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Review of There Will Be Blood (Jonny Greenwood)
Composed and Produced by:
Jonny Greenwood
Conducted by:
Robert Ziegler
Label and Release Date:
Nonesuch Records
(October 16th, 2007)
Availability:
Regular U.S. release, with vinyl options available.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... if you rejoice in bleak musical representations of despair, hopelessness, dejection, and anguish.

Avoid it... unless you have already established that you can survive Jonny Greenwood's most atonally unpleasant music without wanting to slaughter someone.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
There Will Be Blood: (Jonny Greenwood) Extremely unpleasant films of high refinement seem to exist for two reasons: winning awards and making you feel terrible about humanity. Predictably, Paul Thomas Anderson's 2007 drama, There Will Be Blood, accomplished both, serenaded widely as one of the very best films of its decade. It also happens to show the worst of human nature on display, conveying the destruction of morality by capitalism, greed, and religious fraud as it examines the story of oil baron Daniel Plainview at the outset of the twentieth century. Plainview discovers oil deposits near Los Angeles and begins the long process of obtaining land, destroying lives, and outright killing people to achieve massive wealth that ultimately brings him no happiness. The lead performance by Daniel Day-Lewis is the highlight of the picture, though bleak cinematography and music also gained much praise for their disillusioning demeanor. The movie represented the first entry in a long collaboration between Anderson and musician Jonny Greenwood, who remains best known as the lead guitarist and keyboardist for the rock band Radiohead. Because of his classical training, however, Greenwood has flourished in his work with the BBC Concert Orchestra, writing challenging string compositions and dabbling with the theremin-like Ondes Martenot. Not surprisingly, he carries over this style of atonality and dissonance to many of his film scores, where they generate acclaim foremost because they are so obvious in providing incongruent musical tones to unsettling situations on film. Greenwood's classical and film music is rarely pleasant, and that was the vibe sought by Anderson when searching for the right sound for There Will Be Blood. Undoubtedly, Greenwood delivers. His score is horrifically alienating and strikingly painful at most times, its dissonance alternating between cold disconnection to frantic flurries or outright aggression. Some of the music is barely audible for periods of time, and the overall length of the work is short. It's a score that was highly praised by Hans Zimmer in subsequent years, reinforcing the notion that unusually disturbing atonality from an orchestra makes for high art in film music. It suffices to say that There Will Be Blood is thus a polarizing soundtrack. Despite several major nominations, the work was ineligible for Academy Award consideration because Greenwood applied excerpts from his earlier "Popcorn Superhet Receiver" piece to the equation.

You have to approach the music for There Will Be Blood in preparation for a specific mood of unyielding despair and occasional fright. The narrative of the score is completely non-existent, Greenwood making no attempt to develop and nurture motifs in a way that helps convey any part of the film's plot. Instead, he applies his ensemble as a blunt tool of emotional abuse on a scene by scene basis. That performing group is intentionally slim, with about half the cues performed by a string quartet with or without a piano and the other half handled by the fuller string section of the orchestra. There are seemingly no brass, woodwind, or percussion contributions. Rather, Greenwood applies various techniques to the strings to give them different performance aspects, such as the mad plucking and striking of layers in "Proven Lands." The only exception to the ensemble restriction seems to come in "Prospectors Arrive," where an almost synthesizer-like effect in the treble lends a disturbing tone to slight waltz rhythms performed by piano and minimal strings underneath. Listeners are left grasping for any semblance of warmth in this extremely dry and exhausting ambience. There is faint tonality that struggles to emerge in "Oil," and "HW/Hope of New Fields" conveys the score's only consistent melodic grace that will resemble Golden Age restraint for some listeners. Even here, though, the tone is sparse and lacking any redeeming characteristics outside of very basic, unhappy turmoil. Two early cues exhibit the far ranges of Greenwood's scope in exploring these depths of futility. The extremely minimal high string meandering in "Open Spaces" establishes the cinematography of the picture in its initial scene while the subsequent "Future Markets" shifts the cellos into high gear as they ambitiously tear through Bernard Herrmann-like figures of suspense. The barely-controlled chaos in this cue dissolves into actual wildness by the latter half of "Eat Him by His Own Light," the piano and strings presenting totally discordant layers that are emulated by the equally disturbing "Stranded the Line" late in the score. An intellectually intriguing choice by Greenwood is the long and simplistic crescendo in "Henry Plainview," a cue that suggests unyielding focus but almost no complexity for the lead character. Ultimately, there's no light at the end of the tunnel for the music in There Will Be Blood; whereas some later Greenwood scores offer variably tonal resolution at their conclusions, this score provides no such release. It's an intentionally disheartening, sparsely brutal conveyance of classical minimalism that will test your patience with its atonal hopelessness. Expect its short album presentation to leave you as gloomy (or annoyed) as ever.
  • Music as Written for the Film: ***
  • Music as Heard on Album: *
  • Overall: **

TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 32:55

• 1. Open Spaces (4:00)
• 2. Future Markets (2:44)
• 3. Prospectors Arrive (4:40)
• 4. Eat Him by His Own Light (3:36)
• 5. Henry Plainview (4:14)
• 6. There Will Be Blood (2:08)
• 7. Oil (3:04)
• 8. Proven Lands (4:49)
• 9. HW/Hope of New Fields (2:29)
• 10. Stranded the Line (2:20)
• 11. Prospectors Quartet (2:56)
NOTES & QUOTES:
The cardboard packaging contains artwork by actor Daniel Day-Lewis that is related to the film.
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The reviews and other textual content contained on the filmtracks.com site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Christian Clemmensen at Filmtracks Publications. All artwork and sound clips from There Will Be Blood are Copyright © 2007, Nonesuch Records and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 5/14/23 (and not updated significantly since).