WAMG Takes A Look At Henry Jackman’s Score For JUMANJI: THE NEXT LEVEL And Talks With The Composer About His Approach To Combine Music And Film

https://www.facebook.com/henryjackmancomposer

Two-time BAFTA nominee Henry Jackman has won multiple American Society of Composers, Authors & Publishers (ASCAP) Awards for his work on top box office films like ‘Kingsman: The Secret Service,’ ‘Captain Phillips,’ ‘G.I. Joe: Retaliation,’ ‘Jack Reacher: Never Go Back,’ and ‘X-Men: First Class,’ as well as animated features such as ‘Monster vs. Aliens,’ ‘Puss in Boots,’ and ‘Wreck-It-Ralph’ for which he also won an Annie Award. His other diverse credits include ‘Captain America: Civil War,’ ‘Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle,’ ‘Kong: Skull Island,’ ‘Big Hero 6,’ ‘Ralph Breaks the Internet,’ and ‘Kingsman: The Golden Circle,’ also recently composing for ‘Pokemon Detective Pikachu’ and The Russo Brothers’ produced action crime-drama ’21 Bridges.’

In theaters now, Henry returns to the magical board game-turned-video game adventure world of ‘Jumanji: The Next Level’ and this summer, he is rejoining The Russo Brothers for their new drama feature ‘Cherry.’

Jumanji: The Next Level (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

In Jumanji: The Next Level, the gang is back but the game has changed. As they return to Jumanji to rescue one of their own, they discover that nothing is as they expect. The players will have to brave parts unknown and unexplored, from the arid deserts to the snowy mountains, in order to escape the world’s most dangerous game.

This past weekend ‘Jumanji: The Next Level’ brought in an astounding $60.1 million at the box office.

As the film debuted to audiences worldwide, Henry and I spoke over the phone about the sequel as well as his score for last summer’s ‘Predator’,  his thoughts on working on franchises and the holistic approach on the melding of film and music.

WAMG: We’ve had two previous conversations, one being your work on ‘Captain America: The Winter Soldier’ https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2014/04/wamgs-interview-composer-henry-jackman-captain-america-winter-soldier/ as well as ‘Captain America: Civil War‘ and now you’ve scored for both “Jumanji: Welcome To The Jungle’ and ‘Jumanji: The Next Level’. I found there to be a few similarities with the cues on this second musical adventure.

Henry Jackman: I don’t often work on two movies of the same franchise. I took the “Jumanji” DNA and came up with new themes. I had great fun with the combinations of crazy fun and a stealthy vibe, while re-conceptualizing for a new adventure.

WAMG: One of the tracks “A Fond Farewell” is a lovely final piece of music after the frantic pace of the rest of the movie. It’s an adagio, quiet theme.

HJ: Most of the movie is full of excitement, with complex action sequences, and I had to come up with this final cue that calmed it all down at the end and let the audience breathe. It’s great for a composer because it’s fun doing music for an action movie but its nice to able to do the quiet and touching pieces of music.

WAMG: I have to go back when we first spoke in 2014 where we discussed the score for 1987’s ‘Predator’ film and how we both loved Alan Silvestri’s score. Jump to 2018 and it’s Henry Jackman composing the score for ‘The Predator’. I was truly excited to see your name as composer and while watching Shane Black’s film, you could hear the original theme cleverly running throughout the new movie.

HJ: You couldn’t make that up. I had a strictly classical education and I saw the original movie when I was about 14 or 15 and I heard this really cool score that made my ears pick up. I’m not claiming the movie was Shakespeare but the music was really sophisticated and I thought I’m going to remember that name, Alan Silvestri. And then jump 20 something years ahead and I’m composing for “The Predator’.

I jumped into this franchise and tried to resurrect various them from Silvestri’s original score. Tonally the two movies were very different. The original had the very patriotic type of theme, which fits with that movie. ‘The Predator’ is very different and I was on the phone to the producers telling them, “Alan Silvestri is a hero of mine, I have this musical obsession with the original movie and I’m going to come up with new cues that have similar language and sound and harmony where I can start weaving in the music so that they can be heard on top of each other.”

A deadly Predator escapes from a secret government compound in Twentieth Century Fox’s THE PREDATOR. Photo Credit: Kimberley French.

WAMG: You score was so exciting because you really went out of your way to include the original theme for the fans of the 1987 movie. You found a way to cleverly pay tribute to Silvestri’s music. It was thrilling to hear your score in the cinema last summer.

HJ: Funny thing is, he’s a genius and so humble. When I finished it I really felt that I had done something to pay tribute to him and that it sounded cool, so I called him up and wanted him to listen to my music. We got into this conversation and I told him, not to sound like a fanboy, “Alan your score is so original and what so cool about it is that up until 1987, I can’t think of any other score that uses that kind of harmony.”  I asked him what made him use those themes because its brilliant.

He was so funny. He said, “Ohhhh ‘Predator’ – I didn’t know what I was doing! The only thing I remember is that I was floundering around, I didn’t think I was film composer or an arranger.” I said, “hold on a minute, you wrote ‘Back To The Future’ by then!” He said, “Yeah but that was the first and it was orchestral, with ‘Predator’ I really didn’t know what I was doing.” I was like WOW… if that what happens when you feel like you don’t know what you’re doing, then that’s some natural talent. It’s still so original.

WAMG: That’s a great story! But how do you go from a Predator movie to ‘Pokemon Detective Pikachu’ and ‘Ralph Breaks the Internet’? How do you shift composing gears from sci-fi to two animated features?

HJ: You have to be a bit of a shape-shifter. (laughs) I’m lucky enough to be able to compose for the different genres so it’s really a blessing instead of a curse. One of the great things about that is that I don’t compose for the same type of film year after year. I had to leave the Predator behind and wrap my head around ‘Detective Pikachu’. You have to leave the other film behind and muddle your way into the new characters. By the time you join a project you’re seeing a first cut of a movie – so you have to forget the previous film, forget it even existed. The funny thing is that sometimes you can go really quickly from one film to the next and it very noticeable. The first few cues of ‘Pickachu’ has a hangover from the orchestrations of ‘Predator’. I hadn’t quite taken off the ‘Predator’ clothes and you can hear it. It’s a natural process. Far from annoying it keeps everything interesting. After the ‘Jumanji’ movie I’ll be doing a movie with the Russo brothers called ‘Cherry’ which is wildly different.

WAMG: I also loved your score for ‘Kong: Skull Island’ and the recent ’21 Bridges’. That one was very edgy and intense.

HJ: I was on that one from the get go. ’21 Bridges’ was produced by the Russo brothers. I worked with Alex Belcher on that and we tried to go for an intimate theme, not a boring electronic one. We really enjoyed that one. https://open.spotify.com/album/0E5Q7isRCDwXmlZKAbVQfG

21 Bridges (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

WAMG: I was glad to see you working with the Russo Brothers again. Certain filmmakers tend to go with certain composers time and time again. Steven Spielberg and John Williams, James Cameron worked many times with the late James Horner. Do you find this to be true?

HJ: I think you’re right. When you’re a filmmaker you’re in a precarious, nerve-racking business to try and find the music. There is a bit of magic to it, but when you look at the history of filmmaking, the director and composer are music companions so it’s no surprise. Look at Cameron and Horner, their films together shows how the music is such a big part of the movies. Sometimes the score doesn’t work with a movie, so it’s no surprise that a director goes back to the same composer.

WAMG: How was the premiere for ‘Jumanji: The Next Level’ – you were on the red carpet?

HJ: Oddly enough it was a blue carpet (laughs). It was great fun. When you compose music you spend so much of your time locked away in a room like a hermit but you know ultimately it will help the movie that will be seen by many. It is a very hermetic experience so when you go to a premiere you get to see all these people, the production crew and the actors but it’s a good way to remind yourself that while you were locked away like a madman in a laboratory ultimately it’s a shared experience and everyone did a great job on the film.

Listen to Jackman’s ‘Jumanji: The Next Level’ on Apple Music HERE, Amazon HERE and on Spotify HERE.

THE PREDATOR Score From Henry Jackman Available September 23 On Digital Download And CD

Lakeshore Records has announced the release of THE PREDATOR – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack EP on Digital Download on September 14, 2018.  The full soundtrack will be available on September 23, 2018 on Digital Download and CD. The Album features original music by blockbuster Composer Henry Jackman (KONG: SKULL ISLAND, THE KINGSMAN).

From the black depths of outer space to the backwoods of southern Georgia, the Predators come to hunt in Shane Black’s explosive reinvention of the beloved series. Now, the universe’s most lethal hunters are stronger, smarter and deadlier than ever before. And only a ragtag crew of ex-soldiers and an evolutionary biology professor can prevent all humanity from becoming the Predators’ trophies.

“It was an honor to work on a film that had such rich thematic heritage,” said wonderful dynamic Composer Henry Jackman. “Alan Silvestri’s fantastic score from the original has always been a favorite of mine and when asked if I would like to be involved in this project I immediately said yes. Shane was an absolute pleasure to work with from beginning to end – I’m sure audiences will appreciate this addition to the Predator saga.”

Henry Jackman has established himself as one of today’s top composers by fusing his classical training and his experience as a successful record producer and creator of electronic music. His musical versatility ratcheted up the tension in Paul Greengrass’ CAPTAIN PHILLIPS (earning him a BAFTA nomination), super-powered such comic book hits as X-MEN: FIRST CLASS and CAPTAIN AMERICA: WINTER SOLDIER (INTERVIEW); kicked ass in KINGSMAN: THE GOLDEN CIRCLE and KICK-ASS; breathed life into legendary animated characters like WINNIE THE POOH, PUSS IN BOOTS, WRECK-IT RALPH, and Oscar-winner BIG HERO 6. His most recent work can be heard in the standalone Jumanji sequel, JUMANJI: WELCOME TO THE JUNGLE, Marvel’s blockbuster hit CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR, Naughty Dog’s latest installment in the Uncharted video game franchise, UNCHARTED: THE LOST LEGACY, and the adventure sequel from Warner Bros.’ KONG: SKULL ISLAND starring Brie Larson and Tom Hiddleston.

His other diverse credits include the animated features MONSTERS VS. ALIENS and TURBO, period drama HENRI 4, family adventureGULLIVER’S TRAVELS (starring Jack Black), crime thriller MAN ON A LEDGE, horror fantasy ABRAHAM LINCOLN: VAMPIRE HUNTER, and the Seth Rogen / James Franco comedies THIS IS THE END and (the firestorm sensation) THE INTERVIEW. Up next for Jackman is Walt Disney Animation’s adventure sequel RALPH BREAKS THE INTERNET, the biographical drama TRIAL BY FIRE DIRECTED by Edward Zwick,

Jackman grew up in the southeast of England, where he began composing his first symphony at the age of six. He studied classical music at Oxford and sang in the St. Paul’s Cathedral Choir—but simultaneously got involved in the underground rave scene and began producing popular electronica music and dance remixes, eventually working with artists such as Seal and The Art of Noise. In 2006 he caught the attention of film composers Hans Zimmer and John Powell, and began writing additional music for Zimmer and Powell on KUNG FU PANDA, and then for Zimmer on THE DARK KNIGHT, THE DA VINCI CODE, and THE PIRATES OF THE CARIBBEAN films, which rapidly led to scoring blockbuster films on his own.

20th CENTURY FOX presents THE PREDATOR in theaters on September 14, 2018 nationwide. Lakeshore Records pleased to announce the release of THE PREDATOR – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack EP on Digital Download on September 14, 2018.  The full soundtrack will be available on September 23, 2018.

Review here

Win Passes To The Advance Screening of MARVEL’S CAPTAIN AMERICA: CIVIL WAR in St. Louis

CivilWar-finalposter

© 2016 MARVEL

Marvel-logo

AND

wamg_logo

INVITE YOU TO ATTEND
THE ST. LOUIS 3D ADVANCE SCREENING OF

Image converted using ifftoany

For your chance to win 2 admit-one passes, email marvelpromosstlouis@gmail.com with your full name, mailing address, and phone number.

Screening is on Tuesday, May 3rd at 7:o0 PM.

Please include “WAMG” in the subject line for your entry to be valid. Entry deadline is Wednesday, April 27th at 10:00AM.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. LIMIT TWO (2) ADMIT-ONE PASSES PER PERSON. THIS FILM IS RATED PG-13. MUST BE 13 YEARS OF AGE TO RECEIVE PASSES. EMPLOYEES OF ALL PROMOTIONAL PARTNERS AND THEIR AGENCIES ARE NOT ELIGIBLE. VOID WHERE PROHIBITED.

ENTRIES MUST BE RECEIVED BY WEDNESDAY, APRIL 27, 2016 AT 10:00AM TO BE ELIGIBLE TO RECEIVE PASSES. WINNERS WILL BE CONTACTED VIA E-MAIL TO RECEIVE THEIR PASSES. SPONSORS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR INCOMPLETE, LOST, LATE OR MISDIRECTED ENTRIES OR FOR FAILURE TO RECEIVE ENTRIES DUE TO TRANSMISSION OR TECHNICAL FAILURES OF ANY KIND. SEATING IS LIMITED, SO ARRIVE EARLY. PASS DOES NOT GUARANTEE A SEAT AT THE SCREENING.

L to R: Falcon/Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie), Ant-Man/Scott Lang (Paul Rudd), Hawkeye/Clint Barton (Jeremy Renner), Captain America/Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), Scarlet Witch/Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen), and Winter Soldier/Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan) © Marvel 2016
L to R: Falcon/Sam Wilson (Anthony Mackie), Ant-Man/Scott Lang (Paul Rudd), Hawkeye/Clint Barton (Jeremy Renner), Captain America/Steve Rogers (Chris Evans), Scarlet Witch/Wanda Maximoff (Elizabeth Olsen), and Winter Soldier/Bucky Barnes (Sebastian Stan) © Marvel 2016

Marvel’s “Captain America: Civil War” finds Steve Rogers leading the newly formed team of Avengers in their continued efforts to safeguard humanity. But after another incident involving the Avengers results in collateral damage, political pressure mounts to install a system of accountability, headed by a governing body to oversee and direct the team. The new status quo fractures the Avengers, resulting in two camps—one led by Steve Rogers and his desire for the Avengers to remain free to defend humanity without government interference, and the other following Tony Stark’s surprising decision to support government oversight and accountability.

Marvel’s “Captain America: Civil War” stars Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Sebastian Stan, Anthony Mackie, Don Cheadle, Jeremy Renner, Chadwick Boseman, Paul Bettany, Elizabeth Olsen, Paul Rudd, Emily VanCamp, Marisa Tomei, Tom Holland, Frank Grillo and Martin Freeman, with William Hurt and Daniel Brühl. Anthony & Joe Russo are directing with Kevin Feige, p.g.a. producing. Louis D’Esposito, Victoria Alonso, Patricia Whitcher, Nate Moore and Stan Lee are the executive producers. The screenplay is by Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely. The score is by composer Henry Jackman.

Get ready to pick a side and join the nonstop action playing out on two fronts when Marvel’s “Captain America: Civil War” opens in U.S. theaters on May 6, 2016.

Visit the official site: www.Marvel.com/CaptainAmerica
Like on Facebook: www.facebook.com/CaptainAmerica/
Follow on Twitter: twitter.com/CaptainAmerica

null

Interview – WAMG Talks To KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE Composer Matthew Margeson

kingsman-the-secret-service-KSS_JB_D11_01354_rgb

If there’s one film you need to see this weekend, it’s KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE. It’s funny, it’s fast-paced and it’s one insane, entertaining experience. Catch this one in the theater and with a crowd!

Based upon the acclaimed comic book and directed by Matthew Vaughn (Kick Ass, X-Men First Class), KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE tells the story of a super-secret spy organization that recruits an unrefined but promising street kid into the agency’s ultra-competitive training program just as a global threat emerges from a twisted tech genius.

Composers Henry Jackman (CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER) and Matthew Margeson score the spy action adventure comedy. This is the second collaboration between Jackman and Margeson, who had worked previously on KICK ASS 2. The duo supplied the soundtrack for the star-studded KINGSMAN with Oscar winners Colin Firth and Michael Caine, Oscar nominee Samuel L. Jackson, and newcomer Taron Egerton. The film also features Sophie Cookson, Mark Strong, and Mark Hamill.

kingsman-the-secret-service-KSS_JB_D15_01597_rgb

Matthew Margeson is part of Hans Zimmer’s exclusive Remote Control team, and is known for his powerful arrangements and his ability to make audiences fall in love with the music instead of the movie. Margeson composed Position Music Orchestral Series Volume 5, and has provided additional music to the scores of KICK ASS, THE EXPENDABLES, and X-MEN: FIRST CLASS.

Matthew Margeson’s additional music is also featured in video games such as Monsters vs. Aliens, Lego Universe, Socom U.S. Navy Seals: Combined Assault.

Jackman and Margeson’s score for KINGSMAN delivers nail biting action sequences while emphasizing the heart of the film which lie in the relationship between Firth and Egerton.

Listen to a few tracks HERE.

During my recent phone conversation with Mr. Margeson, we discussed the importance of music in all of Matthew Vaughn’s films, how to “Vaughnesize” a movie, the use of Lynyrd Skynyrd’s “Free Bird” during one memorable scene, as well as his work on the upcoming SCOUTS vs. ZOMBIES.

WAMG: The film is quite a ride. Your score is a nod and wink to spy movies.

Matthew Margeson: We wanted to make it our own thing, but we definitely needed to remind ourselves it is a spy genre film.

WAMG: You’ve collaborated on KICK-ASS 2 with Henry Jackman and now on the KINGSMAN. How did the two of you get involved in Matthew Vaughn’s film?

MM: It goes back quite a few years. There were four composers on the first KICK-ASS – Marius De Vries, John Murphy, Ilan Eshkeri and Henry Jackman. There are a couple of cues where Henry was brought in, for whatever reason, and there were four of them on the project.

I think one of Matthew Vaughn’s producers went to school with Henry, so that was the initial introduction. On KICK-ASS, one of the cues on the score at the end, in the fight between Hit-Girl and Frank, Matthew was still a little unhappy with this cue. All the other composers were recording with the orchestra – they were past writing and were all on the stage recording for a week straight. There was a big question mark – how are we going to get this cue right? Henry was trusting enough to say to Matthew Vaughn, “I’ve got this friend I’ve worked with back in Los Angeles, we should give him some direction over the phone and see if we can whip something up in the next 24 hours.”

I got this phone call at eight, nine p.m. and Henry says, “listen, we’ve got a bit of an emergency and we need to rework this fight cue and send a pass back to Matthew in a day.” I did this piece and Matthew reacted really well to it. Henry worked with him throughout the film and that was my first introduction to working with Matthew Vaughn, even though it was in an indirect way.

When it came time to do a sequel to that movie, he really enjoyed what Henry did and his contribution to the pie, so he called Henry to do the score. Henry was on a couple of different projects at the same time and really wanted to do it. He said he couldn’t prepare to write an hour and twenty minutes worth of music for this score by himself, but suggested co-composers on the film with the young lad who wrote the “Frank fight” on the first KICK-ASS and Matthew took a little bit of a leap of faith. It let me take a big part of the responsibility off of Henry’s plate and we put our heads together and got it done together, while splitting the workload.

WAMG: From what you’re describing, it sounds like Matthew Vaughn really takes a vested interest in the scores for his films.

MM: He’s more involved than any other filmmaker I’ve worked with. The other extreme being someone who shoots the film and edits it, and hands it over to you and says, “here, do your thing.” What I love about working with Matthew is he’s invested in the whole entire process in post. He’ll be sitting there with the editor for days and days. We’re in Los Angeles and he’s in London, where we’ll skype or face chat, and we’ll have these daily meetings with him and he’s very clear in steering us on what he wants.

He really likes to be involved with the music. When we go to the final mix for his films, a lot of the times if you’re doing action or chase cues, with massive explosions and bullets flying across the screen, I know music is not going to win that fight. We take that into consideration. But on a Matthew Vaughn movie, when I say there’s a huge explosion there and I’m not going to win, he’ll be the first to say, “I’m in charge of what’s going to win and make the music louder.” We never have a problem with not being able to hear any of the music in a Vaughn film. An awesome position for us to be in.

kingsman-the-secret-service-KSS_JB_D24_02451_rgb

WAMG: It’s a dark film. It’s a funny film. The soundtrack is very over-the-top, while being a fairly traditional score.

MM: Yes! I hate to use this cliché, but that’s part of the wink in the score and something Matthew wanted us to keep in mind the whole time we were writing. No matter what’s up on the screen, you should always be having fun. Part of the way we accomplished in this one are those moments that are so over-the-top, that you’re laughing with them. You are feeling for those characters, but at the same time it is a comic-book film. You’re always enjoying yourself and you can’t put the popcorn in your mouth fast enough, because you’re trying to keep up with the pace of the film.

WAMG: There are some great percussion cues throughout, especially in the “explosive heads” scenes.

MM: We experimented with a lot of different cues over that scene and we found what really worked was re-recording “Pomp and Circumstance.” We needed to “Vaughnesize” it and basically took Elgar’s orchestration and added some extra percussion, some extra guitars and gave it a slightly contemporary, bit more edgy theme for this world. It was an opportunity to work with the visual because everything is synced up with the explosions, so we were able to get involved with the visual effects department. We were able to tweak little things here and there to make it become a set piece. It was definitely a lot of fun.

WAMG: Who chose the songs that show up throughout, such as “Free Bird” and “Money for Nothing”?

MM: The music supervisor usually goes through a whole catalogue of songs to see what fits. I usually get involved to see if there’s an underscore cue that goes into the song or for technical consideration to make sure what key it’s in and tempo – that kind of thing. Because MARV films, the production company, in one of the five majors, Matthew will sit there and throw different things up there.

With “Free Bird,” that was one of those things that was placed in there very early on and it stuck. We tried different arrangements of “Free Bird” and since it’s set in a Baptist church in the middle of the U.S., we tried a blue-grass version. Ultimately it was just getting the multi-track from the original and doing our own deconstruction of it, because that scene is quite long.

Even though I wasn’t involved with picking “Free Bird,” I was eventually given the film because if you remember, at the very end, it breaks down to almost a piano/choir version of it when Harry is coming out of his trance and that was one instance where I did have to get involved to write with the song, so I guess I can now say that I’ve worked with Lynyrd Skynyrd. (laughs)

WAMG: The use of vocals and choir really add to the score.

MM: We had to pick and choose our moments for that because once you use a choir, there’s immediately an epicness about it. And there are moments for that in this film.

WAMG: Samuel L. Jackson’s bad guy, Valentine, has a unique sound and theme. How did that come about?

MM: As far as thematic material, his vibe was one of the most difficult times we had to really nail down. We had a tune for him that we wrote very early on, but we had to rewrite it a few times to crack the encasement of it and how it’s presented. Valentine is basically a little boy, a cartoon character – his hat is sideways and he’s funky dressed. Henry and I felt we had to play against that and make his music extremely serious – almost Wagnerian.

Although Matthew liked the tune, he felt we weren’t having enough fun. He said, “he’s a tech mogul with plans of taking over the world.” Playing out his evil scheme is with his cell phones, so Henry and I started thinking about telephones. What are some of the components we think of? Back in the 80’s and before, when you would call someone, and you couldn’t get on touch with them, you’d get a busy signal. We tried to recreate that – recorded some dial tones and busy signals and putting them through the effects chamber. Slowing them down and playing them backwards. Just doing all sorts of experiments with them in the lab here and eventually we came up with this weird, twisted reverse tone.

WAMG: It’s very effective – it really works.

MM: Thank you very much. I can proudly say it hasn’t been done before and we managed to come up with one kind of sound that you’ve never heard before in a film. It was a way to remind the viewer that Valentine is from that kind of world of cell phones and tech and how we can sprinkle that throughout the score, especially in his areas.

WAMG: After you hear it a few times, you realize it’s done on purpose.

MM: You kind of latch onto it after a while.

kingsman-the-secret-service-KSS_JB_D59_05292_R_rgb

WAMG: How did you originally get into music? Were you the typical “band kid” at school?

MM: Yes. I started playing the piano really young. I did the whole band thing in school and at a certain point did a lot of musical theater. I was in the pit band and directing small orchestras for regional theater, and then ironically, I was working at a small video rental store in my hometown, so I was able to sit there all day and watch films. I noticed there was music throughout these movies and somebody has to be doing it. The John Williams and Alan Silvestri scores really stick with you when you’re that age while you’re watching Indiana Jones and Back to the Future. I think all those random thought processes, and being involved in directing musical theater, led me to drive out to LA and to see how I could get involved in film music.

WAMG: This must have helped with your work on INTO THE WOODS.

MM: It was such a fulfilling job to be part of INTO THE WOODS. I’m such a huge Sondheim fan and being from that world many years ago, it was really nice to get the opportunity to dive into some of those scores and to work with Rob Marshall who’s on the top of that game as far as musical theater and those movies go. It was a real treat to work on that film.

WAMG: Is there a KINGSMAN 2 in the works?

MM: I would love to tell you that I have some inside information – I know we’ve always joked about it, but a lot of it depends on how the film does. If Matthew is up for it and wants to do another one, I think we would. It’s a lot of fun and we’ve gotten a lot of good buzz from the screenings.

kingsman-the-secret-service-KSS_JB_D01_00117_rgb

WAMG: How’s your upcoming project, SCOUTS vs. ZOMBIES, which I can’t wait for, coming along? (Stars Tye Sheridan and Logan Miller – slated to open October 30, 2015)

MM: When I first got involved with it, I was a little skeptical and when I sat down to watch the film I said, what do I need to do to work on this project! It is absolutely hysterical and absolutely scary at the same time.

I can promise you, it’s got some really great laughs and some awesome creepy moments too and you have Boy Scouts and Zombies, so it’s a good recipe.

WAMG: I was glad to see the movie is being released at the end of October now.

MM: After many meetings, they decided they had great success in releasing this kind of movie at Halloween. It’s a good time of year for that film and after everyone Trick-or-Treats, they’re going to want something to do.

I’m pretty sure there will be an R rating, so it does have some good action and some good chases, while at the same time, again like KINGSMAN, you’re laughing with the film. It’s a hoot.

WAMG: Is the score done, have you started recording it?

MM: Today I’m starting the last cue of the film that I need to write and get approved. We’re on the very tail end of it and we’re recording with the orchestra at the beginning of March. Some of it has been shipped off to orchestration, getting it on paper and we’ll be recording in two or three weeks.

WAMG: Thanks to Matthew Margeson for taking the time to talk to us.

mm scoring session

The KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE soundtrack will be released on La La Land Records, February 17, 2015.

Order it here: http://www.lalalandrecords.com/Site/Kingsman.html

Order it on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Kingsman-Service-Original-Picture-Soundtrack/dp/B00T76W2ZY/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1423772330&sr=8-2&keywords=kingsman+soundtrack

The movie opens in cinemas Friday, February 13, 2015.

Read Jim Batts’ review here.

10955797_10153161396308755_7170285665565913012_o

Henry Jackman and Matthew Margeson Providing Score For Matthew Vaughn’s KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE

kingsman-the-secret-service-KSS-012_rgb

Henry Jackman and Matthew Margeson score KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE, from 20th Century Fox, a spy action adventure comedy directed by Matthew Vaughn, which debuts in theaters February 13, 2015.

This is the second collaboration between Jackman and Margeson, who had worked previously on Jeff Wadlow’s KICK ASS 2.

The duo have taken on the star-studded Kingsman with Oscar winners Colin Firth and Michael Caine, Oscar nominee Samuel L. Jackson, and newcomer Taron Egerton. Based on a comic book by Mark Millar, the story follows a veteran secret agent (Firth) who takes a young protégé (Egerton) under his wing.

The score album will be released on La La Land Records, February 17, 2015.

Jackman and Margeson’s score for Kingsman delivers nail biting action sequences while emphasizing the heart of the film which lie in the relationship between Firth and Egerton. The deep brass notes exemplify the grandeur of the secret society and the score boasts melodic strings to bring the intensity of the scenes to life.

Matthew Margeson is part of Hans Zimmer’s exclusive Remote Control team, and is known for his powerful arrangements and his ability to make audiences fall in love with the music instead of the movie. Margeson composed Position Music Orchestral Series Volume 5, and has recently provided additional music to the scores of Kick Ass, The Expendables, and X-Men: First Class. He also ventured into television contributing additional music to the scores ofTransformers: Prime, and Pushing Daisies. Furthermore, Matthew Margeson’s additional music is also featured in video games such as Monsters vs. Aliens, Lego Universe, Socom U.S. Navy Seals: Combined Assault.

Margeson’s upcoming project, Scouts vs. Zombies starring Tye Sheridan and Logan Miller is slated to open October 30, 2015.

In just over five years, Henry Jackman has established himself as a highly successful and prolific film composer. He has scored three Oscar nominated films (Big Hero 6, Captain Phillips, and Wreck-It Ralph) and has composed numerous box-office hits. His accolades include an Annie Award for his score for Wreck-It Ralph, many ASCAP Film and TV Music Awards, and a World Soundtrack Award. At an early age, Jackman developed a deep love for music. After years of classical training at St. Paul’s Cathedral Choir School, Eton College and Oxford University, he moved to Soho and immersed himself in the underground rave and electronica scene. Jackman’s eclectic background allows him to produce unique and captivating symphonies, which was admired by Hans Zimmer. Jackman joined Zimmer’s team at Remote Control Studios and has since formed his own Sacred Tiger Productions.

In addition to Kingsman: The Secret Service, Jackman scored Evan Goldberg and Seth Rogen’s most recent controversial comedy, The Interview.

Jackman’s upcoming projects include Clifford the Big Red Dog and Captain America 3.

(From left) Taron Egerton, Colin Firth, director Matthew Vaughn, Samuel L. Jackson and Sofia Boutella review a scene on the set of KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE.
(From left) Taron Egerton, Colin Firth, director Matthew Vaughn, Samuel L. Jackson and Sofia Boutella review a scene on the set of KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE.

KINGSMAN: THE SECRET SERVICE hits theaters FEBRUARY 13, 2015

http://www.kingsmanmovie.com/

Top 15 Scores/Soundtracks of 2014

POTA
Jerry Goldsmith, PLANET OF THE APES (1968) Nominee for Best Original Score for a Motion Picture

By Michelle McCue and Melissa Thompson

As 2014 comes to a close, we take a look back at some of the best movie music from this past year. The backbone of any movie, audiences heard rocket engines roar, traveled through LEGO worlds and made spiritual connections all thanks to the musical vision of the composer.

In a mix that was soulful, haunting and fun, this year’s soundtracks covered a range of emotions, from light to dark, to atmospheric and assaultive.

Our Top 15 scores wouldn’t be complete without an honorable mention…

Michael Giacchino – DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES

The story about the birth of a civilization and “restart” for the planet Earth was no more prevalent than with the emotional reality of composer Michael Giacchino’s score. Director Matt Reeves’ sequel to 2011’s Rise of the Planet of the Apes found its musical language through the empathetic sounds of the apes in the environment Caesar has created for them.

1. Hans Zimmer – INTERSTELLAR

Making his fifth collaboration with filmmaker Christopher Nolan, composer Hans Zimmer steered clear of any musical expressions he’d explored in the past with the director, and invented a whole new palette for the film with the earthy yet elevating notes of an organ.

We went for a spectacular adventure on a journey into the universe and Zimmer’s score gave humanity’s mission to the stars a very primeval quality.

2. Alexandre Desplat – THE IMITATION GAME, GODZILLA and THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL

Three of the best scores this year, six-time Academy Award Nominee Alexandre Desplat’s music was heard by audiences throughout 2014.

Desplat developed one of his most unusual scores for THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL – one played entirely without traditional orchestral instruments. Instead, he brought in a host of Central European instruments, including balalaikas and the cimbalom, a type of hammered dulcimer common to Eastern European gypsy music.

With THE IMITATION GAME, the composer took us to the Bletchley Park codebreaking centre and inside the Enigma machine. Desplat may see his first Oscar win with his beautiful score to the Alan Turing biopic.

Listen on SoundCloud HERE.

Lastly with the great force of GODZILLA propelling the action and keeping the tension high, Desplat made a big sonic impact with the music. “I’ve never done a monster movie before, so coming to this with more than a hundred musicians—double brass, double horns—allowed me to open the frame of my imagination to another territory, and that’s very exciting.”

3. Jóhann Jóhannsson – THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING

Filled with a charming score, composer Jóhann Jóhannsson’s music for director James Marsh’s THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING was a mix of orchestral instruments and synthesized sounds giving the story of astrophysicist Stephen Hawking and Jane Wilde an ethereal, lovely sound.

Read our interview with Jóhannsson HERE.

4. Atticus Ross & Trent Reznor – GONE GIRL

David Fincher returned again to work with Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross (THE SOCIAL NETWORK, THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO) for the surging undertow to GONE GIRL.

Trent Reznor said, “In terms of the palette of sounds what’s unique on this one is that we used a more organic, less synthetic soundscape. We didn’t want it to feel too slick so we used a lot of interesting homemade equipment. There are moments where the rhythm is just me tapping on a wooden box so it feels repetitive but drifts around a bit like a human heartbeat.”

5. Antonio Sánchez – BIRDMAN or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance

Drums, cymbals, sticks, mallets and rods were used for the percussion heavy score in director Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s BIRDMAN or The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance. Four-time Grammy Award winner and composer Antonio Sanchez effectively sets the pace and rhythm to convey Riggan Thomson’s (Michael Keaton) tonal tightrope between comedy and pathos, illusion and reality.

Read our interview with Sánchez HERE.

6. John Powell – HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2

Composer John Powell’s fantastic soundtrack on HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON 2 was filled with emotional triumphant orchestral pieces and a resounding chorus making it one of our favorites scores of the year.

Read our interview with Powell HERE.

Listen on SoundCloud HERE.

7. Henry Jackman – BIG HERO 6, THE INTERVIEW and CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER

Jackman had three big scores in 2014.

He composed a grandiose action score for North Korea’s favorite film – THE INTERVIEW. While building on his previous collaboration with Evan Golderberg and Seth Rogen on THIS IS THE END, Jackman scored the film as if it were a classic action-blockbuster to ground the film’s comedic moments. Jackman also created a score that celebrated the comic-book style action of BIG HERO 6, while weaving in the original music from American rock band Fall Out Boy.

But none was more epic than Jackman’s contemporary take on his superhero score for CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER. Up next for Jackman is Kingsman: Secret Service and Marvel’s Captain America: Civil War.

Read our interview with Jackman HERE.

8. Steven Price – FURY

Just as Price did on his Oscar-winning score for GRAVITY, where the sounds of radio waves were incorporated into the score, the British composer was able to find a distinctive voice for the music of FURY by using unusual and unconventional instruments in a fusion with the orchestral, choral and solo writing featured throughout. The daunting sounds put the audience inside the WWII tanks alongside Brad Pitt and his crew.

Read our interview with Price HERE.

9. Marco Beltrami – THE HOMESMAN

Marco Beltrami’ s created a rustic sounding landscape in director Tommy Lee Jones’ THE HOMESMAN. Alongside his work on SNOWPIERCER, THE GIVER and THE NOVEMBER MAN in 2014, the Oscar-nominated composer’s score for THE HOMESMAN evoked the desolation of the homesteaders by drawing out the essence of the wind with an innovative wind piano that contained 175 feet long wires.

Read our interview with Beltrami HERE.

10. James Newton Howard – MALEFICENT and THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY – PART 1

The sweeping emotions and volatile moods of THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY – PART 1 and MALEFICENT are evoked not only in the performances and visual designs but in the music, which once again is driven by an original orchestral score from eight time Oscar nominee James Newton Howard. The music for both films cover the whole breadth of experience from scenes of epic action to moments of epic heartache and intimate poignancy.

Howard also composed the score for Dan Gilroy’s NIGHTCRAWLER and Edward Zwick’s PAWN SACRIFICE.

11. Hanan Townshend – THE BETTER ANGELS

Directed by A.J. Edwards, executive produced by Terrence Malick with a beautiful score by Hanan Townshend (TO THE WONDER), THE BETTER ANGELS music took a poetic approach to Abraham Lincoln’s childhood in the harsh wilderness of Indiana.

12. EDGE OF TOMORROW – Christophe Beck

The composer created a score that captured the suspense, the action and the fun of Cage (Tom Cruise) and Rita’s (Emily Blunt) extraordinary journey in director Doug Liman’s awesome EDGE OF TOMORROW.

Read our interview with Beck HERE.

13. GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY – Tyler Bates

Combining a rich orchestral score with familiar rock tunes, composer Tyler Bates’ score for director James Gunn’s GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY was one of the most popular of the year.

The soundtrack featured classic 1970s songs like Blue Swede’s “Hooked on a Feeling,” “I’m Not in Love” by 10cc, Redbone’s “Come and Get Your Love,” and The Runaways’ “Cherry Bomb.”

Bates also composed the score for the heart-pounding revenge thriller JOHN WICK starring Keanu Reeves.

Read our interview with Bates HERE.

14. A MOST VIOLENT YEAR – Alex Ebert

Another beautiful score from composer Alex Ebert (ALL IS LOST), the haunting music for director J.C. Chandor’s A MOST VIOLENT YEAR transported audiences into the treacherous yet stunning landscape of NYC, 1981. Ebert’s score uses piano, synth, and percussion to capture the tension and emotional pressure faced by Oscar Isaac’s Abel Morales, as he fights to protect his business and family.

Displaying his versatility, Ebert also recently composed the score for Disney’s animated short FEAST, which is currently being shown in theaters prior to BIG HERO 6.

A Most Violent Year (Original Music From and Inspired By) by Alex Ebert by Nyc1981 on Mixcloud

15. THE LEGO MOVIE – Mark Mothersbaugh

Brick by Brick, composer Mark Mothersbaugh’s fun score for THE LEGO MOVIE

Filmgoers went along for the hilarious ride with Emmet, Wyldstyle, Vitruvius, Lord Business, Unikitty, Batman, Benny the Spaceman and Bad Cop/Good Cop and it truly was the most AWESOME time at a movie theater this year!

Read our interview with Mothersbaugh HERE.

Listen as The Hollywood Reporter discusses with Marco Beltrami (The Homesman), Danny Elfman (Big Eyes), John Powell (How To Train Your Dragon 2), Trent Reznor (Gone Girl) and Hans Zimmer (Interstellar) the process behind scoring the top films of the year.

Henry Jackman Creates An Epic Action Score for THE INTERVIEW

INTR_DgtMrkt_Prod_1SHT

Award-winning composer Henry Jackman delivers an epic score to North Korea’s favorite comedy THE INTERVIEW, directed by Evan Goldberg and Seth Rogen.

Jackman’s score is ironically-serious and over-the-top, qualities the directors enjoyed from the score for their previous film, THIS IS THE END.

In THE INTERVIEW, journalists Dave Skylark (James Franco) and Aaron Rapoport (Seth Rogen) land an interview with North Korea’s dictator, Kim Jong Un, for their popular tabloid-TV show. As the duo prepare for their journey, the CIA enlists them to carry out an incredible mission: Assassinate Kim Jong Un.

This film marks the second collaboration between Jackman and the film’s directors Goldberg and Rogen, previously scoring their apocalypse comedy THIS IS THE END.

THE INTERVIEW opens in theaters on December 25th. The soundtrack will be released on January 13th 2015 by La-La Land Records.

Jackman began his solo career in 2009, and in just five years, he has established himself as a dynamic and prolific film composer.

His music is featured in films in all genres, scoring animated films (Big Hero 6, Wreck-It Ralph), action-adventures (Captain America: The Winter Soldier, X-Men: First Class, Kick-Ass 1&2), comedies (This is the End) and dramas (Captain Phillips).

Read our interview with him HERE.

Henry Jackman began composing music from age six and after studying classical music at St. Paul’s Cathedral Choir School, Eton College, and Oxford University, he immersed himself in the underground rave and electronica scene. Jackman’s broad music sensibilities is evident when creating music, and his ability to invent compelling scores as well as co-write and produce songs caught the attention of acclaimed film composer Hans Zimmer. Under Zimmer’s wing, Jackman contributed additional music on films such as The Dark Knight and the Pirates of the Caribbean films before developing his solo composing career.

Jackman’s upcoming projects include the British action-spy film Kingsman: The Secret Service, in theaters February 13, 2015, and the third installment of the Marvel’s Captain America: Civil War.

jackman-controlboard-6-10-13

Henry Jackman’s BIG HERO 6 Soundtrack Available November 4 – Listen To Fall Out Boy “Immortals” Song

Walt Disney Records Big Hero 6

The BIG HERO 6 original motion picture soundtrack will be available at digital retail on November 4 and on CD November 24 and features an original song, “Immortals” from Fall Out Boy.

The soundtrack includes score from Henry Jackman (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier,” “Captain Phillips” and “Wreck-It-Ralph”).  Pre-order for the album begins today.

Fall Out Boy was tapped to write and perform the song for the film’s sequence in which the “Big Hero 6” team is transformed from a group of super smart individuals to a band of high-tech heroes. “The idea of this kid stepping up on behalf of his brother is what inspired the song’s title ‘Immortals,'” says Patrick Stump. “Your victories aren’t exclusively yours, so the fact that all of these people are coming together to help him get to the finish line is really exciting.”

“They’re testing out their new super suits for the first time in the scene,” says Pete Wentz. “Some of it works—some of it doesn’t. You get the sense that they’re stepping into a bigger role. The story’s in the DNA of Fall Out Boy. It is an authentic story and it’s who our band is—we’ve always identified with the underdog.”

Jackman used a 77-piece orchestra and created a score that celebrates the comic-book style action of “Big Hero 6,” the embracing of technology and, of course, the special relationships that are forming. “It’s very important to me in a score like this when there’s a lot of emotional content, as well as heroism and jeopardy and the rest, to allow the musicians to play together. If you can put everyone in a room together, it’s great. They bounce off each other. Music is really the emotion of the movie, beautifully stitching the scenes together,” says director Don Hall. “We wanted a score that was melodic with prominent themes, while pushing technical boundaries with electronica music, too. Henry Jackman was able to weave it all together brilliantly.”

BIG HERO 6

From Walt Disney Animation Studios, the team behind “Frozen” and “Wreck-It-Ralph,” comes “Big Hero 6,” an action-packed comedy-adventure about the special bond that develops between Baymax (voice of Scott Adsit), a plus-sized inflatable robot, and prodigy Hiro Hamada (voice of Ryan Potter). When a devastating event befalls the city of San Fransokyo and catapults Hiro into the midst of danger, he turns to Baymax and his close friends adrenaline junkie Go Go Tomago (voice of Jamie Chung), neatnik Wasabi (voice ofDamon Wayans Jr.), chemistry whiz Honey Lemon (voice of Genesis Rodriguez) and fanboy Fred (voice of T.J. Miller). Determined to uncover the mystery, Hiro transforms his friends into a band of high-tech heroes called “Big Hero 6.” Inspired by the Marvel comics of the same name, and featuring breathtaking action with all the heart and humor audiences expect from Walt Disney Animation Studios, “Big Hero 6” is directed by Don Hall (“Winnie the Pooh”) and Chris Williams (“Bolt”), and produced by Roy Conli (“Tangled”). The film hits theaters in 3D on Nov. 7, 2014.

The BIG HERO 6 soundtrack is set for release at digital retail Nov. 4 and on CD Nov. 24, 2014 and is available for pre-order beginning today.   A special bundle featuring a Baymax 7″ vinyl single, the soundtrack CD and poster is now available for pre-order at Disney Music Emporium: http://smarturl.it/bhsva1.

Watch the video here: http://vevo.ly/5n6uep.

Wide Download Link: http://smarturl.it/bhss1
Amazon Music Smart Link: http://smarturl.it/bhsams1
Wide Streaming Partners Link: http://smarturl.it/bhssts1

For more information on Walt Disney Records’ releases, like on Facebook.com/ disneymusic or follow at Twitter.com/disneymusic.  To purchase Disney music, visit the online store at www.disneymusicstore.com.

For more information on Big Hero 6, check out www.Disney.com/BigHero6, like on Facebook www.facebook.com/DisneyBigHero6, and follow on Twitter: www.twitter.com/DisneyAnimation.

BIG HERO 6

Interview – WAMG Talks To CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER Composer Henry Jackman

jackman-controlboard-6-10-13

Marvel’s CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER has had a second stellar weekend at the box office.

That makes it two worldwide weekends in a row at over $100 million and nearly half a billion to date as it continues to draw audiences internationally and in North America. With the success of directors Joe and Anthony Russo’s sequel , Marvel/Disney have officially announced CAPTAIN AMERICA 3 will open on May 6, 2016.

About two years have passed since the alien invasion of New York was repulsed by Nick Fury’s special team – The Avengers. The world is now well aware that extra-terrestrials, godlike beings and monsters may be lurking in the cosmos and that Super Heroes walk among us. The demand for protection of the world’s citizenry has reached a zenith. In response to the world’s justifiable fears, S.H.I.E.L.D. has expanded its presence to enhance the security of Earth.

WAMG recently spoke with British composer Henry Jackman.

captainamerica252efe1b686785

Jackman, born in Hillingdon, Middlesex, UK, began composing his first symphony at age six, and was an accomplished composer by age nine. He went on to study classical music at St. Paul’s Cathedral Choir School, Eton College and Oxford University. As a teenager, Jackman became heavily influenced by the underground rave scene, and he began producing chart-topping dance remixes, electronica and club music soon afterwards.

Over the next few years, Jackman built a successful career in the recording industry, not only releasing three solo albums, but also co-writing, mixing, producing and programming with a host of outstanding artists. Jackman wrote, mixed and produced albums and songs for Seal and Art of Noise. He co-wrote songs for the films “The Family Man” and “Anastasia.” He produced songs with Gary Barlow from Take That (which reached no. 3 in the UK Charts) and Justin. He programmed for artists Mike Oldfield, Marc Almond, Coolio and Kirsty McColl. He even collaborated with Andy Gardner (of Plump DJ’s fame) to produce a series of dance remixes that topped the dance charts and were selected for Pete Tong’s Essential selection.

In 2006, Jackman’s accomplishments garnered the attention of Hans Zimmer and John Powell, who soon hired Jackman to compose additional music on such films as THE DARK KNIGHT, THE DA VINCI CODE, KUNG FU PANDA and the PIRATE OF THE CARIBBEAN films.

Well-versed in superhero epics, including X-MEN: FIRST CLASS, KICK-ASS and G.I. JOE RETALIATION, Mr. Jackman received a BAFTA nomination for CAPTAIN PHILLIPS. The composer’s scores also include WRECK-IT RALPH, THIS IS THE END and PUSS IN BOOTS. He will also be composing the score for WRECK-IT RALPH 2.

10154472_529747313811197_1777877344_n

His latest score brings audiences into the world of S.H.I.E.L.D. It is bigger and more powerful than ever and loaded with new weapons, vehicles, devices and gadgets that will excite and intrigue fans around the world and keep audiences on the edge of their seats in the not-to-be-missed thrill ride that is Marvel’s CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER.

Listen to the score on Spotify.

In our conversation, Mr. Jackman and I discussed his collaboration with Joe and Anthony Russo, composing music for the big screen, and one of the best scores in film history, Alan Silvestri’s PREDATOR.

WAMG: CAPTAIN AMERICA had such a huge opening at the Box Office. People have really embraced it. Congratulations on such a great score.

HENRY JACKMAN: I’m really happy to be part of Joe and Anthony Russo’s film. They nailed the film and people love it.

You can write whatever music you want, but if it’s not attached to a film that’s made by people who know what they’re doing, then it’s not going to go anywhere.

WAMG: This film is what Marvel fans were really hoping for. Cap doesn’t fly; he doesn’t shoot lightning bolts. He punches and kicks.

This movie has a rougher feel as opposed to most Super Hero films and what we saw in the last film. He’s a fish out of water – going from WWII to modern day, isn’t he?

HENRY JACKMAN: There isn’t much fantasy in the film. The directors celebrated that and in a really good way. He does have super powers in as much that he’s stronger than everyone else, but there’s something fantastical about Captain America.

And the fact that it’s a modern story set in 2014. It’s very visceral. Everything feels real, right down to the fight sequences. It doesn’t feel pantomime. This has an impact on the music. There’s a version of a Captain America film that we have in our heads that’s sort of a nostalgic, traditional superhero that’s dispatching the Nazis and the Communists – a period piece.

It is still Captain America, but Joe and Anthony Russo have taken it to a new level. He still has those values and he still has musical thematic material to support the heroism and the patriotism. It’s a much more of a contemporary take on that superhero.

It has an impact meaning the music and the action cues have a lot of electronic sounds going on which is counter-intuitive potentially for a Captain America / Winter Soldier faceoff. There are banging and screaming sounds as well as distorted metal and twisted time-stretched vocals – all these musical techniques that owe their background to electronic music rather than symphonic music.

It has an impact on the score as well – along with the visceral, electronic elements.

WAMG: It’s very gritty and not a symphonic-type score.

HENRY JACKMAN: I love that. By the way, at the point where I found out I was going to get involved with CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER, I, like anyone else, thought, “Oh Captain America, great! It’ll be one of those rousing, traditional symphonic scores.” I love doing those! I get to do those a lot in animation. You don’t often get to do those in live-action.

Then I read the script and then I thought, oh, hold on. This might be another animal.

WAMG: It’s like a political thriller.

HENRY JACKMAN: Exactly! It’s much darker. Upon reading the script I thought, “Oh, that idea I was having about a traditional symphonic Captain America score is not relevant.”

Then I met the directors. Then I saw the film and knew this was a completely different thing.

FZ-00190_R_C
Joe and Anthony Russo

WAMG: What kind of liberty did the Russo Brothers give you with the score?

HENRY JACKMAN: They were brilliant! They trusted me, even though I had never worked with them before. They have a lot of creative authority, but not directorial.

What you really look for when you’re working with good directors is that dialogue that comes from two things. One is you have the freedom to try and experiment, but at the same time, you have respect for and a trust in that you’re part of a team where the director has an overall vision.

And two, anytime you’re having a conversation about the music, it’s with this creative security of knowing that the people at the top and in charge have a coherent sense of what their film is supposed to do. And it’s a magical combination.

captainamerica25342dcf90aa50

When I saw the film, I went ahead and wrote my Captain America theme. The Winter Soldier music (Track 6 – “The Winter Soldier”) is super radical. (Laughs). You may hate it as it doesn’t sound like an arch villain theme should sound. It’s really a brutal, mechanized kind of thing.

To see if they were into it, I played the Winter Soldier music for the Russo Brothers and they said, “That’s exactly what we are looking for.”

WAMG: There’s a beautiful piano solo towards the end of the film. (Track 17 – “End of the Line”) It is a lovely transition from the frantic sounds. What made you add that in the score?

HENRY JACKMAN: Oh definitely. That’s one of those things I’m always looking for. If you know a film is going to have a lot of electronic elements, and there’s going to be an element of brutality or visceral aspect to the music, once you know that’s the case, I’m always on the lookout for where there can be relief from that.

There are several scenes towards the end that have unexpectedly strong, emotional beats, especially with Bucky Barnes and Nick Fury – so when you do get those, you should grab them with both hands and go the other way. Really commit to the emotional beats.

And you need that break, no matter how wonderful the action is. The choreography of the action is particularly interesting. It’s sort of an odd combination of being poetic and brutal. Some of the action sequences have a Ninja sensibility, but they’re not so stylized that you don’t believe them. They are very immediate and brutal, but at the same time they’re not clumsy.

There’s something poetic about a lot of the fighting sequences.

WAMG: It was nice hearing some of Alan Silvestri’s CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER theme.

HENRY JACKMAN: There’s a section at the front that reminds everyone where we left off. This character is about to get hurled into a completely different environment, so it’s a nice way to tie the two films together.

WAMG: There’s quite a bit of percussion across the board. It’s a very sophisticated score.

HENRY JACKMAN: We spent a lot of time coming up with the percussion sounds for the visceral elements. It’s a different animal. The action sequences needed to be motivated by more than just virtuosic orchestrations. It needed pulses and percussion sounds so that it feels immediate.

WAMG: After seeing the first pass of the film, as well as the action scenes beforehand, is that what inspired you for the main theme?

HENRY JACKMAN: Definitely. I was lucky – the first time I saw the film was pretty much all of it. Not quite the same as what’s released in cinemas, but these guys were so on top of it that the first version I saw was in really good shape. It wasn’t in fragments, which helps. When you’re trying to come up with the overall themes and the architecture of the score, it helps to know the journey that the music has to take and where it’s leading to. I was lucky in that respect.

Plus I read the script. The thing about scripts is you get with different directors, you get completely different films. It really is gold dust to see as early as possible the presentable version of the film, so I was lucky in the end to be able to do that.

51MzpybO7BL

WAMG: Among such a wide variety, you’ve composed the score for the animated film WRECK-IT RALPH and then last year’s intense CAPTAIN PHILLIPS. What is it like to go between the genres?

HENRY JACKMAN: It’s like being married three times a year and every year. Meaning, you take on a project and just as you get to the end of that project, you reach the point where you really know what you’re doing. You know what the themes are as well as the vocabulary. You know the textures, the palettes, the sounds. You feel like if anyone threw any extra footage at you, you’d be able to score it in a heartbeat.

Just as you get to that point, it’s the end of the film, and bang, you’re onto something else where you have to start all over again. You’re completely committed to it and completely in that world, along with the aesthetics of that project. And then something else comes along, you just wipe the slate clean and you start work again with a completely different approach – different themes, instrumentation – and you commit yourself to that.

You go mad by the time you’re 60. Or it’s a refreshingly flexible kind of a job… that I’m very grateful for.

jackman

WAMG: Speaking of different films, you’re collaborating once again with director of the hilarious THIS IS THE END, Evan Goldberg, and actors Seth Rogen and James Franco on the movie THE INTERVIEW.

Synopsis – Dave Skylark (James Franco) is king of the celebrity interview and host of the hit night time talk show “Skylark Tonight.” The brain behind Dave’s empire is his producer and best friend, Aaron Rapoport (Seth Rogen). Unfulfilled, Aaron yearns to do meaningful work. He scores the chance of a lifetime when he secures an interview for Dave with Kim Jong-Un, the mysterious and ruthless dictator of a nuclear-armed North Korea. As Dave and Aaron prepare to leave for North Korea, they are approached by the CIA and asked to assassinate Kim. They accept the mission, becoming two of the least qualified men ever to assassinate – or interview – the most dangerous man on earth.

HENRY JACKMAN: I can’t say too much because I’m just getting started on that, but I can say that anyone who saw THIS IS THE END, which was hilarious, to expect more of the same in a completely different kind of film.

WAMG: THIS IS THE END is an absolute scream.

1170481 - The End Of The World

HENRY JACKMAN: One of the reasons I love Seth and Evan is you’ll often get goofy or silly things happening, but you’ll often get funny, silly stuff made by really clever people. They are super smart. There is something about their films that are actually smart. There’s something knowing about their filmmaking where they’re entertaining you and it’s not hugely pretentious or having airs and graces. You’re being manipulated by two clever people.

WAMG: I just watched it again, and yes it’s raunchy, but it’s also a smart kind of humor at the same time.

HENRY JACKMAN: Exactly. There’s such a difference between dumb stuff happening, made by dumb people and cleverly dumb things happening by cleverly smart people.

WAMG: Is there any type of genre you wouldn’t compose for?

HENRY JACKMAN: No, not really and that’s the problem. I’ll probably be schizophrenic by the time I’m 60.

No, if it’s good, I’m in!

51eRLq2X9SL

WAMG: What are some of your favorite film scores?

HENRY JACKMAN: Just to throw some in that are wildly different. I would say, the original ALIEN and THE LAST EMPEROR. Funnily enough – PREDATOR, the most highbrow movie in history. Alan Silvestri’s score is great. He’s brilliant.

I think he’s the first person, as a kid, where I was, “stop the press. I need to find out who this is when the credits roll.” His score is just brilliant.

I used to ignore music in a film, because I had a classical upbringing where I was at music school, studying Brahms and piano sonatas. I’m watching PREDATOR where you expect it to be kind of dumb – Arnie sticking a knife into someone, going, (in a mock Schwarzenegger accent) “stick around.”

Meanwhile I’m thinking, wow, this is slightly better than the Brahms rhapsody that I’ve learned this week and why aren’t we doing this at school. I’m still thinking this is a concert composer and I see the credits roll up and the name Alan Silvestri. I’m thinking, I’m going to remember that.

WAMG: I love PREDATOR too. I named one of my dogs Dutch after Arnold’s character in the movie.

HENRY JACKMAN: See? And I’m really not knocking PREDATOR. I’ve seen it like 50 times. It’s just that Silvestri’s score elevates it.

We could all argue that it’s not in the same category as THE LAST EMPEROR or THE THIRD MAN, but what Alan did musically was so classy. To think you’ve got these big, bulky guys getting picked off one by one – there’s an element of muscle movie about it, as well as all the tension, because they’re not the most sophisticated guys in the world who are being tangled up.

It would be tempting to think you might need to do something a little more heavy-handed and clumsy because you’re representing big ole soldiers. What I really learned from that film is that he did a score that was exquisite in tension – really classy and harmonically quite sophisticated. You don’t have to be literal just because you have a guy covered in war paint, with massive, bulging muscles, who speaks monosyllabic. It doesn’t mean you have to do the music equivalent.

WAMG: Some scores almost become a character.

HENRY JACKMAN: You could say Silvestri’s WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT – that’s good one!

51UtUahO8VL

WAMG: Any advice for kids who think they may want to score a film one day.

HENRY JACKMAN: If you want to have any sleep in your life, don’t be a film composer. (Laughs) I would say however good you think you are at music, the most important thing about music for movies is the story. Whatever musical skills you have, whether you’re the most awesome guitarist, the best drummer or you’re an incredibly virtuosic orchestral person, whatever it is you’re good at, the whole idea is to take what you’re good at and use it in service of telling the story.

There are so many different kinds of scores – you could be good at any one of those things and it will be useful in someone’s film.

WAMG: Thanks to Henry Jackman for taking the time to talk to us!

Download the soundtrack from iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/captain-america-winter-soldier/id838575494

CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE WINTER SOLDIER is in theaters now.

Capt2_Payoff_1-Sht_v8_Lg

15 Best Film Scores of 2013

2012-film-scores

Contributed by Melissa Thompson and Michelle McCue

The sets. The hair and makeup. The cinematography. The story. The sound. All of the work of talented crafts people are pulled together under the very heart of any good movie – the score.

With the Academy Award nominations on Thursday, January 16, looming like the drumline at the head of a marching band, we thought we’d have a look back at some of the finer scores of 2013.

Listen and watch a handful of Hollywood’s leading composers discuss the art of scoring a film in The Hollywood Reporter’s round table discussion. With one hundred fourteen scores from 2013 vying for nominations in the Original Score category for the 86th Oscarswe suspect some of these names will be announced .


(THR)

Honorable Mention: INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS from T Bone Burnett.

The soundtrack for INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS transported us to another time and place. The documentary feeling of the film stems from the Coens Brothers decision to shoot and record the music live with no playback and we joined right in the folk-song revival.

For more on the music, read a Q&A with T Bone Burnett HERE.

GRAVITY soundtrack

1. GRAVITY – Steven Price

For Alfonso Cuarón’s thriller, Price created a groundbreaking score, blurring the lines between electronic and organic sounds, incorporating a wide range of elements, from glass harmonicas to string and brass sections. The score captures the on-screen emotion and vacuum of space as another character in the film and left our hearts pounding.

Read our interview here: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2013/10/interview-wamg-checks-in-with-gravity-composer-steven-price/

900

2. THE PLACE BEYOND THE PINES – Mike Patton

American singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Mike Patton, best known as the lead singer of the alternative metal/experimental rock bands Mr. Bungle and Faith No More, has composed a brooding and emotionally charged original score. Patton’s music guides the viewer through this multi-generational drama, linking characters, time periods, and locations with a harmonic convergence of jazz, folk, rock, blues and classical.

Patton’s score features an eclectic selection of music including selections by Arvo Part and Ennio Morricone.

all is lost

3. ALL IS LOST – Alex Ebert

In a film so devoid of dialogue, this great musical score assumed special importance. Director J.C. Chandor turned to acclaimed singer-songwriter Alex Ebert, leader of the band Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros, to compose the film’s score—his first such project.

“It was sort of a shocker in some ways,” says Ebert. “It’s amazing that J.C. would have that kind of faith in someone who hadn’t scored a film.”

Ebert says Chandor initially asked him to deliver very subdued materials, drones and low notes that sustained over scenes. He also specifically requested that the instrumentation avoid piano. That was challenging for the composer, who had already written some pieces on piano, but he understood Chandor’s reasoning.

“The piano has this inherent emotion to it,” he says. “We didn’t want anything that was ’emotion in a can’ or ‘tension in a can.’ But eventually I started taking more chances, and after some back and forth with J.C., we landed in this middle spot that I think was perfect.”

“It’s about beauty,” he says. “It’s emotional and everything that comes along with life and death, and nothing less. I think that’s the primary subject of humanity—and it’s something that you might want to stay away from because it would be overdramatic. But this dude’s in the middle of the ocean on a raft. Let the music be emotional because it is emotional. We followed the movie’s lead.”

http://alexanderebert.com/

philomena

4. PHILOMENA – Alexandre Desplat

The very emotional score from Alexandre Desplat’s PHILOMENA broke our hearts. We laughed and cried from beginning to end with Philomena Lee’s heart-wrenching story.

Oblivion

5. OBLIVION – Anthony Gonzalez,  M83, Joseph Trapanese

The score was one of the best of 2013 and an intregral part of OBLIVION’s sci-fi landscape.

Read more about it here: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2013/04/m83-joseph-trapanese-and-the-music-of-oblivion/

artworks-000058730164-otv9bo-t500x500

6. CAPTAIN PHILLIPS – Henry Jackman

Jackman displays versatility in capturing both the intense, desperation and terror in the story of Captain Richard Phillips’ hostage situation with Somali pirates as well as the humanity of the circumstances. Hitting the right musical balance of drama and intensity was a challenge in minimalism for Jackman, so as not to manipulate the audience.

nebraska

7. NEBRASKA – Mark Orton

A member of the bluegrass folk collective Tin Hat, Orton’s vibe for Americana music was sought out by director Alexander Payne. Horns, acoustic strings and organ are some of the primary elemental instruments fueling the musical emotion to this story, capturing both the vast landscape and people of the flyover states. Orton, a graduate of the Sundance Filmmaker Institute, also scored the music to the 2014 Sundance premiere Drunktown’s Finest.

Click here to listen: http://markortonmusic.com/nebraska/

despicable-me-2-soundtrack

8. DESPICABLE ME 2 – Heitor Pereira

A celebrated musician and former member of the platinum-selling group Simply Red, Pereira sings to the hearts of children through his scores for Despicable Me 2. The sequel, which follows the further adventures of the notorious spy Gru, Pereira created specific themes for the new characters, specifically 1960s romantic comedy tones for his love interest Lucy and Latin-mariachi rhythms for the evil El Macho.

smb_soundtrack

9. SAVING MR. BANKS – Thomas Newman

Newman has composed music for nearly 100 motion pictures and television series and has earned 11 Academy Award® nominations and six Grammy® Awards. His score goes hand-in-hand with the back story of Walt Disney and PJ Travers making of MARY POPPINS and left us looking for tissues by the film’s end.

frozen

10. FROZEN – Christophe Beck

The second of Disney’s movies that showed young girls it was okay to be their very own heroes!

rush

11. RUSH – Hans Zimmer

With their collaborations on blockbusters from The Da Vinci Code and Angels & Demons to more intimate projects such as Frost/Nixon, director Ron Howard and Hans Zimmer, a Grammy, Golden Globe and Academy Award® winner, once again joined forces for the sounds of RUSH.

Balancing the racers’ simple desires with their frenetic-yet-controlled behavior on the track was a challenge for Howard and Zimmer as they created the soundtrack to the film. The composer captured the spirit of the Formula 1 world.

epic

12. EPIC – Danny Elfman

The rousing score for The Leaf-Men. Enough said.

pacific rim

13. PACIFIC RIM – Ramin Djawadi

Okay, so maybe it didn’t live up to everyone’s expectations, but hot damn if the score to PACIFIC RIM wasn’t one of the coolest of 2013. Made us want to suit up as Jaeger pilots and make a last stand in our ‘Gipsy Danger’.

WWZ_CD-Bklt_VA-15B-560x560

14. WORLD WAR Z – Marco Beltrami

Animal skulls and teeth combined with percussion add to the tension of utter panic and anxiety in a world being overrun by a Zombie pandemic.

Listen here: http://www.marcobeltrami.com/world-war-z

Read our interview here: https://www.wearemoviegeeks.com/2013/06/interview-wamg-talks-to-world-war-z-composer-marco-beltrami/

artworks-000057536474-3q4hba-t500x500

15. PRISONERS – Jóhann Jóhannsson

Giving you the sense of dread and desperation, Jóhann Jóhannsson’s score for PRISONERS left us with aches and chills over a parent’s worst nightmare.

croods

We couldn’t end our list without a quick mention for composer Alan Silvestri’s music for THE CROODS. While the film score conveyed beautiful themes and resonated on a deeper level than words could ever say, we were fans of how Silvestri combined the Abbey Road Orchestra  and the USC Trojan Marching Band… especially the percussion section!