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		Vangelis, composer of 'Chariots of Fire' score, dies at 79
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		 [May 20, 2022] 
		By James Mackenzie and Karolina Tagaris 
 ATHENS (Reuters) -Vangelis, the Greek 
		composer whose rousing electronic theme music for the Oscar-winning 1981 
		film "Chariots of Fire" became one of the most loved movie scores, has 
		died at the age of 79.
 
 The law firm representing the composer said he died late on Tuesday, 
		without giving a cause of death.
 
 In a post on Twitter, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis called 
		Vangelis "a pioneer of the electronic sound."
 
 "He began his long journey on the Chariots of Fire. From there he will 
		always send us his notes," Mitsotakis wrote.
 
 "Ad astra, Vangelis" - Latin for "to the stars" - tweeted NASA, saying 
		Vangelis contributed scores to its explorations to Jupiter.
 
 Born Evangelos Odysseas Papathanassiou in 1943, the young Vangelis 
		developed an early interest in music and experiments with sounds 
		produced by banging pots and pans or fixing nails, glasses and other 
		objects to the strings of his parents' piano.
 
 
		
		 
		He absorbed the tones of Greek folk songs and Orthodox Christian choral 
		music, but he had no formal musical training, which he later said had 
		helped save his sense of creativity.
 
 After a start with local rock bands, Vangelis left for Paris at the age 
		of 25, joining an exodus of young artists following a 1967 coup that 
		installed a military junta in Greece.
 
 Away from home, he was attracted by the then-new field of electronic 
		synthesizers that allowed him to create the lush melodic colours that 
		became his trademark sound.
 
 Despite enjoying success in the European "prog rock" scene of the early 
		1970s with Aphrodite's Child, a band he formed with fellow Greek 
		musician Demis Roussos, Vangelis was uncomfortable with the expectations 
		on a commercial performing artist and largely retreated to the recording 
		studio he created for himself in London.
 
 It was there that he wrote the score for "Chariots of Fire", the story 
		of the triumph of a group of British runners at the 1924 Olympic Games.
 
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			Greek composer Vangelis performs during a concert at the Temple of 
			Zeus in Athens on June 28, 2001. Vangelis presented a 60-minute 
			composition entitled Mythodea./File Photo 
            
			 
		Unashamedly non-contemporary, its pulsating synthesizer beats and 
		soaring melody made the slow motion opening sequence of a group of 
		athletes running along a beach a model for the way the cinema portrayed 
		sport. 
		Vangelis once said the score, which earned him an Academy Award and 
		topped the charts for weeks, was in part a tribute to his father, who 
		had been a keen amateur runner. But he was also slightly dismissive of 
		the enormous popularity it enjoyed.
 "It's only another piece of music," he told an interviewer.
 
 The success of "Chariots of Fire" overshadowed his other scores, but he 
		wrote the music for a number of major films including "Missing", 
		directed by his compatriot Costa-Gavras, and Ridley Scott's futuristic 
		thriller "Blade Runner".
 
 He was a prolific composer over many decades, his work ranging from 
		advertising music and film scores to elaborate symphonic-style 
		compositions and "Jon and Vangelis", his duo with Jon Anderson, lead 
		singer of the prog rock group Yes.
 
 But he remained wary of commercial success, once telling an interviewer 
		he never saw music as just an entertainment.
 
 (Editing by Peter Graff, William Maclean, Frances Kerry and David 
		Gregorio)
 
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