This is tremendous.
> This is part of a series.
> - Here’s the last post on Lorne Balfe’s 2018 -
> https://www.filmtracks.com/scoreboard/forum.cgi?read=119482
> - If you want the full set of links covering the Too Big To Fail era or
> earlier, click on my profile.
> -----------------------
> Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018) - *****
> John Powell; Han Solo theme composed & conducted by John Williams;
> add’l music & arrangements by
> Batu Sener, Anthony Willis & Paul Mounsey; orchestrated by John Ashton
> Thomas; Geoff Lawson,
> Tommy Laurence, Andrew Kinney, Randy Kerber, Rick Giovinazzo & Gavin
> Greenaway; London
> orchestra conducted by Greenaway; Vanya Moneva Women's Choir conducted by
> Vanya Moneva;
> Sofia Session Choir conducted by George Strezov; thank you to Edie
> Boddicker & Hans Zimmer
> “[Star Wars] is our understanding of what the best of film music
> can be. I’d always found it to be intriguing how he had such catchy tunes,
> and they weren’t simplistic. People could hum them, but they were not easy
> to hum. That always puzzled me. I sat around for hours on this giant
> Pinewood set with the visual effects supervisor. We both geeked out; we’re
> about the same age, we’d grown up with it. ‘Did you ever believe when you
> were 15 you’d be working on Star Wars?’ And he was like, ‘No, I
> can’t believe I’m in charge of all this.’
> If I’d told you in the late 90s that a new Star Wars film was
> someday going to feature music from someone who worked under Hans Zimmer,
> you might’ve thought there was a vast difference in what the music of the
> concept now sounded like, perhaps akin to a Man of Steel-like
> reboot where the themes and style of John Williams were replaced by
> something different, or maybe even that Jerry Bruckheimer had taken over.
> If I told you more specifically that the composer would be the guy that
> just wrote the last-minute replacement score for Face/Off, you may
> have thought something had gone horribly wrong. Instead, it turned out to
> be one of my ten favorite film scores of all time.
> But things in fact did go horribly wrong during production, and the
> astonishing music for Solo: A Star Wars Story almost never
> happened.
> -----------------------
> The Han Solo origins film was a doomed enterprise. There were disappointed
> and even toxic segments of the fandom in the wake of The Last Jedi,
> a sense of Star Wars fatigue with this entry coming only five
> months after that movie (something its composer would say “backfired on
> everyone”), and a mid-film production shake-up as Lucasfilm boss
> Kathleen Kennedy fired 21 Jump Street directors Phil Lord and Chris
> Miller and brought in Ron Howard. It was the first film in the franchise
> that could be appropriately categorized as a box office disappointment,
> though with Disney at the time having committed to pumping out a Star
> Wars film every year this was perhaps an inevitability; if it hadn’t
> been Solo, it probably would’ve been one of the other spin-off
> movies in development. Still, it was a bit of a shame because aside from a
> few groan-inducing moments (Han gets the last name Solo because an
> Imperial officer notices he is alone) the end product still made
> for an entertaining bit of escapism.
> Composer John Powell had been avoiding live action films for a while, but
> Star Wars entries weren’t going to demand minimalist action music (not
> yet, anyway) or trigger his ethical concerns about dramatizing real-world
> violence. The job did come with some strings attached though. “I
> thought this could be too dangerous. [But] I said yes when they said,
> ‘John [Williams] will be doing a theme, and you are expected to take that
> theme and then write the rest of the music.’ John is incredibly humble; he
> said: ‘Are you okay with this? You don’t really need me.’ I said, ‘That’s
> very kind of you, however, the role of the composer is to make the music
> as good as he possibly can for the film, so not having you involved would
> be idiotic.’ I always thought it was normal when composers work together.
> Gavin Greenaway and I used to write together all the time. It’s like a
> songwriting partnership.”
> Powell was in awe not only of Williams’ decades-old achievements but also
> his music for the prior year’s film. “It doesn’t comprehend in today’s
> Hollywood. He’s 85, but he can put more energy in music than a roomful of
> EDM fuckers. I love EDM, but you’ve got to admire the sheer velocity and
> kinetic energy in Williams’ scores, even today. It exhausts me to just do
> a minute of it.”
> Powell would end up doing a few pieces of music while Lord and Miller were
> on the film, all meant to be played in the movie “like the Cantina band
> in the original” and in at least one case showing extremely
> unnecessary effort on Powell’s part. “I did the first version in a
> language I found online, and then Disney pointed out they might not own
> that language even though it was from the films, so there had to be an
> official translation into Huttese.” That would show up in the film, as
> would a bit of “Stormtrooper karaoke” that had Powell’s
> self-described ”shitty” singing voice which was written as a rush
> job request for Lord and Miller and almost ended up in the unused pile
> until Howard asked if Powell had any more source music laying around just
> before the release date.
> Thankfully, Powell would survive the mid-film director swap. “I got a
> call from one of the producers. ‘Yes, there’s been a change but you’re not
> necessarily fired.’ Truthfully, I thought I was going to get fired. Ron
> probably called Hans as soon as he got the gig, and then I think Ron
> realized that they’d already hired a composer and called Hans and said
> ‘I’m sorry.’ And Hans, this is why we all love him, he’s like, ‘Johnny
> will be great! You’ll be fine.’”
> But until Williams actually came around to watch the film it was “a
> hellishly frightening experience. Walking through a minefield in clown
> shoes. I spent months worrying, studying his stuff, worrying about
> studying his stuff. Kathy was the one pushing. ‘Let’s see how far we can
> go.’ That was my concern; how far can we push the fans away from what
> they’re expecting? The story was already doing that. There’s no mysticism
> to Solo, that religious aspect. It’s closer to The Italian
> Job than anything else I’ve done. It’s a heist movie with interesting
> characters, people trying to make it, backstabbing. You could make a $5
> million version [of this story] in London.”
> Perhaps not helping matters was that Powell, someone who’s acknowledged
> being heavily reliant on visuals for scoring inspiration, was dealing with
> the same challenges his contemporaries were with regards to visual
> effects. “I scored a movie that had half of the visual effects not
> done. I was on the set they shot the train scene on. [On my working copy]
> it looked like shit. And then I watched the premiere, it was bizarre, I
> was going ‘where did they shoot this?’ I forgot they shot it on [that]
> soundstage!”
> Williams watched a cut of the film alongside Powell in November 2017 and
> recorded his ideas with an orchestra the following January; his work was
> originally intended to be just a theme for Han but ending up as two themes
> plus some scene-specific scoring. Powell would say once this was done
> “it was such a relief. I knew almost immediately how it would work. My
> involvement was finding other ways of using it. He wasn’t sure about his
> secondary theme and I said, ‘That for me is Han yearning.’ I’d written a
> bunch of themes and didn’t know if they’d be right. A lot of them did work
> once I had John’s material. He’d put these classic bricks down, and you
> see the brick and you know [that] it’s level, now I can build everything
> else around that as my reference.”
> His own themes (all comfortable in the Star Wars universe and yet
> undeniably Powell creations) would at first glance seem to be more
> character-centric than usual. There are ideas clearly linked to the love
> interest Qira, Chewbacca, Woody Harrelson’s gang, the droid L3, and the
> villain Dryden. But Powell still thought of them as being attached to
> ideas in the story, which helped with their malleability and how he
> evolved them throughout the film. “There is a love theme, but love
> that’s lust is very different from true love. Chewie is the true love; the
> person who’s good for you is the unexpected person. I needed a theme for a
> gang being family. I needed a theme for freedom, which worked for [L3]. We
> needed a theme for Dryden, but [also] it represents secrets. The theme is
> literally three notes, but it’s like a rail that allows me to put other
> things on it.” That last point would be clear right from the start of
> the film where the secrets theme relentlessly tolls underneath a solemn
> statement of the Han theme as the main titles appear, all before a rowdy
> burst of the secondary Han theme introduces the film’s logo.
> -----------------------
> “In college Gavin and I got let into studio 1 at Abbey Road. It was
> James Horner recording American Tail. The engineer was Shawn
> Murphy, who I use. And Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall were
> there!”
> The music for the train heist in the first third of the film was amazing,
> and I suppose I could’ve written 3,000 words just on the supreme might of
> that material. But the middle of the film has perhaps the most sensational
> 25-minute near-continuous stretch of film music from this decade, and as
> such it demands its own section.
> As the crew approaches a mining planet, bass grooves and electric guitar
> provide one of the few Italian Job-style hints of the impending
> heist. The Millennium Falcon lands amidst a Williams-like fanfare.
> Tentative winds and strings play with Han’s theme as he’s “sold” to the
> operation, while a brief shot revealing Han holding his dice is treated to
> a twinkly take on Williams’ legacy title theme. After martial tones get
> the gang into position, the L3 droid goes into a revolutionary fervor and
> frees the mine’s human and robot slaves, and Powell would audaciously
> rework her theme into a fugal style of writing where (to greatly
> oversimplify things) the same melodic idea is played in an overlapping
> fashion by different groups, a style Williams had used in the franchise as
> well as the later parts of Jaws. Powell seemed to take this on as a
> dare to “catch up a bit with [Williams], keep that standard of writing.
> Kathy explained that [the] section needed to feel that it’s building up,
> getting better and worse simultaneously. The fugue seemed appropriate, but
> also dangerous. You [can] lose all your accuracy when the film is edited.
> But Kathy was really pleased.”
> That fugal revolt would lead into a lengthy breakout and chase sequence,
> and Powell would unleash darn near every instrument and theme at his
> disposal. L3’s theme would morph into a resilient march for robot freedom,
> Chewie’s theme would shift from a soothing friendship idea to a rousing
> statement of heroic rescue, and both of Williams’ Han themes would reach
> energetic new heights. Powell would even sneak in some trumpet outbursts
> of Williams’ Rebel Fanfare as the Falcon heads back into space. As the
> Falcon then moves to evade TIE Fighters in a maelstrom of space fog and
> asteroids, Powell would sprinkle in some lightly rearranged portions of
> Williams’ Death Star motif, The Asteroid Chase from The Empire
> Strikes Back and TIE Fighter Attack from A New Hope,
> perhaps the only choice of his that would rank as even mildly
> controversial (and then only for a small subset of listeners). “I used
> some old cues like needle drops. We re-recorded them [and] I had to change
> keys. You shouldn’t fuck with that music, but as long as I can get it to
> work smoothly, it’s good.”
> Powell would support the final stretch of the chase involving a space
> monster and a black hole with a cacophony of relentless string rhythms,
> nasty brass trills, and $3 vuvuzelas, bringing to mind Germaine Franco’s
> story about having to go out and buy cat toys for Robots. “I
> need to see what the finest players in the world who have [expensive]
> instruments would sound like on a big tube.” The chase sequence would
> be brought to an energetic close by exultant statements of Williams’
> original title theme and Rebel Fanfare, followed by brass blasting out one
> last urgent statement of Williams’ yearning secondary theme for Han as the
> ship lands at its destination.
> If you’re not saying “wow!” to yourself after this point, you may want to
> check if you have a pulse. Heck, I did it the last time I heard the score
> and that was probably well over my 200th listen to that portion.
> -----------------------
> “One of the themes that I think Ron wanted to get was youth. He’s got
> more optimism than perhaps he had in the movies we know. I’m trying to
> create music less serious than the music we know for A New
> Hope.”
> The score is such an embarrassment of riches that one could argue I’ve
> barely scratched the surface on what makes it so superlative. There’s the
> harsh Bulgarian choir used for Powell’s theme for the mercenary adversary
> that was both a way for Powell to get a distinctively aggressive sound
> (“I needed an exotic theme, something unusual; a normal women’s choir
> wouldn’t have worked”) and also him “trying to do my best at John’s
> writing for choir.” There’s the off-kilter ensemble used for a card
> game scene that calls to mind the various quirky scores Powell wrote in
> the aughts; only a madman would think to sneak slide guitar into a Star
> Wars score! There’s a jaunty major key version of the Imperial
> March done for an in-film recruitment ad, possibly as a nod to
> Powell’s beloved Ron Goodwin scores from his youth. Williams would at
> first nix that last item from the original album release, maybe thinking
> Powell and team were taking the piss out of one of his most famous
> creations, but apparently liked its usage when he saw the completed film,
> and Powell would include it on an expanded score album released a few
> years later.
> And of course there’s the brilliant sonic cohesion of it all. This isn’t a
> Powell score with random bits of Williams thrown in, nor is it Powell
> completely subordinating his own voice to that of Williams and producing a
> simulacrum of the maestro’s music; the latter would’ve been fine but also
> basically the equivalent of any Star Wars video game score from the
> era. It is very clearly a John Powell creation of the 2010s, but it is one
> written in a style that is in complete harmony with the mannerisms of
> Williams for the saga, almost as if the composers’ identifiable styles are
> having a conversation with each other throughout the nearly two hours of
> original music written for the film. “I’m not quite equipped to sound
> exactly like John. I have my own strange ways of doing things and they
> make everything sound like me. So it was a trick of trying to transition
> carefully to try and honor the style. When I’m going for big action
> scenes, I wouldn’t quite put them together the way that John would, but
> hopefully you can definitely hear the influence there.”
> Achieving this kind of precise balance isn’t easy. Just ask Michael
> Giacchino, who did a stellar job given the very little time he had to
> write music for Rogue One: A Star Wars Story less than two years
> earlier but didn’t quite nail the sublime intersection point Powell did on
> Solo. And not only was Powell taking Williams’ new Han melodies and
> doing fascinating things with them, but he was also giving fresh spins on
> several of Williams’ other ideas, including understated variations of
> Duel of the Fates for a character’s unexpected reappearance, a
> surprising burst of the Imperial theme from A New Hope during the
> train heist, and a brief bombastic declaration of the Imperial
> March filtered through Powell’s How To Train Your Dragon style
> during the early Mimban battle. “He told me, ‘Don’t feel that you must
> constantly honor the history of the music. It was just a gig for me. So do
> with it what you need to do.’”
> -----------------------
> Disney didn’t submit Solo for consideration for Best Original Score
> at the Academy Awards (or at least didn’t submit it on time, per a later
> article in Variety), perhaps understandable as the organization had an
> inconsistent record when it came to permitting nominations for music with
> multiple credited lead composers, such as the ineligibility of The Dark
> Knight a decade earlier. But it was probably more of an effort on
> Disney’s part to put all its musical eggs in one basket, specifically the
> basket containing the music of Mary Poppins Returns. It’s hard to
> argue with Disney throwing its promotional muscle behind getting composer
> Marc Shaiman some well-deserved recognition; Shaiman not only showed
> impressive fealty to the music of the original hit film but arguably
> surpassed it in overall quality, producing one of the best original
> compositions for a movie musical of all time.
> Yet it was still unfortunate that all that came at the expense of any
> formal promotion of Powell’s magnificent accomplishment (although the
> IFMCA did award it the year’s best score). Forget being in the same league
> as Powell’s earlier music for How To Train Your Dragon 2. His work
> on Solo is arguably the only other score in the Star Wars
> franchise that merits being in the same conversation as Williams’ work on
> the original film and The Empire Strikes Back (for me, it’s second
> only to Empire). That sentiment has proven even more true as
> Disney’s subsequent streaming series for the saga have migrated to a
> galaxy far, far away from Williams’ original design, one full of
> contemporary-sounding action scoring, abrasive electronics, and sound
> design.
> -----------------------
> Powell would later laugh in an interview done around when Solo came
> out about the tactics his team had used to keep him aware of his deadline.
> “Batu started this countdown clock for the hours, minutes, [and]
> seconds up until I need to get into the car to go to London [to record].
> You cannot write past this point. When it’s 60 days, you take the weekend
> off. When it’s 40, when it’s 14, it’s very effective. I just went down to
> the kitchen and Batu’s started it for the next one!” The release date
> for the final How To Train Your Dragon film was less than 10 months
> away when he said that.
> -----------------------
> Next time: “It’s probably my most orchestral score.”
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