-
For much of the 20th century, our idea of cinema music was classical,
-
symphonic, stately even.
-
MUSIC: "Jumpin' Jack Flash" by The Rolling Stones
-
But might this also be film music?
-
A pop hit by The Rolling Stones turned up to full volume,
-
- driving the action.
- # Watch it! #
-
MARTIN SCORSESE: 'The music I knew, and the music that scored my life,
-
'is the music I heard growing up.
-
'And the music that was around me at the time.'
-
And that was the music that propelled all the action in the story.
-
Mean Streets was the most extreme expression yet of how
-
popular music had pushed aside the symphonic tradition
-
to take hold of the film score.
-
As new musical genres like rock, pop and disco were born,
-
they reverberated throughout cinema.
-
MUSIC: "A Hard Day's Night" by The Beatles
-
Popular music revitalised the soundtrack,
-
and indeed the movies themselves.
-
More distinctive, simpler, more direct, more memorable.
-
It was music that appealed to a younger audience.
-
And to a new generation of composers
-
and directors who knew how to use it.
-
These composers pushed the film score in fresh, exciting directions.
-
Composers like John Barry.
-
MUSIC: "James Bond Theme" by John Barry Orchestra
-
Those screaming horns are giving us a tremendous sense of power and sex.
-
And Lalo Schifrin,
-
whose cool jazz beats gave an inner voice to iconic movie stars.
-
MUSIC: "Bullitt Theme" by Lalo Schifrin
-
'Steve McQueen, he said,'
-
"Bullitt is a very simple guy.
-
"I want you to write a simple theme."
-
It was pop arranger Ennio Morricone who orchestrated this.
-
One of the greatest gunfights in cinema.
-
Here the characters are choreographed to the music
-
in an almost operatic way.
-
But pop has also been used for commercial
-
rather than creative reasons.
-
To help fund and promote big budget movies.
-
MUSIC: "Take My Breath Away" by Berlin
-
MUSIC: "Misirlou" by Dick Dale
-
And when the most influential director of his generation
-
decides he can get rid of original scores altogether,
-
has the use of popular music in film gone too far?
-
Is it really possible to cut out the composer
-
and still make a musically great film?
-
JAZZ MUSIC PLAYS
-
In the late 1940s,
-
cities across America were buzzing with a new style of jazz.
-
More exciting, less predictable, more like the sound of real life.
-
But it was far removed from the discipline of
-
the traditional film score.
-
And Hollywood cinema wasn't ready for it.
-
Until a film came along in 1951 which would be the perfect vehicle.
-
A Streetcar Named Desire boasted the first all-jazz score.
-
And it's one of those movies I can remember seeing for the first time.
-
I was completely blown away by the jazz - the immediacy of it.
-
The physicality, too.
-
And if it had that effect on me in the 1980s,
-
think what it did to audiences in 1951.
-
A Streetcar Named Desire stars Marlon Brando as Stanley.
-
The arrival of his unstable sister-in-law Blanche,
-
played by Vivienne Leigh, causes sexual tension,
-
which leads to her breakdown.
-
You can hear the seeds of this in the music
-
from their very first encounter.
-
SLOW JAZZ MUSIC
-
The soundtrack was the debut film score of Alex North.
-
A modernist composer who loved jazz.
-
And had long wondered
-
if its essence could be captured in a more classical musical structure.
-
With Streetcar, North harnessed the rhythms and harmonies of jazz
-
to emphasise the complex chemistry between the characters.
-
As soon as Stanley walks in the room,
-
you get this brilliant jazz riff.
-
HE PLAYS PIANO
-
It's got a march to it, a sort of step.
-
It's like the march of fate - he will be her nemesis.
-
Over that we get these two gorgeous sax solos.
-
One of them starts almost straightaway.
-
Which is kind of Stanley.
-
- You must be Stanley. I'm Blanche.
- Oh, you're Stella's sister.
-
- Yes.
- Oh, hi.
-
There's a real sense that Stanley's there in all his sweaty glory.
-
We suddenly hear another sax solo,
-
which immediately begins to climb higher and higher and higher.
-
Until it almost gets within a range beyond which it can't go.
-
That is Blanche.
-
Hey, you mind if I make myself comfortable?
-
- My shirt is sticking to me.
- Please, please. Please do.
-
That sax solo is telling us what she's feeling.
-
And she's already close to breakdown.
-
These are all moments in the scene that simply couldn't be
-
put across any other way.
-
And what the instruments are doing is being played in a way
-
whereby you can hear the breath, you can hear the notes
-
moving around, you can hear them being bent and changed.
-
And it begins to sound like a human voice.
-
When you add that sound to a scene, there's a real sense of physicality.
-
Humanity, if you like.
-
Something which you couldn't get out of classical music.
-
But which jazz gives you from the first second you hear a note.
-
But this is no ordinary love triangle.
-
Despite Blanche's attraction to Stanley, it's Stella, his wife,
-
with her unavoidable sexual power, who really has a hold over him.
-
Stella!
-
Hey, Stella!
-
North's score in this scene is doing what all great film music does -
-
telling us more than we can see.
-
And in this case, more than the characters will actually tell us.
-
This scene's about desire.
-
You can hear in every note of that sax how Stanley feels about Stella.
-
And how she feels about him.
-
And what binds the two of them together.
-
ATMOSPHERIC JAZZ MUSIC
-
And that was the problem.
-
The Legion Of Decency, a self appointed moral pressure group,
-
were very powerful at this time.
-
They saw the scene, heard the music and took exception to both.
-
The scene had to be cut, and North had to go back and rescore.
-
Out went the sax to be replaced by strings.
-
EMOTIONAL MUSIC
-
Sentimentality took over from sensuality.
-
And in the version everybody saw, Stella wanted Stanley back.
-
But in North's original, Stella just wanted Stanley.
-
Don't ever leave me, baby.
-
Through the 1950s, jazz expanded the range of film music in America.
-
And drove a wave of gritty dramas whose soundtracks captured
-
the moral complexities of the characters and stories.
-
MUSIC: "Beat Girl Theme" by John Barry
-
Across the Atlantic,
-
Britain was producing its own socially aware dramas
-
with contemporary scores to match.
-
Beat Girl was set in the Soho beat scene.
-
And while its moralistic plot was all a bit trad, its music
-
harnessed the urgency and energy of jazz-influenced British pop.
-
Beat Girl was the debut film score by John Barry -
-
a young composer and arranger who'd had several pop hits
-
with his own group, The John Barry Seven.
-
The band's signature sound was driven by catchy guitar riffs
-
and Barry's own trumpet solos.
-
Barry's real ambition was to have a career as a pop star.
-
And he only landed the Beat Girl job
-
because he shared the same manager as the film's star Adam Faith.
-
# I diss what you told me... #
-
But maybe it was predestined.
-
Barry's father had run a cinema chain
-
and, as a child, he'd lapped up movies.
-
John Barry worked here in Soho - the heart of London's film
-
and music industries. Tin Pan Alley.
-
He even used a strip club as a rehearsal space for his band,
-
The John Barry Seven.
-
I think you can hear those influences in the job that he did.
-
Arranging and performing the theme to the first James Bond film, Dr No.
-
MUSIC: "James Bond Theme" by John Barry Orchestra
-
Dr No's opening titles are animated entirely around the rhythm
-
of the music - pushing it to the fore.
-
We can't ignore the swagger of the guitar
-
and the almost sleazy quality of the horns.
-
Barry was brought in to arrange this theme from a tune
-
written by big band singer Monty Norman.
-
I never saw the movie.
-
I never met Saltzman and Broccoli. I never met the director.
-
I never even read a script. I just knew Bond.
-
I think it was in the Daily Mail,
-
there was a strip of Bond, which I'd occasionally looked at.
-
So I knew what it was about.
-
Monty Norman's theme for Dr No was based on a number
-
he'd written for musical. And it went like this.
-
HE PLAYS DR NO MELODY
-
So what John Barry did in his arrangement, was bring to it
-
everything he understood about pop and jazz.
-
First of all, he kept that melody line but he gave it to
-
the twangy guitar that he understood so well
-
from The John Barry Seven days.
-
Then he added a real driver behind it, which is
-
this deep bass brass sound.
-
HE PLAYS THEME
-
Then he added this fabulous middle eight, which takes the music
-
and the film on to a different level.
-
HE PLAYS THEME
-
That screaming horn section
-
has an extraordinary confidence and raciness.
-
But it's also deeply pop. It's deeply jazz.
-
It's got a wonderful kind of mish-mash of all the things
-
that John Barry understood.
-
MUSIC: "James Bond Theme" by John Barry Orchestra
-
John Barry got paid 250 quid for his arrangement of the Bond theme.
-
And it wasn't until he queued up with everybody else to see
-
Dr No at the cinema that he realised how ubiquitous his theme was.
-
He contacted the producers, saying, "I arranged your opening title
-
"music, I didn't expect to hear it sploshed through the whole film.
-
"Can I have some more money?"
-
They said, "No, but you can score the next one.
-
"If there is a next one."
-
In fact, Barry went on to score 11 Bond movies.
-
And you can hear the difference when he's not just an arranger
-
but a fully-fledged composer in his own right.
-
MUSIC: "Goldfinger" by Shirley Bassey
-
For Goldfinger, Barry drew from his pop contacts,
-
casting Shirley Bassey to sing the title song.
-
LOUD KISS
-
# It's the kiss of death
-
# From Mr Goldfinger... #
-
From now on, every Bond movie's title number would be
-
performed by a leading pop star of the day.
-
And the song would help sell the movie.
-
# ..His heart is cold
-
# He loves only gold... #
-
Having firmly established his Goldfinger theme
-
in the opening song, Barry runs it
-
though a series of symphonic variations throughout the film.
-
As when Bond pursues Goldfinger through the Swiss Alps.
-
VARIATION ON BOND THEME PLAYS
-
And here, Barry seamlessly switches from the original Bond theme
-
to the Goldfinger tune.
-
MUSIC PLAYS
-
He's on the move.
-
Although his music's origins are rooted in pop and jazz,
-
Barry was also scoring the characters with their own themes -
-
in a way traditional Hollywood composers would have understood.
-
Barry's success showed how the worlds of film
-
and pop music were drawing ever closer together.
-
But throughout the '60s, although pop was becoming an ally of film,
-
it also threatened to pull young audiences away from the movies,
-
overtaking them in popularity.
-
MUSIC: "Hard Day's Night" by The Beatles
-
So, with a strident guitar chord and an opening shot that captures
-
the tidal wave of fan hysteria,
-
one film set out directly to embrace the pop phenomenon.
-
A Hard Day's Night - the first film to feature The Beatles,
-
the world's biggest pop band.
-
Nobody had ever seen anything like it before.
-
But then that was the idea.
-
A young generation could tell straightaway,
-
this was a movie aimed directly at them.
-
# So why on earth should I moan
-
# Cos when I get you alone
-
# You know I feel OK... #
-
Director Richard Lester faced a unique challenge.
-
He had to choose songs which had already been
-
recorded by The Beatles before a script had even been written.
-
And somehow construct a film that made sense.
-
We were given ten songs and I rejected two.
-
You sit down,
-
given this bag of toys, of wonderful songs,
-
and you think,
-
"I can't see where this can go."
-
The only thing that bound these songs together was the band.
-
So Lester looked to the Beatles themselves for ideas about how
-
to build his sequences.
-
They all had a fairly developed sense of the surreal.
-
The first thing I tried to do with the film is to let the audience
-
know that things were not going to be a straightforward documentary
-
narrative of a day in the life of The Beatles.
-
Aye, aye, the Liverpool shuffle.
-
In this scene,
-
the band magically switch from playing cards to playing a song.
-
MUSIC: "When I Get Home" by The Beatles
-
# Whoa-whoa I... #
-
It was saying to the audience, "You see, life is not as you think it is.
-
"There is a surreal quality to them."
-
# Can't you see? Can't you see? #
-
The whole of Hard Day's Night was starting out of them
-
being ordered about in small spaces.
-
And no messing about.
-
Lennon, put those girls down or I'll tell your mother on you.
-
'Being yelled at and being chased by people,
-
'and that sudden sense of relief.'
-
We're out!
-
MUSIC: "Can't Buy Me Love" by The Beatles
-
'When they break out and run down a staircase and out into a field.'
-
# I'll buy you a diamond ring... #
-
CHEERING
-
The success of A Hard Day's Night showed how pop music
-
could get younger audiences flocking to the cinema.
-
Hollywood had also seen how the wind was blowing.
-
And leading the way was Walt Disney.
-
Looking to appeal to children and parents alike,
-
Disney realised his new composers had to be au fait with the pop song.
-
He signed up the song-writing duo, brothers Richard
-
and Robert Sherman, creators of the smash hit You're Sixteen.
-
My dad challenged us to write pop music.
-
And we started writing pop songs.
-
And we had some big number one hits with rock 'n' roll songs.
-
Uncle Walt wanted the brothers to bring their song-writing magic
-
to a new Disney movie.
-
He said, "You know what a nanny is?" We said, "Oh, yeah, it's a goat.
-
"You want to do an animated film about a nanny goat?"
-
"No, no, no," he says. "It's an English nursemaid."
-
"Oh, yeah, sure. We can..."
-
So we read this enchanting series of stories.
-
The challenge facing the brothers was not only to compose
-
the songs for Mary Poppins, but to construct a story from these books.
-
We were reading them with great alarm because we'd say,
-
"Well what's the plot? I mean, where is the storyline?"
-
It was not a storyline at all.
-
It was just wonderful adventures with this magical nanny
-
who comes in and does great stuff, and then she leaves.
-
So we knew we had to do some quick thinking.
-
Let's come in with a storyline.
-
MUSIC: "Boiled Beef And Carrots" by Harry Champion
-
The brothers fused American pop with a more surprising tradition -
-
English music hall.
-
# Boiled beef and carrots
-
# Boiled beef and carrots... #
-
Their passion for these songs would be
-
the inspiration behind the film's score.
-
With the movie set in Edwardian London.
-
I've always been a fan of English music hall.
-
Those wonderful old songs. Boiled Beef And Carrots.
-
All those things like that.
-
Walt bought that right away. He knew what I was talking about.
-
We were called in and there were Walt Disney, all of them
-
singing Knees Up Mother Brown, kicking their feet up in the air.
-
And they were all out of breath.
-
And Walt said, "Now, I want you to write me a song like this, right?"
-
We said, "Yes, Walt, we'll write you a song like that."
-
So we started with...
-
# Step in time, step in time
-
# Step in time, step in time
-
# You never need a reason, never need a rhyme
-
# Step in time you step in time... #
-
Link your elbows!
-
# Link your elbows, step in time
-
# Link your elbows, step in time
-
# Link your elbows, link your elbows
-
# Link your elbows... #
-
That little piece went for 12 minutes.
-
You know, one of the greatest scenes you've ever seen.
-
And the Shermans would mix all the ingredients that make a classic
-
pop song - a memorable lyric, a catchy melody and a potent hook -
-
to create the film's most-loved tune.
-
We came up with this nonsense word,
-
which we decided would be a great gift for Mary Poppins
-
to give to the children.
-
So we said, "Let's give them
-
"a really, funny, crazy, obnoxious word."
-
And we started, we said, "It's got to be super colossal."
-
And super colossal...well, anybody would write super colossal.
-
So we said, "Super something, super crazy,
-
"super caga...flava...slava...
-
"Supercali... supercalifragilistic! A-ha!" And then, we had...
-
# Um diddle diddle um diddle ay Um diddle diddle diddle um
-
# Because I was afraid to speak When I was just a lad
-
# Me father gave me nose a tweak And told me I was bad...
-
# But then one day I learned a word That saved me aching nose
-
# The biggest word you ever heard And this is how it goes, oh!
-
# Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious
-
# Even though the sound of it Is something quite atrocious
-
# If you say it loud enough You'll always sound precocious
-
# Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious
-
# Um diddle diddle um diddle ay # Um diddle diddle um diddle ay... #
-
These songs earned the Sherman Brothers two Academy Awards.
-
# I've reached the top And had to stop
-
# And that's what bothering me... #
-
Their knack for writing pop tunes would underlay the huge success
-
they went on to enjoy with other classic Disney movies,
-
like The Jungle Book.
-
# ..I'm tired of monkeying around!
-
# Oh, oobee doo
-
# I wanna be like you
-
# I wanna walk like you Talk like you... #
-
The Shermans had applied their pop sensibility
-
to reinvigorate the animated musical.
-
But in Europe, an entirely different film genre
-
would unexpectedly be changed by a pop composer.
-
This is the opening of A Fistful Of Dollars,
-
its bold graphics and striking music a declaration
-
that the Spaghetti Western had arrived.
-
Italian filmmakers were giving new life
-
to one the oldest genres of cinema.
-
Written by Ennio Morricone,
-
this title theme boasts the kind of elements
-
that made his sound so distinctive -
-
the melody, the whistles,
-
the recording of a whip crack.
-
HORSE TROTTING
-
GUNSHOTS
-
This use of real world sounds came from Morricone's time
-
as an arranger of Italian pop records.
-
TRANSLATION FROM ITALIAN:
-
The music for A Fistful Of Dollars was based on a pop record
-
that Morricone had arranged called Pastures Of Plenty,
-
which had impressed director Sergio Leone.
-
# We come with the dust
-
# And we're gone with the wind
-
# Oh, oooh, oooh, oooh... #
-
Leone and Morricone had been friends since childhood,
-
but Leone also knew that the innovation Morricone had shown
-
on his pop records could deliver something special
-
despite a tight budget.
-
Morricone brings his own sensibility to the Western,
-
he mixes his kind of idea of '60s music and modern sounds
-
and very individualistic sounds with the idea of the Old West,
-
the Spanish guitar, the whistle, this sense of folk music.
-
And here, he combines this with the 19th-century European device
-
of the leitmotif.
-
So out of that title music, when we first see Clint Eastwood,
-
The Man With No Name,
-
he gets his own little motif.
-
FLUTE PLAYS
-
Just a little flute...
-
But then, when he is spotted by the villain, you get this.
-
PIANO PLAYS
-
And it's got a little bit more of a sense of danger about it.
-
PIANO PLAYS
-
And above that comes the Japanese flute,
-
which to me says, you know,
-
Yojimbo, which is the Japanese epic
-
on which this film was entirely based.
-
So now, Eastwood is a samurai.
-
This is what Morricone does,
-
he drops these tiny musical ideas into the film throughout,
-
giving us a different feel, a different sound each time,
-
sometimes very, very short, just a couple of notes.
-
Here we have the other great gift that Morricone has,
-
a gift for melody, and not just melody,
-
a melody that will break your heart.
-
MELODY PLAYS
-
Get three coffins ready.
-
But often, a melody that is placed
-
either before or during the most violent moments of these films,
-
it gives them an extraordinary texture. Listen to this.
-
MELANCHOLIC PIANO PIECE
-
MELODY CONTINUES
-
It's actually still quite a thin sound,
-
it's a single melodic instrument over a string section,
-
so it's not full orchestra.
-
This is partially because of budget,
-
but also because I think Morricone understands
-
that we want to hear small textures working under these moments,
-
but it really makes us root for Clint Eastwood
-
and gives Clint Eastwood's character a soft side
-
which is simply not there in the way that he plays it.
-
By the time we get to the final shootout,
-
that theme of Eastwood's has become huge.
-
We now have a trumpet on the lead line,
-
very Spanish, beautiful.
-
We have strings behind, we have the voices behind,
-
so it has an amazing strength.
-
FULL MELODY PLAYS
-
And we're now in a world of ritual.
-
It's as if the music is making the characters choreographed.
-
They appear to move in time with the music.
-
MELODY INTENSIFIES
-
And it gives it that timeless quality,
-
but it also gives it an operatic quality -
-
this shootout was inevitable from the first moment of the film
-
and now the music is giving us the arena within which it can happen.
-
Scenes like these placed Morricone in the great tradition of composers
-
who shaped not just the sound of a movie,
-
but its very construction.
-
In these and his subsequent films with director Sergio Leone,
-
Morricone was a fully-fledged artistic collaborator
-
in creating the cinematic drama.
-
The Spaghetti Western established a trend for increasingly violent films
-
with almost wordless heroes,
-
whose inner nature was expressed through the music.
-
This method of scoring characters
-
would make its way into American cinema
-
through a film shot here, on the West Coast.
-
I'm driving through San Francisco, it's a beautiful sunny day.
-
And thanks to the movies,
-
these are some of the most recognisable streets in the world.
-
But there's something missing.
-
JAZZ MUSIC PLAYS
-
That's more like it.
-
This is the soundtrack to the movie Bullitt,
-
set in San Francisco and starring Steve McQueen.
-
Bullitt was scored by Lalo Schifrin,
-
an Argentinian-born composer
-
who trained in both classical and jazz music.
-
He'd worked in Hollywood since the early '60s
-
and was best known for his theme to TV series Mission: Impossible.
-
Schifrin had also been mentored by the jazz legend Dizzy Gillespie,
-
playing with him in New York in the '50s,
-
and he wanted to inject some of those jazz rhythms and beats
-
into the soundtrack for Bullitt.
-
Like Clint Eastwood's gunslinger,
-
Steve McQueen's detective Frank Bullitt rarely speaks,
-
but Schifrin's score is his voice.
-
Steve McQueen, he said,
-
"Bullitt is a very simple guy.
-
"I want you to write a simple theme."
-
McQueen's charisma is that of an ordinary man
-
required to do extraordinary things.
-
His almost wordless performance means that we are relying a lot
-
on how he looks for that charisma.
-
However, Lalo Schifrin's music gives his every moment,
-
no matter how mundane, a cool energy.
-
Bullitt's most famous sequence is ten minutes long
-
and contains no dialogue, but an awful lot of driving.
-
What makes it compelling is Lalo Schifrin's score,
-
which through a couple of very precise gear changes
-
turns a street game of cat and mouse
-
into something altogether more deadly.
-
Here, Schifrin's music focuses
-
on Bullitt's intense concentration
-
as he tails a pair of mobsters through the busy streets.
-
It is insistent but tightly controlled,
-
as we feel the pressure building up for the inevitable chase.
-
MUSIC PLAYS
-
So what will the score do next?
-
'The director, he asked me to write music for the chase.
-
'I said, "No."'
-
"Why not?"
-
"Because you are going to orchestrate the chase
-
"with sound effects, you don't need music."
-
'When Bullitt is in the car and changes gears,
-
'that's when the chase starts and I build music up to that point,
-
'and at that moment, stop.'
-
MUSIC STOPS
-
TYRES SQUEAL
-
CAR ENGINE RUMBLES
-
And yet people congratulate you
-
on your scoring of the chase, I believe.
-
Yes, they say, I love the music over the chase."
-
And there's no music.
-
Three years after Bullitt, Schifrin was invited
-
to score another, altogether more violent, thriller
-
set in San Francisco.
-
And with Dirty Harry,
-
director Don Siegel offered Schifrin considerable scope to experiment.
-
And he said, "I have a new film," and he said,
-
"I want you to write the music for it."
-
And he gave me complete freedom.
-
He didn't tell me what to do.
-
While the dramatic centre of Dirty Harry is Clint Eastwood,
-
much of Schifrin's music actually accompanies Scorpio,
-
the crazed serial killer he pursues.
-
I love, particularly, right from the very start in Dirty Harry,
-
the first thing we have is Scorpio up on the roof
-
- with his gun trained.
- Yeah.
-
And the music has a terrific power to it.
-
TENSE MUSIC PLAYS
-
Scorpio came with the idea of voices.
-
Very frenetic,
-
kind of...hysterical voices.
-
Schifrin uses unusual sounds, such as rubbing the rim of a glass,
-
to take us inside Scorpio's psychotic mind.
-
EERIE MUSIC PLAYS
-
There's also a sense that Scorpio
-
represents the end of the '60s dream,
-
a countercultural figure turned psychopath.
-
Schifrin captures that idea in this scene with acid-rock guitar riffs.
-
ROCK MUSIC PLAYS
-
In Bullitt, I have electric guitar playing jazz or jazz style.
-
In...in Dirty Harry, I used, for Scorpio,
-
electric guitars playing kind of acid rock
-
because I wanted to make a difference.
-
ROCK MUSIC PLAYS
-
Again, it's unpredictable.
-
Yeah, and menacing, a little bit menacing.
-
Schifrin had taken the popular-music influenced score
-
to a new level of sophistication.
-
But he was still working in the classic mould
-
of a film composer trusted by the director
-
to take charge of how a film sounded.
-
But by the 1970s, a new generation of directors was coming into cinema
-
who'd grown up with pop music as the soundtrack to their lives
-
and wanted to reflect this far more directly in their films.
-
In 1973, the greatest of these directors
-
began a journey back into his own youth.
-
Here, on the streets of New York's Little Italy.
-
Martin Scorsese's Mean Streets was a film about the New York Mafia.
-
It followed in the wake of The Godfather,
-
but concerned small-time criminals
-
and drew extensively on
-
Scorsese's own memories.
-
Scorsese made it on a small budget
-
raised independently of the big studios.
-
But it meant he had creative control
-
and he made the key decision to leave out the composer entirely
-
drawing the film soundtrack from his own record collection.
-
'It wasn't even a question.'
-
I could never have a composer, like Bernard Herrmann or Elmer Bernstein
-
or...that was out of the question.
-
You know, I knew I was going to make films somehow,
-
but when I did, the soundtrack's up to me.
-
And the music I knew and the music that scored my life,
-
and still does to a certain extent,
-
is the music I heard while growing up.
-
So music was very, very much part of a expression
-
of who you are and how you feel.
-
You know, in reality,
-
Mean Streets really takes place between '61 and '63,
-
even though we shot it in '72.
-
There was Phil Spector and there was the Wall Of Sound.
-
And that's the sound I hear in my head.
-
And that was the music that propelled
-
all the action in the story
-
and because that's what was playing in the middle of the night
-
in those after-hour joints that we were in.
-
Cos there were jukeboxes in these places, you see.
-
And especially in the summertime, that music would just echo through.
-
And when you're living in a tenement area,
-
everybody's out and everybody knows what everybody else is doing.
-
Right from the pre-title sequence,
-
Scorsese used a record he loved
-
to accompany the lead character, Charlie, played by Harvey Keitel.
-
'I imagined the opening of the picture,
-
'he looks at himself in the mirror, wonders who the hell he is'
-
and then, he puts his head back on the pillow
-
and as we do that, we cut three times into the beat.
-
So that was all worked out in my head way, way in advance.
-
MUSIC: "Be My Baby," by The Ronettes
-
'The first beats of Be My Baby,
-
'they just emerged'
-
and they're with me all the time.
-
So it's...even when I'm on set, it's always...
-
HE TAPS THE SONG'S RHYTHM
-
And they know, everybody looks at me, "Yeah, OK?"
-
And it's just, it's just what I do.
-
It's part of, it's become part of my DNA.
-
And then, the thing was to go to home movies.
-
And then, intercut with actual eight-millimetre films
-
that my brother took of his first son's christening, that was 1965.
-
- # ..Say you'll be my darling
- Be my, be my baby
-
# Be my baby now
-
# Whoa whoa whoa whoa... #
-
Mean Streets tells how Charlie's attempts
-
to get ahead in the local mafia
-
are complicated by Catholic guilt
-
and his loyalty to his irresponsible friend Johnny Boy,
-
played by Robert De Niro.
-
Scorsese carefully makes us wait
-
before showing us the two friends together.
-
Girls, after you.
-
'All right, OK, thanks a lot, Lord, thanks a lot for opening my eyes...'
-
Charlie is waiting at the bar for Johnny Boy,
-
what could Scorsese possibly do with such an ordinary scene?
-
Well, what he does is to pull off
-
possibly the greatest musical cue of the whole movie.
-
MUSIC: "Jumpin' Jack Flash", by The Rolling Stones
-
The music leaps into the foreground
-
and, suddenly, Johnny Boy IS Jumpin' Jack Flash
-
and he's a gas, gas, gas.
-
And we know Charlie can't trust him.
-
Look at Charlie's face - he knows Johnny Boy is going to be trouble.
-
SONG CONTINUES
-
It's a world in which there is a conformity and a tradition,
-
a tradition which is underworld.
-
Johnny is anarchy
-
and is Jumpin' Jack Flash.
-
And I knew it had to be in slow motion,
-
but what we found when I cut to Harvey
-
and when he put that glass of liquor down, it just worked beautifully
-
with the music and he moves back to the edge of the bar
-
and there's a woman sitting there, I don't know who she is,
-
but she looks like a ghost.
-
SONG CONTINUES
-
I guess, basically, you know,
-
that was the movie, that was the one,
-
I put it all in there.
-
And if anyone was ever to wonder what that life was like or...
-
..or what that world sounded like and felt like, you know,
-
they can check out that picture.
-
Scorsese had proved that a serious, dramatic film
-
could cut out the composer altogether.
-
That same year another of this new wave of young directors,
-
George Lucas, explored his boyhood experiences in American Graffiti
-
to a soundtrack consisting entirely
-
of '50s and early '60s pop classics.
-
But through the '70s, pop music itself was changing,
-
evolving new styles and genres.
-
For film producers canny enough to ride this wave,
-
there was serious money to be made.
-
In 1977, a film was released that was shot here, in Brooklyn,
-
and used the latest pop music to tell us about the dreams
-
and hopes of its characters.
-
Not a back catalogue of '50s and '60s hits,
-
but a phenomenon that was sweeping the country
-
and would burn very brightly, if a little briefly.
-
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you disco.
-
MUSIC: "Night Fever", by the Bee Gees
-
The producers of Saturday Night Fever wanted to build its soundtrack
-
around six songs that had already been recorded by the Bee Gees.
-
To provide additional tracks and incidental music,
-
David Shire was called in.
-
With a theatre and jazz background,
-
Shire had written scores for key '70s films
-
like All The President's Men.
-
He now had to find a way of working within the disco style.
-
I guess that's what I liked about disco.
-
You could take anything, you could take Beethoven,
-
you could take Rimsky-Korsakov, you could take Mussorgsky,
-
and just put 120 beats-per-minute to it and a rhythm section,
-
and it would kind of work.
-
For this sequence,
-
Shire adapted a classical piece Night on a Bare Mountain
-
by the 19th-century Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky.
-
MUSIC: "Night on a Bare Mountain" by Mussorgsky, adaptation David Shire
-
Shire gives it a disco twist, which enhances the tune's
-
and the scene's dizzying, dangerous feel.
-
MAN SHOUTING
-
And it turned out to be the most lucrative film job I've ever had.
-
The least composing but the most rewarding, financially.
-
The Saturday Night Fever soundtrack sold 15 million copies
-
and spent six months at number one.
-
The film itself earned more than 90m at the US Box Office,
-
a huge sum for the time.
-
Hollywood studios would now seek to exploit this cash cow,
-
with an eye firmly on the commercial rather than the artistic
-
possibilities of pop songs.
-
In the 1980s, with American cinema ticket sales topping
-
a billion-a-year,
-
Hollywood and the pop industry became increasingly co-dependent.
-
Big budget movies like Top Gun were indiscriminately filled with
-
pop and rock tracks.
-
Video were used to market movies on MTV,
-
while the films were used to promote the artists themselves.
-
MUSIC: "Take My Breath Away", by Berlin
-
Against this corporate background,
-
it would take a director of singular vision to make popular music
-
mean more than the sum of its lyrics.
-
MUSIC: "Blue Velvet" by Bobby Vinton
-
Right from exaggeratedly idyllic opening of Blue Velvet,
-
David Lynch uses '50s pop songs to create a dream-like atmosphere.
-
For Lynch, classic pop is like necromancy,
-
bringing to life a world of strange,
-
chilling encounters between people on the edge, as in this scene
-
where the title song is performed by the film's star Isabella Rossellini.
-
# Blue velvet... #
-
Here, Lynch's sinister alchemy twists a seemingly innocent
-
love song to highlight the growing obsession of the film's
-
protagonist Geoffrey with Rossellini's character.
-
# ..was the night from the stars... #
-
To help Rossellini with her vocal performance,
-
the producers called songwriter and composer Angelo Badalamenti.
-
And I meet with Isabella.
-
We work on the song Blue Velvet.
-
We then record it.
-
David puts the earphones on,
-
he listens to the whole thing,
-
takes the earphones off and he says,
-
"This is peachy keen.
-
"That's the ticket."
-
But that wasn't the end of it.
-
Lynch wanted to use a track by the band This Mortal Coil in the film,
-
but the producers couldn't afford to licence it.
-
Instead, they suggested Badalamenti should write an original song.
-
So I said, "OK, but I need a lyric. I'm not a lyric writer.
-
"Why don't you tell your director to write a lyric?"
-
And I'm recording Isabella now on Blue Velvet,
-
and she comes in with this little piece of paper,
-
and on it, on the top, says, "Mysteries of Love."
-
And I'm reading it, "And sometimes the wind blows,
-
"and you and I float in the darkness and kiss for ever..."
-
blah, blah, blah.
-
I'm thinking, "This is awful."
-
So, what do I do? I call David and I say,
-
"David, I'm just curious. What kind of music do you hear for it?"
-
"Oh, Angelo, just let it float. Make it like the tides of the ocean.
-
"Make it kind of cosmic and..." No clue, right?
-
I take the lyric, I put it on the piano...
-
- I'll play it for you, if you like.
- Sure. Please.
-
# Sometimes a wind blows
-
# And you and I...
-
- WOMAN'S VOICE:
- # ..float... #
-
In this scene, the song Mysteries of Love epitomises the purity of love,
-
not the morbid desire Geoffrey felt for Rossellini's character
-
when Blue Velvet played.
-
The lyric forced me to...
-
Even David's description...
-
Just something floating and no real times,
-
no rhymes, no hooks.
-
# ..And the mysteries of love... #
-
Lynch had started out wanting to include one pop track in his film
-
and ended up co-writing a brand-new one but, more importantly,
-
he'd found himself a musical soul mate.
-
Angelo Badalamenti has gone on to score pretty much
-
all of Lynch's films since
-
and I think there's a reason for that.
-
His music is the sound of Lynch's world with all its paradoxes.
-
It's cold but, at the same time, it's very warm.
-
It's nostalgic and yet it's very, very modern.
-
And, to be frank, for me,
-
David Lynch's films couldn't work without Badalamenti's music.
-
One day in 1989, the pair sat down at Badalamenti's piano
-
and, in a single take,
-
wrote the theme for a groundbreaking new television series.
-
David comes in. "Angelo, now we're really pals."
-
And he says, "We're in a dark wood."
-
And I'm going like...
-
PLAYS MOODY PIANO MUSIC
-
"No, Angelo, those are beautiful notes but can you do them slower?"
-
OK.
-
PLAYS PIANO SLOWER
-
"No, no, Angelo, slower."
-
I said, "David, if we do it any slower,
-
"I'm going to play in reverse."
-
"OK, Angelo, now there's a girl named Laura Palmer...
-
"She's a very troubled teenager,
-
"and she's in the dark woods and she's coming out
-
"behind some trees.
-
"She's very beautiful, too.
-
"Give me something that's her."
-
SAD PIANO MUSIC PLAYS
-
"That's it, Angelo.
-
"Now let it build, cos she's coming closer and she's so troubled.
-
"She's got tears in her eyes. Angelo, it's so sad. Reach a climax.
-
"That's it. Just keep it going.
-
"Beautiful. Beautiful. Now, start coming down
-
"but fall slowly. Come slowly, slowly down, down.
-
"That's it.
-
"That's it.
-
"Quiet.
-
"Now, Angelo, go back into the dark woods...
-
"..and stay there.
-
"There's an owl in the background."
-
He said, "Angelo, you just wrote Twin Peaks."
-
From a starting point in pop, Badalamenti
-
and Lynch formed a fertile partnership of director
-
and composer almost unparalleled in contemporary cinema.
-
But could a truly creative director ever insist, in effect,
-
that he wouldn't touch a composer with a barge pole?
-
As a composer, I rather took against Quentin Tarantino,
-
gifted filmmaker though he is,
-
when he reportedly said that he doesn't use composers
-
because he wouldn't trust one with his movies.
-
But then, maybe it's my prejudices I should be challenging.
-
Maybe he's right.
-
Let's see what he gains by not using a composer.
-
Tarantino's 1992 debut Reservoir Dogs features
-
a soundtrack solely consisting of old pop
-
and rock songs that the characters hear on a local radio station.
-
(RADIO PRESENTER) ..super sounds of the '70s continues.
-
This embeds the music in the film
-
and enables the characters to interact with it,
-
as in this notorious torture scene.
-
MUSIC: "Stuck In The Middle With You" by Stealers Wheel
-
By playing the catchy Stuck In The Middle With You,
-
written by Gerry Rafferty and Joe Egan,
-
Tarantino lulls the audience into being charmed by Mr Blonde.
-
Singing along to the song despite the feeling of imminent danger.
-
# ..Stuck in the middle with you
-
# Yes I'm stuck in the middle with you... #
-
Then, when the violence hits, it's all the more shocking.
-
The violence of Reservoir Dogs divided the audiences and critics,
-
but its soundtrack was hailed as
-
one of the finest uses of pop music in a generation.
-
So, how does Tarantino get round the tricky issue of being
-
allowed to use someone's music in this way?
-
Enter music supervisor Karyn Rachtman.
-
What does a music supervisor do on a movie?
-
Your job can be as basic as licensing every track,
-
and just handling the negotiations
-
and making sure that you take care of all the rights.
-
What happens if you have to then go and say,
-
"We may not be able to clear the rights"?
-
It happens all the time.
-
85% of the movies I've worked on,
-
you do not get every song you want.
-
During Reservoir Dogs,
-
Quentin, when he wrote that script, he had written in the songs.
-
Especially with the scene Stuck In The Middle With You,
-
that was being shot to.
-
So, he has a music supervisor on the film who told him,
-
"You can't use any '70s songs." Quentin was devastated.
-
And I said, "I will get you Stuck In The Middle With You."
-
And I had to get on the phone with Joe Egan
-
because I needed him to call the publisher.
-
He didn't want to do it and I had to reference things like
-
Singing In The Rain used in Clockwork Orange,
-
and how we're paying homage to his song,
-
even though somebody's getting their ear cut off by a sick freak.
-
You have to tell him the scene, I assume.
-
You have to tell him the scene. Yeah, of course.
-
After I got him Stuck In The Middle With You,
-
Quentin said, "What can I do for you? I appreciate it so much."
-
And I said, "You can fire your other music supervisor."
-
Karyn Rachtman worked with Tarantino on his follow-up
-
to Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction,
-
which again featured characters interacting with songs.
-
But he didn't think he was going to put a song
-
when Bruce Willis was driving in the car
-
and he said, "Get me a song."
-
# Flowers on the wall... #
-
Flowers On The Wall ended up there.
-
I just guess I was picturing Bruce Willis
-
singing along to something funny.
-
With Quentin's movies, the music sometimes let's you go...
-
EXHALES DEEPLY
-
But this fun musical sing along is just
-
a moment of respite before the violence starts again.
-
Motherfucker.
-
TYRES SCREECH
-
Tarantino's more recent films show that his drive to feature
-
the music he loves doesn't just stop with pop and rock.
-
He might not want to employ film composers,
-
but he seems to own plenty of their soundtracks.
-
Listen to this scene from Kill Bill.
-
WOMAN WHISTLES
-
The tune Daryl Hannah is whistling was
-
written by Bernard Herrmann for the 1968 film Twisted Nerve.
-
And remember this one?
-
SPAGHETTI WESTERN MUSIC PLAYS
-
Ennio Morricone's music for the climactic
-
shoot-out in A Fistful Of Dollars.
-
Tarantino, a master of utilising the pop song,
-
uses composers all right,
-
but only when their music is already iconic,
-
revealing the debt even he owes to the history of the movie soundtrack.
-
When it comes to respecting tradition,
-
one cinema franchise more than any other requires its composed
-
to acknowledge its musical heritage.
-
For Casino Royale, composer David Arnold faced the challenge
-
rebooting the legacy of John Barry for a contemporary audience,
-
20 Bond movies on from Dr No.
-
It was kind of classic back to sort of Barry,
-
back to basics, the spirit of it.
-
The wailing brass, the seductive strings,
-
but knowing it's a different world.
-
Casino Royale would be the first Bond movie to star Daniel Craig.
-
Arnold's score had to reflect this tougher and more physical 007.
-
The music was modelled on Daniel's movement and muscularity.
-
His attitude, the way he looked...
-
So, you're actually scoring body language...
-
Bond's not one for saying an awful lot.
-
The music is accompanying him moving.
-
But Casino Royale is also an origin tale,
-
explaining how Bond becomes a fully-fledged super spy.
-
This presented Arnold with an interesting opportunity to
-
work with a classic Bond theme.
-
He deliberately didn't play the Bond theme during that
-
film in its entirety until the very end of the picture.
-
Erm...
-
because it felt like he wasn't that character yet.
-
When he wins the DB5 in the game of cards,
-
the first time you kind of hint at that...
-
HE HUMS GENTLY
-
The first time he puts the dinner jacket on.
-
He gets the tuxedo and he straighten his tie,
-
and he looks at himself in the mirror and you think,
-
"OK, that's a bit closer."
-
SHE LAUGHS
-
And then ultimately, at the end of the film,
-
when he says, "The name's Bond - James Bond."
-
There you are. Hello.
-
The name's Bond - James Bond.
-
It's only when these four seconds of black appear that we hear
-
the Bond theme in full, just in time for the credits to roll.
-
BOND THEME PLAYS
-
David's Arnold's music
-
helped give the Bond franchise a new lease of life.
-
And, in, 2013, Skyfall, performed and co-written by Adele,
-
became the first Bond song to win an Academy Award.
-
# Let the sky fall
-
# When it crumbles
-
# We will stand tall... #
-
The song carries its heritage proudly.
-
The powerful chorus...
-
# ..Let the sky fall
-
# When it crumbles
-
# We will stand tall... #
-
The classic Bond chord progression it incorporates...
-
# ..That sky falls
-
# That sky falls... #
-
And, crucially, the careful casting of the performer.
-
Following a tradition that began with Shirley Bassey and Goldfinger.
-
I don't think you would necessarily expect to see Adele in a scene
-
but the sound of her voice says, "This could belong in Bond's world."
-
Pop may once have been a cinematic upstart,
-
but now it's so well established it can draw on its own tradition.
-
Today's audience enjoys films that can move seamlessly
-
between the orchestral score and the energy of popular music,
-
making soundtracks more diverse, forceful and relevant.
-
This has become the modern sound of cinema.
-
Next time, the film score goes electronic.
-
How technology pushed the boundaries of the soundtrack.
-
MUSIC: "Skyfall" by Adele, instrumental arrangement
-
Subtitles By Red Bee Media Ltd