|
|
Article:
Score!
Original movie music returns to spotlight as Oscar recognizes today's best film composers
Fred Shuster | Daily News
March 7, 2003
The big chill is thawing in the film world, where for the first time in
decades, directors are focusing on original music rather than compilations
of often overexposed pop songs.
Todd Haynes has now remade this feature, or one could say he uses it as a
jumping off point to express the real concerns of the fifties that Sirk
couldn't touch with a ten-foot rake, concerns that are dishearteningly
still relevant today.
Evidence can be found in stirring Oscar-nominated scores for "Catch Me If
You Can," "The Hours," "Road to Perdition," "Frida" and "Far From Heaven."
Each soundtrack consists of eloquent compositions designed to underscore the
filmmakers' vision in terms of mood, emotion and color.
It's an opportunity few veteran Hollywood composers expected to see again.
For ages, directors generally turned to licensed pop tunes to act as
emotional shorthand for characters, situations or the period portrayed on
celluloid. In 1973, for example, "American Graffiti" used 1950s and 1960s
rock and doo-wop jukebox hits complete with DJ chatter to sustain the mood
of a 1962 summer's night in suburban California.
But many of the most acclaimed film projects last year took an alternate
route and leaned toward creative collaborations with composers. It was an
unforeseen throwback to a golden era when Max Steiner's themes dramatized
"Gone With the Wind" and "Casablanca," Bernard Herrmann labored over
resonant symphonic cues for Hitchcock thrillers like "North by Northwest,"
and Nino Rota brilliantly combined jazz, pop and classical elements for his
timeless Fellini music, not to mention "The Godfather."
Emotional echoes
Veteran film/TV composer Elmer Bernstein, 80, whose melancholy underscore
for "Far From Heaven" has been singled out for praise and an Oscar nod, said
the move toward smaller stories dealing with emotions rather than explosions
requires deeper musical accompaniment.
"The whole nature of things has changed," he observed. "Things like 'The
Hours,' 'Road to Perdition' and 'About Schmidt' are modest kinds of films --
the kinds of films we haven't seen for a while, with more adult themes that
need emotional support from the music. I think we're seeing directors making
films where they're projecting emotions rather than events. And music is the
one art that's purely about emotions."
Thomas Newman, among the most influential modern film composers and a
second-generation member of Hollywood's pre-eminent musical dynasty, views
Hollywood's new mood as a step toward a less dictatorial atmosphere.
"I'm able to encourage my musicians to improvise," said the five-time Oscar
hopeful whose nominated "Road to Perdition" is just the latest in a long
reel of highly regarded film work. "When you work with an intimate ensemble,
you work almost as a sound effects person would. But I think the main thing
directors are looking for is music that deepens the dramatic experience
rather than comments on it."
Newman's is arguably the most ubiquitous sound in current cinema. His
compelling and strangely persuasive African music-tinged trademark has
enhanced such features as "White Oleander," "American Beauty," "The Salton
Sea" and "In the Bedroom," along with the Emmy Award-winning "Six Feet
Under" theme for HBO.
Instrumental honesty
"He's part of a movement of environmental composers," said Los Angeles film
composer Starr Parodi. "The music can make you feel like this story could be
happening to you. He's very influential and often copied. His use of
marimbas, (the stringed) balaton and angular- sounding piano, coldly played,
is extremely original. A lot of people who try to re-create his style use
synthesizers, but it's much more effective to do what Newman does and use a
close ensemble playing the instruments."
Since Steiner's day and earlier, the twin forces shaping screen cues remain
the desire to target a specific audience and the question of who has final
cut. When marketing pressures don't tip a filmmaker's hand and a popular
song or two aren't obligatory, the function of an original score is to
compliment and reinforce plot.
"We expect music to be the emotional point of view of a filmimages are
surprising neutral," said composer Philip Glass, who collected an Oscar nod
for his turbulent "Hours' cues. Glass is one of the few composers who
successfully straddles the relatively free world of contemporary classical
music and the often restrictive studio system.
As Newman's observation about a new informality in major movie composing
suggests, imaginative musical thinking is being sought from within or
without the mainstream.
New and notable
The last few years has seen the electronics-friendly names Craig Armstrong
("The Quiet American"), Damon Gough aka Badly Drawn Boy ("About a Boy") and
Cliff Martinez ("Narc") on screen as end credits roll.
Armstrong, the Scottish composer and arranger whose credits include Bjork,
U2, Massive Attack and a Golden Globe trophy last year for work on "Moulin
Rouge," was brought into the "Quiet American" remake at the insistence of
the film's star, Michael Caine.
"I was sent little bits of the film and started realizing this was a chance
to do a score almost in the traditional Hollywood way," Armstrong said. "The
film was poetic and so beautiful that I decided to go back to the old way of
creating a theme for each main character. I love Hollywood scores like
Herrmann's work for Hitchcock, where the characters were very tied into the
themes. For 'Quiet American,' it was refreshing to try and write some
beautiful East-West melodies for the orchestra."
Other thoughtful musicians have long found support at the studios. From the
jazz fringe, trumpeter and onetime Van Morrison sideman Mark Isham
("Moonlight Mile") and trumpeter Terence Blanchard ("25th Hour") were lured
to Hollywood many years ago. From pop came Oingo Boingo's Danny Elfman
("Spider-Man") and the Police's Stewart Copeland ("Rumble Fish"). Glass
("Koyaanisqatsi") has been at the top of a very short list for around 30
years.
Authentic blend
A slightly more traditional approach can also pay dividends. Elliot
Goldenthal, who won a Golden Globe for his Oscar-nominated "Frida" score and
is also a contender for an original song trophy for the film's end-title
song, "Burn It Blue," mirrored the Mexican heritage of painter Frida Kahlo
in a refreshingly melodic soundtrack that combined original music with
mariachi tunes and romantic boleros beloved by the film's subject.
"It wasn't a big budget thing," Goldenthal said. "We thought of the project
as something to do out of artistry. An important part of the score is song.
Song is everywhere in Mexicoyou are sung to and you are expected to
sing. I wanted the music to become another character in the movie."
Predictably, instrumental scores don't often translate into major sales no
matter how good they are, apart from Howard Shore's best-selling "Lord of
the Rings" albums and John Williams' platinum "Star Wars: Episode IThe
Phantom Menace." The biggest soundtrack money-spinners in recent days
include the musical "Chicago," "8 Mile," "The Lord of the Rings: The Two
Towers," "Disney's Lilo & Stitch" and "A Walk to Remember."
But even with minor sales, music will always be a carefully considered
element in any film production. Its importance is magnified each year in
Oscar's two music categoriesoriginal score and song (winners are
announced March 23 at Hollywood's Kodak Theatre).
Just the mere fact that instrumental scores are again finding a home in
Hollywood is heartening to musicians like Armstrong, who predicts other
entertainment options will provide even more work for composers and
arrangers.
"The fact that movie composers are writing music for films and getting work
is good," he observed. "But I think we'll be seeing even more original music
in other areas, be it songs or atmospheric sounds, in computer games where
people are looking for a fast hitviscerally or literally. But the reward
of scoring a film for a composer is infinite.
"You really have to dig deepand that's worth everything."
|