCXk0qa
Ennio Morricone, such an incredible talent. Thank you for everything, you will be truly missed. pic.twitter.com/lYbvsOLa37
— muse (@muse) July 6, 2020
"Music is mysterious; it doesn’t offer many answers. Film music, on the other hand, is even more mysterious at times, both because of its bond with images and because of its way of bonding with the audience."
— The Academy (@TheAcademy) July 6, 2020
Thank you, Ennio Morricone, for all that you've given us. pic.twitter.com/8RsP1aIrbg
#EnnioMorricone was a film composer for the ages. Sergio Leone had him orchestrate the final scene of Once Upon a Time in America before filming. As shooting commenced, suddenly the music soared live on the sound stage. Greatest movie experience of my life. #RIPEnnioMorricone pic.twitter.com/Cr7wHA8c8b
— James Woods (@RealJamesWoods) July 6, 2020
RIP Ennio Morricone, the celebrated Italian composer known the world over for his instantly identifiable scores, who lent his talents to directors from Sergio Leone and Pasolini to Elio Petri and Terrence Malick.
— Criterion Collection (@Criterion) July 6, 2020
A conversation with the great Morricone: https://t.co/oCSTP7kK15 pic.twitter.com/0yToMz7aHY
Farewell, maestro.
— Elijah Wood (@elijahwood) July 6, 2020
One of my favorite’s from a lesser appreciated work:https://t.co/MxzOqRRnXM
As I grew up, Ennio Morricone was a major inspiration.
— Tom Holkenborg (@Junkie_XL) July 6, 2020
From Once Upon a Time in the West to The Mission?his dramatic themes always touched me. Right through the heart. Straight in my stomach. You could feel his music everywhere in your body while listening to it.
RIP, Ennio. pic.twitter.com/y0LznDLbzs
few have as much impact on the entire world of music than Ennio Morricone ...
— blobtower (@blobtower) July 6, 2020
this is my personal favorite from a (for some reason) lesser known film about a piano player who lives on a ship for his whole life.https://t.co/poWzeANLGI
RIP
film - The Legend of 1900 feat Tim Roth
RIP
— Geoff Barrow (@jetfury) July 6, 2020
Ennio Morricone
The Greatest ever film composer. pic.twitter.com/6IxCYuJWlH
During #lockdown we’ve watched a movie each night with the family. Showed the kids Once Upon A Time In The West, which introduced them to genius @MEnnioMorricone, only yesterday our youngest was humming the music from Cinema Paradiso while drawing a birthday card #morricone
— asifkapadia (@asifkapadia) July 6, 2020
The Good Bad and the Ugly soundtrack existed while Clint Eastwood was acting those scenes. He was hearing a playback of that guitar and that whistling while chewing that cigar! Unique genius music. https://t.co/Napm1MKmO6
— Clive Deamer (@clivedeamer) July 6, 2020
Sad to hear about the passing of Ennio Morricone today. He was a huge inspiration for Goldfrapp too, in particular Felt Mountain. X Here’s a playlist we’ve made for you of some our favourite Morricone tracks: https://t.co/2kfOceqJLJ pic.twitter.com/eIitK3lkp9
— Goldfrapp (@goldfrapp) July 6, 2020
Guru #EnnioMorricone. Sire we shall never miss you! You’ve given enough music to listen, live with, improvise and go beyond. Thank you & Salutes! He’ll never be called late Mr.Morricone. He will always be on time.
— Kamal Haasan (@ikamalhaasan) July 6, 2020
Leone, Lautner, Huston, Boorman, Carpenter, Bertolucci, Tornatore, Verneuil, Malick, Pasolini, Argento, de Palma, Tarantino… What a deafening silence on world cinema since this morning without Ennio Morricone… https://t.co/I4pBYVWsB8
— Festival de Cannes (@Festival_Cannes) July 6, 2020
In the year Morricone wrote the feted Maddalena he also wrote more than 20 other film scores... and they are all worth hearing. His productivity, and his strike rate, were unbelievable. You can live inside his world and never get bored. https://t.co/nxL1wUGI7u
— bob stanley (@rocking_bob) July 6, 2020
RIP Ennio Morriconehttps://t.co/HUkDsOkjhN
— Yo La Tengo (@TheRealYLT) July 6, 2020
Those Morricone scores elevated those movies to heavenly heights pic.twitter.com/Ua80SGTj8g
— Chris Stein (@chrissteinplays) July 6, 2020
RIP Ennio Morricone, who didn't invent the film score but obviously invented the film score.
— Otto Von Biz Markie (@Passionweiss) July 6, 2020
thank you Ennio Morricone
— el-p (@therealelp) July 6, 2020
Ennio Morricone has passed at 91. Can’t say how much he meant to so many of us
— Steven Drozd (@stevendrozd) July 6, 2020
Just learned of the passing of the Great Ennio Morricone. His music has been embedded in my brain my whole life. What an incredible composer he was. His music will be in my mind forever! RIP
— Petra Haden (@petrahaden) July 6, 2020
Farewell, maestro.
— Elijah Wood (@elijahwood) July 6, 2020
One of my favorite’s from a lesser appreciated work:https://t.co/MxzOqRRnXM
Rest In Peace Ennio Morricone . Thank you for all your brilliance.
— Garbage (@garbage) July 6, 2020
One of the most emotional moments in cinema history is this final scene from CINEMA PARADISO - a montage of movie kisses celebrating life, love, and the life-affirming magic of the movies. It was scored by the late, great #EnnioMorricone. RIP, Maestro. https://t.co/aQnTV7UqkY pic.twitter.com/ILlQJtTChh
— KevinSmith (@ThatKevinSmith) July 6, 2020
Morricone https://t.co/ygZs6F0uhr
— Michael Moore (@MMFlint) July 6, 2020
A true giant. https://t.co/YVebtdeDk8
— Geoffrey Rickly (@GeoffRickly) July 6, 2020
RIP Ennio Morriconne such an inspirationonal composer. Loved his music growing up as a kid ,he was an original and his scores sounded like nothing else i’d ever heard before,his music will always be a big influence with my own writing.
— Tom Chapman (@tommychap01) July 6, 2020
Guru #EnnioMorricone. Sire we shall never miss you! You’ve given enough music to listen, live with, improvise and go beyond. Thank you & Salutes! He’ll never be called late Mr.Morricone. He will always be on time.
— Kamal Haasan (@ikamalhaasan) July 6, 2020
RIP The Maestro, Ennio Morricone. He truly helped define the language of cinema.
— Sasha Grey (@SashaGrey) July 6, 2020
I am heartbroken- Ennio Morricone, my favourite film composer has gone - he was the biggest influence on early Human League and Heaven 17
— martyn ware (@martynware) July 6, 2020
Goodbye Maestro...https://t.co/GxCccNvUMS
So sad to hear that Ennio Morricone has died . He was a great influence . One of the best film composers of all time.
— Orbital (@orbitalband) July 6, 2020
Si triste de la disparition de l’immense Ennio Morricone.
— renaud Capucon (@RCapucon) July 6, 2020
Le petit Toto de Cinema Paradiso et tous les amoureux du compositeur sont bouleverses aujourd’hui. pic.twitter.com/eswT4a70Lf
Ricorderemo sempre, con infinita riconoscenza, il genio artistico del Maestro #EnnioMorricone. Ci ha fatto sognare, emozionare, riflettere, scrivendo note memorabili che rimarranno indelebili nella storia della musica e del cinema pic.twitter.com/SNGmJjfJ2H
— Giuseppe Conte (@GiuseppeConteIT) July 6, 2020
There’s no greater film composer than Ennio Morricone. So distinctive. So prolific. He made every movie he worked on better. Beloved for his westerns and thrillers but my favorite score is from Gillo Pontecorvo’s brilliant political epic “Queumada” https://t.co/NVIOA1UWah pic.twitter.com/zRehKWvvfS
— Larry Karaszewski (@Karaszewski) July 6, 2020
RIP Ennio Morricone https://t.co/DBBhIMAWqj
— Chance The Rapper (@chancetherapper) July 6, 2020
Ennio Morricone has passed at 91. Can’t say how much he meant to so many of us
— Steven Drozd (@stevendrozd) July 6, 2020
Movie lovers everywhere. If you have a projector, throw open your windows tonight and project this onto a wall, a cliff, a sheet, a billboard, to celebrate how #Enniomorricone made movies soar: https://t.co/e3QBrqhwzA
— mark cousins (@markcousinsfilm) July 6, 2020
Over the next few days, a lot of good people are going to tell you how great Ennio Morricone was and how much he meant to film music.
— Don Winslow (@donwinslow) July 6, 2020
But I would like to invite you to just listen to this for yourself.https://t.co/J4jF1p1H11
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