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| Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL | |
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Largo's Shark 00 Agent
Posts : 10588 Member Since : 2011-03-14
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Wed Oct 31, 2012 12:10 am | |
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| | | Harmsway Potential 00 Agent
Posts : 2801 Member Since : 2011-08-22
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Wed Oct 31, 2012 12:12 am | |
| - Largo's Shark wrote:
- For Harms, who doesn't give a rats arse about spoilers, and probably the only one here who's as geeky about film scores as me. Read at your own peril.
- Spoiler:
01. Grand Bazaar, Istanbul - Bond finds Ronson, car chase, shootout and bike chase. Closes with Bond diving onto the train. 14. The Bloody Shot - Entire train sequence - shootout, digger scene, fight and Bond's fall. Adele's Skyfall - Title sequence (no shit) 02. Voluntary Retirement - Begins with Mallory's line to M - "Retirement planning" and ends with M stopped by police on Vauxhall Bridge. 15. Enjoying Death - Bond lying in bed with the Turkish babe, drinking Heini, popping Benzedrine pills etc. Konyali - Ensemble Hüseyin Türkmenier - Bond bored out of his mind. CNN Breaking New Theme #2 - Herb Avery - News of the attack. Reprise of M's theme from "Voluntary Retirement" - Bond epiphany and M at the funeral. 03. New Digs - Begins with the drive to the underground HQ, ends with a witty exercise montage (treadmill, sit-ups etc.), while Tanner plays Mr. Exposition on who the perpetrator of the attack could be. Ends with Bond unable to do any more pull-ups. . 10. Day Wasted - Begins with the "Skyfall - Done" exchange at the evaluation, followed by "Day - Wasted." Second half is Bond is Bond cutting out the bullets, and getting Tanner to do a ballistics report, identifying Patrice from three suspects who all use depleted uranium bullets. 05. Brave New World - Begins with Q showing Bond his gadgets, ends with Bond swimming a few laps at a rooftop pool in Shanghai. 06. Shanghai Drive - Bond in disguise at the airport watching Severine and Patrice, then tailing Patrice across the Yan'an highway. Reprise of the mysterioso opening of Grand, Bizarre (IIRC without the brassy stinger) as Patrice kills the guards at the lobby, then follows Patrice across the first floor, using the dead bodies as footprints. 07. Jellyfish - Bond grabs onto the lift and tries to fight the pain. Ends with the assassination. 08. Silhouette - Begins with fight, and ends with Bond questioning a hanging Patrice (who doesn't answer) until he's sucked out by the wind current. 09. Modigliani - An admiring Severine spots Bond, he vanishes, and then he analyses the left-over machinery (rifle and glass cutter).. 17. Close Shave - Eve drops by. 31 Old Dog, New Tricks (unused) - Replaced by Moonlight - Jun Chen - Bond and Eve chat and she gives him a wet shave. Mallory's military background is revealed.. 13. Komodo Dragon - Cut to the Macau casino as Eve says "Old dog, new tricks" - Ends as Bond places his bet. 12. Someone Usually Dies - Very effective cue as Bond lets Severine know that he's aware of her three bodyguards, he identifies the tattoo on her wrist, wins her trust, raises a glass to the three thugs. Reminiscent of the beach scene with Bond and Domino in TB, along with Bond and Viv in Fleming's TSWLM. The Pit Fight - Can't remember this one, though it could have been a reprise of "Silhouette." 04. Severine - The shower scene. 16. The Chimera - Severine's yacht (the Chimera) taking Bond to Silva's island. Charles Trenet - Boum - The William Tell scene. Silva's Capture - Bond theme appearance. Silva shows his deformity. 11. Quartermaster - Analysing Silva's computers, Silva preparing to escape, and Bond chasing him through the tunnels. 18. Health & Safety - Bond enters the tube train and says to a worker "health and safety." 19. Granborough Road - Silva gets off (that sounded wrong), the escalator sliding, and back to the tunnels. Can't remember what the Bond theme at the end was for. 20. Tennyson - Tense inter-cutting between M's enquiry speeches (quotes Tennyson’s Ulysses), Silva and his men approaching, Bond racing against time. 21. Enquiry - Mallory's shot and runs for cover, Bond arrives, Silva escapes and Bond drives off with M. 22. Breadcrumbs - We first see the DB5, Mallory gives advice to Q and Tanner on how to lure Silva. Ends with a zoom into a map of Scotland. 23. Skyfall - The DB5 drives through the misty glen. 24. Kill Them First - Bond, M and Kincade lay dynamite. 25. Welcome To Scotland - The group of mercenaries arrive by foot HIGH NOON/OUTLAND-style, shoot out, M is injured. Boom Boom - The Animals - Silva arrives by helicopter. 26. She’s Mine - Bond carries Bond Aston fires, Silva throws charges, Aston is destroyed, Bond enraged, lights fuse to fuel cannisters. 27. The Moors - Silva spots M and Kincade, Bond races to stop Silva and his men from reaching the chapel. 28. Deep Water - Bond treads carefully across ice, Silva sees lights in the chapel, fight with henchman in frozen loch, Silva reaches the chapel and meets M and Silva's death. 29. Mother - M dies in Bond's arms. End Credits Medley. Gunbarrel / The Name's Bond... James Bond (abridged re-recording), then fades into... 30. Adrenaline, which fades into... 14. The Bloody Shot (abridged version), which fades into... 13. Komodo Dragon (abridged version)
Thanks for this. |
| | | Largo's Shark 00 Agent
Posts : 10588 Member Since : 2011-03-14
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Wed Oct 31, 2012 1:58 am | |
| Updated it to reflect some sleuthing I've done on the unreleased stuff. |
| | | Control 00 Agent
Posts : 5206 Member Since : 2010-05-13 Location : Slumber, Inc.
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Wed Oct 31, 2012 2:00 am | |
| - Spoiler:
So the gunbarrel is also a version of Arnold's "The Name's Bond... James Bond"?
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| | | Largo's Shark 00 Agent
Posts : 10588 Member Since : 2011-03-14
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Wed Oct 31, 2012 2:05 am | |
| - Control wrote:
- Spoiler:
So the gunbarrel is also a version of Arnold's "The Name's Bond... James Bond"?
- Spoiler:
It's a re-recording I believe, but it's the only direct quote. "Breadcrumbs" is more of a rearrangement.
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| | | bondfan06 'R'
Posts : 339 Member Since : 2011-03-14
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Wed Oct 31, 2012 12:42 pm | |
| I really like "Severine" , "Breadcrumbs" , "Komodo Dragon" and "New Digs" and the soundtrack is much better than anything Arnold has produced. |
| | | dr. strangelove 'R'
Posts : 447 Member Since : 2011-03-19 Location : Chicago
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Tue Nov 06, 2012 1:21 am | |
| For those lucky ones who've already seen the film: How well is the Adele theme worked into the score? |
| | | Lazenby. Head of Station
Posts : 1274 Member Since : 2010-04-15 Location : 1969
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Tue Nov 06, 2012 1:29 am | |
| - dr. strangelove wrote:
- For those lucky ones who've already seen the film: How well is the Adele theme worked into the score?
The spoiler below doesn't give away any plot details, it just tells you how much the song is used and where: - Spoiler:
We get a grand and clear statement of it as Bond's boat heads to the Macao casino around half an hour or more into the film, but it barely turns up again after that (well, not noticeably to my ears anyway). But it's a much better example of the main theme song being used in the score than pretty much any of the times Arnold has worked a song into a Bond score. For that one minute or so, Newman makes it feel just like the good old days when the songs were used well in the scores.
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| | | Largo's Shark 00 Agent
Posts : 10588 Member Since : 2011-03-14
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Tue Nov 06, 2012 1:44 am | |
| Newman talks about scoring that scene in the following interview. - Quote :
- Interview with Thomas Newman
By Daniel Schweiger • November 5, 2012
As James Bond gun-barrels hell-bent into the 21st century with his 23rd film “Skyfall,” 007’s owners have continued to re-shape their iconic 50 year-old bread-and-Broccoli character into a spy who’s far more a part of a believable “Bourne” universe, as opposed the stylish wisecracker who duked it out with evil industrialists aboard super tankers and space stations. While that gallows humor is still very much part of Bond’s DNA, the character has achieved a real-world level of brute force and inner turmoil unheard of in his past incarnations. But even before the real world makeover that’s best been personified by Daniel Craig, 007’s music has strived to stay in tune with modern musical tastes. The soundtrack variations have included the positively relaxed jazz-action approach of John Barry, George Martin’s Afro-funk, the disco-style heroics of Marvin Hamlisch and Bill Conti, the appalling Euro beat of Eric Serra and most recently David Arnold’s electrifying mash up Barry’s now old-school orchestrations and his biggest fan’s rock-pop pulse.
Now James Bond’s music has taken on board perhaps its most interesting agent provocateur by giving Thomas Newman a license to score. A composer who’s somehow managed to walk the Hollywood line between indie experimentalism and studio conformity, Newman has never lost the alt. edge that’s made him the most musically progressive member of his family’s film scoring dynasty, especially with such breakout scores as “Desperately Seeking Susan,” “The Lost Boys” and “The Rapture.” Yet his father Alfred’s robustly melodic symphonic spirit has very much flowed through Thomas’ bloodline in scores to “Little Women,” “The Shawshank Redemption” and “The Good German.” But if there was one genre that Newman barely hit through the years, it’s been action, with recent scores for “The Assignment Bureau” and “The Debt” showing off the rhythmic possibilities he might give a balls-out car chase, a fight atop a train or a gun battle inside a government building.
Thanks to “Skyfall,” Thomas Newman gets to engage in all three, and many more action sequences, all with a particular debt to filmmaker Sam Mendes, whom the composer has worked before with scores like “American Beauty,” “The Road To Perdition” and “Jarhead.” The result of the confidence of a director who brings equally eccentric energy to his work has allowed Newman to engage in a crazy-quilt of his greatest hits for “Skyfall,” among them from the rock rhythms of “Erin Brockovich” the eerie orchestrations of “The Green Mile” and the lush romance of “Meet Joe Black,” with even “Finding Nemo’s” perky comedy thrown in for good measure. It’s a thoroughly engaging Newman mix tape, as uniquely heard for a Bond mission that starts big and ends relatively small. Even cooler yet, his “Skyfall” more than acknowledges the many of the composing styles that have come before, incorporating the famed theme, lush jazz swagger and Vic Flick guitar stylings in a way that will please both purists and Discman-wearing newcomers to the franchise. For a Bond that holds more surprises than most, Thomas Newman’s score is one of “Skyfall’s” most impressive, and wackiest weapons in a musical cannon that’s never been afraid to go for the shot.
In your wildest dreams did you ever imagine you’d be scoring a big action movie, let alone a James Bond picture?
I guess the answer to that would be ‘No.’ I don’t think I ever thought about it. Action scores speak with a muscularity and strength that had to be heard next to tire screeches and gunshots and things of that nature. So even though I enjoy action movies, it’s not like scoring an action movie was ever a thought of mine, especially because one’s personal voice was less likely to come out because of those kinds of requirements. I’d never really thought about doing a Bond movie until I heard that Sam Mendes was directing one. So I thought I’d be brave and give him a holler to say that I’d love to work on it with him if he would have me. But I also didn’t want to be pushy about it. And it turned out that Sam had already been thinking about calling me to see if we could make “Skyfall” happen together.
Did Sam have to fight to get you the gig, especially as you didn’t have a lot of action movies on your resume?
I don’t know. You’d have to ask him that. Barbara Broccoli and Michael Wilson loved working with David Arnold on the last several Bond scores, and wanted to make sure I was the right guy in their mind, and that they could get along with me. So they made sure to come to see me in Los Angeles before hiring me. I enjoyed meeting them, and that was about it.
The Broccoli family has a legendary level of control over the franchise. How much of that did you feel during the scoring process, or did Sam keep you separate from it?
Sam sheltered me up to the point of the recording sessions, which the Broccolis were present for. They were not shy to speak up. But in fairness to them and Sam, the communication was always through Sam in the recording environment.
Did it always go smoothly with the Broccolis?
I think it did go smoothly. They’re kind and good people. Obviously, they’re not going to stop until they get what they want, but they were never ferocious about it. They were always very respectful of me, even if they weren’t going to be shy about making sure I understood any issues they may have had.
What has James Bond meant to you, and what do you think the responsibilities are of scoring such an iconic franchise?
While I wasn’t a rabid fan of James Bond movies when growing up, I really loved watching them. Now there’s obviously a huge amount of expectation in terms of what a “James Bond score” is. Everybody has an opinion on Bond, and his music. But I really didn’t feel an obligation to meet up to these expectations. Or if I was going to defy them, I wanted to defy them in a way that was pleasing and compelling as opposed to making people feel that I was doing something different for it’s own sake.
As one of Hollywood’s more experimental composers, how “far out” did you think you could go with “Skyfall’s” score?
You have ideas, and you see if they fly. In the case of the action, there was so much going on sonically that I wondered how much space was left to hear the intricacy, and detail in the manner that I’ve scored films with before. So at the very least, I knew that sounds really needed to hit the subwoofers to really hit the audience physically. So I think I recognized that I’d have to be more extroverted with “Skyfall’s” score then maybe I’m used to being.
While the musical voice is most definitely your own in “Skyfall,” you can still hear the styles that such past composers as John Barry and David Arnold brought to Bond. Did you want to make a point of capturing those past styles?
It’s not like I set out to study the past Bond scores. I watched some of the movies, and had general notes and impressions about how the music was operating. But after that, I didn’t want to be too studious about it all. I thought that would be intimidating, and suppressing any ability I might have to be creative in my own right. But maybe butting up against those past scores kind of rubbed off on me a bit.
Yet the main theme in the film is essentially the classic James Bond melody.
I guess that’s appropriate, right? It’s a great, iconic and satisfying theme to so many people, especially the fans. I definitely wanted to use it. The issue was when and where, and Sam and I, with the help of Barbara Broccoli and Michael Wilson, talked about where we should evoke the Bond theme.
The Adele theme song is only reflected in the cue “Komodo Dragon.” Did you want to incorporate it anywhere else in the score?
Michael Wilson had asked where I was going to use the Adele song so that it didn’t appear as a kind of “one off” at the top of the movie. And the scene where he enters the Macau casino with his new, shaved appearance and tuxedo was a real moment of “Bond” swagger. The Adele tune has that quality to it too, so that seemed like a good place to reprieve the song.
Did you have any interaction with Adele or the writers of the song?
While I did not get to meet with Adele, I did with Paul Epworth, who was the co-writer and producer of the song, He really wanted to evoke the early Shirley Bassey arrangements with “Skyfall,” and talked to me about arranging the strings and brass to that effect But my task was already so huge and daunting that my orchestrator J.A.C. Redford, who’s a great composer in his own right, ended up doing the arrangements.
The film you scored before “Skyfall” was “The Iron Lady,” which dealt with Margaret Thatcher’s imperious rule of England’s government. Do you think there are any similarities between her and M?
That’s interesting. I guess there’s a certain stoic nature to English behavior, a kind of stiff upper lip. That was obvious in the case of Margaret Thatcher, and also in the case of M. Their music couldn’t be overly sentimental or emotional. And if they were being emotional, then the score had to allow for that without directly “speaking” for their feelings. I think that kind of character gives strength to the way I musically depicted them.
Javier Bardem’s Silva is my favorite character in the film, especially because he’s just might be the craziest Bond villain the series has had. Do you think your naturally offbeat music is particularly well suited to him?
You know, I never thought of it that way. There was so much quirkiness in Silva’s personal choice of music that it occurred to me that my sense of his character would be more wrapped up in his unfolding story.
You’ve got a lush approach for the femme fatale character of Severine.
That’s because I probably wanted to evoke as much of a John Barry’ish type of melody for her as I could find, which meant using a major-minor theme, something that had sexuality and danger as mixed with a certain level of satin loveliness.
I think you’re one of the few composers to write a comedy cue for James Bond with “Close Shave.”
That was a tough scene for Sam because we’re still figuring out what the Bond and his fellow agent Eve is. The scene’s dangerous, sexy and had a level of humor. I ended up doing many different versions of it because the cue kind of came late in late during our process. I’d spent some time on the podium refining a take on “Close Shave” that Sam was very high on. Or at least I thought he was until he rejected it a few minutes later!
What didn’t work about your first “Close Shave?”
I think my first approach, was a kind of classical in its sexiness, and Sam was wondering if the music was saying the wrong thing, or it was saying too much and tipped this kind of balance in what Bond and Eve’s relationship was.
Was the rest of the score relatively easy? Or were there a lot of changes like that?
There were tough moments and areas that needed to be re-examined, and in some cases re-written. But that’s no different then any other movie where something is accepted on a Monday and rejected on a Thursday.
What do Sam’s sensibilities as a director bring to “Skyfall?”
Sam’s great with character, obviously, and had a fundamental understanding of Bond. So I think it was a perfect storm of him really wanting to respect the character and the franchise while wanting to make the story more compelling, and more evolving.
How do you think that “English” quality rubs off on the score?
“Skyfall” is very much an English movie. I felt the same way when doing “The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel” in a way, which is for me to think, “What’s a yank doing on a movie like this?” I was over in London for three and a half months on “Skyfall,” did nearly all of the writing over there. It was a really different experience for me in many ways to have an office at Abbey Road studios, composing morning, noon and night, and then to have the score performed there. The musicians are so fantastic as well in England. There’s a real sense of ensemble on the way the orchestra plays. It’s a great town musically.
Were you ready for “Skyfall’s” rave reviews, some of which say that it’s the best Bond movie since “Goldfinger?”
I always thought it was a good movie. I really enjoyed it when I first saw it. In terms of reviews and people liking it it’s really a wonderful thing to happen at the end of this arduous process.
What kind of doors do you think that “Skyfall” is going to open up for you in terms of people who may have thought Thomas Newman couldn’t score an action film?
I don’t know. I try not to think on that level. What’s fun is to think I can take action films on and handle them, that I can be chameleonic in a way. It’s always a great thing to defy expectations. It’s been such a high point in my career to work with Sam on this film. He tends to bring good work out of me. But then, he kind of expects it and won’t stop until he gets it. So it hurts, but it always rewards, especially with “Skyfall.”
Do you think of “Skyfall” as your biggest score yet?
I never thought of it that way. What’s funny is how much visibility scoring a Bond film has. The Pixar movies I score like “Finding Nemo” and “Wall-E” become known when they’re completed, but typically not before they are completed. Me scoring “Skyfall” has become a much bigger deal then I would have thought. http://www.filmmusicmag.com/?p=10217 Although he doesn't say it outright here, the first half of Komodo Dragon was re-scored at Babs and Mickys request. The score originally didn't have any of the Adele theme in it, but that one scene was deemed the only suitable place for a full-on quote. |
| | | Harmsway Potential 00 Agent
Posts : 2801 Member Since : 2011-08-22
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Tue Nov 06, 2012 2:52 am | |
| Interesting interview, and interesting tidbit about "Komodo Dragon."
I'm happy that they urged him to include something of Adele's theme, though I'm curious what the original cue sounded like. |
| | | Largo's Shark 00 Agent
Posts : 10588 Member Since : 2011-03-14
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Tue Nov 06, 2012 11:49 pm | |
| I'm now fairly certain that Old Dog, New Tricks was originally for the shaving scene (the romantic, classical cue Newman talks about), and was replaced by Close Shave. |
| | | Guest Guest
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Tue Nov 06, 2012 11:55 pm | |
| Very interesting interview, Sharkus, thanks.
I'm glad EON forced Newman to quote Adele's track in his score. Skyfall's cohesiveness is partly what makes it so interesting. |
| | | Largo's Shark 00 Agent
Posts : 10588 Member Since : 2011-03-14
| Subject: Re: Thomas Newman will score SKYFALL Fri Nov 09, 2012 11:20 pm | |
| - Largo's Shark wrote:
- I'm now fairly certain that Old Dog, New Tricks was originally for the shaving scene (the romantic, classical cue Newman talks about), and was replaced by Close Shave.
Bumped for Tux. |
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