From an interview Steely Dan vocalist Donald Fagen had with great Italian film maestro Ennio Morricone, published in Premiere magazine in the early '80s, reproduced in the I Love Music forum.
Fagen: But isn't it true that the Leone films, with their elevation of mythic structures, their comic book visual style and extreme irony, are now perceived as signaling an aesthetic transmutation by a generation of artists and filmmakers? And isn't it also true that your music for those films reflected and abetted Leone's vision by drawing on the same eerie catalog of genres - Hollywood western, Japanese samurai, American pop, and Italian Opera? That your scores functioned both 'inside' the film as a narrative voice and 'outside' the film as the commentary of a winking jester? Put it all together and doesn't it spell 'postmodern', in the sense that there has been a grotesque encroachment of the devices of art and, in fact, an establishment of a new narrative plane founded on the devices themselves? Isn't that what's attracting lower Manhattan?
Morricone: [ shrugs ]
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