I worked on scores. I went to the musical library in Berlin which is very famous. I discovered that we had scores of Beethoven, printed scores of Beethoven, that are full of mistakes. Not the wrong or false notes, but the wrong dynamic, understandabl...
I had to do this very aggressive, big score in a very short time, and knowing that in the beginning, middle, and end would be this very, very famous theme, but I still had to weave a score around it and make it work as a score was really challenging.
Victor Young had been hired to write the score for the dances of The Ten Commandments but he became very ill. You were then hired to write the score. But at the same time you'd written The Man with the Golden Arm score.
To me, score is really important. I would rather not have any score if it's something that's going to detract from the film. So often when I watch films, the score is what really bothers me.
The most insignificant score is the score at halftime.
I grew up on film scores and scores from films.
I shoot, I score. He shoots, I score.
He once told me, Instead of scoring thirty goals a season, why don't you score twenty-five and help someone else to score fifteen? That way the team's ten goals better off.
I'm extremely willful to win, and I respond to challenges. Scoring titles and stuff like that... it sounds, well, I don't care how it sounds - to me, scoring comes easy. It's not a challenge to me to win the scoring title, because I know I can.
When luck joins in the game, cleverness scores double.
We got guys who can score. Everybody knows guys can score.
Goal scoring is a recurring theme. If you aren't scoring then you aren't going to win games. That's obvious.
Sometimes a piece of music in the score isn't effective. When a score is too well finished with too many elements, sometimes it's too much.
Before you can score you must first have a goal.
You have to shoot, to want to score goals no matter how. Just score that goal! You can't be afraid to miss.
If you're playing for five hours you don't want to score goals all the time and I loved dribbling. I could score a goal, but I preferred to dribble.
Keeping score of old scores and scars, getting even and one-upping, always makes you less than you are.
I am a firm believer that if you score one goal the other team have to score two to win.
In 1857, Bizet departed for Rome and spent three years there. He studied the landscape, the culture, Italian literature and art. Musically he studied the scores of the great masters. At the end of the first year he was asked to submit a religious wor...
Stopping at third base adds no more to the score than striking out.
My parents are my backbone. Still are. They're the only group that will support you if you score zero or you score 40.