The Soundtracker Of Our Lives
The Steiner Story Here At Last
I attacked Music By Max Steiner: The Epic Life Of Hollywood's Most Influential Composer soon as it came through the door. White on rice. How
long have we waited for Max Steiner’s life to be truly told? Over most of my
lifetime, at least. I was moved, always and intensely, by Max’s music. He was
the first composer known to me by name and recognizable sound. Anyone else cry
at the end of Two On A Guillotine? I did, at the Liberty, in early 1965, sensing
it was music that wrung my tears rather than plight shared by Caesar Romero and
Connie Stevens. This was Max Steiner’s final score, though one done previous,
Those Calloways for Disney, was released later in ’65, says author Steven C. Smith. He also wrote the definitive Bernard Herrmann bio a few
years back. Smith looks behind batons to how scores for King Kong, Gone With The
Wind, Now, Voyager, and Casablanca emerged. Much stuff here I never knew. Steiner
loved his work and it showed. He wasn’t paid a fraction of what he was worth, and
a rapacious industry took advantage of him. Why are the truly gifted so often
the least rewarded? Maybe they care too much, exploited as are so many laborers
of love. Steiner got satisfaction in greatness he achieved. Steven Smith tells
how the Maestro stood sleepless days and nights toward completion of score jobs
due now … as in right now … we open in a week … that sort of pressure. Max lost
chunks of health along the way, beginning with sight failing thanks to stress. There
were family problems, myriad of that, plus never enough money, part due
to bad habits of Steiner’s own, but how does a man who sleeps eighteen hours
over six days keep proper stewardship over finances? Everyone from Selznick to Wallis
to infamous Jack L. leaned on Max. Did they realize he was the reason their
pictures turned out so well? I suspect so. Did they resent Steiner a little for
so consistently saving their bacon? My guess is yes.
Smith got interviews and archival material that no one else has seen or accessed. You
wouldn’t think a film composer’s life would be stuff of high drama, but here it
is, in bushels, and what a read --- all I needed was one of my old Steiner cassettes,
Saratoga Trunk perhaps, playing for background (remember when super-fan Albert
K. Bender sold these via his Max Steiner Society?). Hard times admittedly for Max, but wait, there’s a big lift for third act triumph of his Summer Place
theme, so Max got to finish in the money, with accolades a-plenty from fans who
searched him out as teens (ace conductor/arranger John Morgan, responsible for
so many Steiner CD releases). Others have kept lamps lit
… James D’Arc of BYU preservation fame, curating Max’s archive and acetate
recordings, the endlessly creative Ray Faiola, releasing numerous and
carefully remastered Steiner scores. Dedicated work of these is ideal
accompany to Music By Max Steiner, a must-read for anyone fascinated by this
greatest of film-music creators.