5 posts tagged “oscars”
KCRW Music Director Jason Bentley will create the musical atmosphere at the Governors Ball, the celebration following the 81st Academy Awards® presentation this Sunday, February 22. Bentley will alternate with live bands throughout the evening. The Ball’s 1,500 guests will include Oscar winners and nominees, show presenters and performers, and other luminaries. This is the 2nd year in a row he has deejayed the event.
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Jason Bentley uncovered compelling stories behind the music for some of the year’s most highly acclaimed films in conversations with top composers on MBE. Check out some of the highlights below and read full transcripts and see other Oscar-related goodies HERE
Slumdog Millionaire composer A.R. Rahman discusses his approach to creating scores that are both perfect for film and listenable on their own.
--Rahman on his collaboration with M.I.A and Director Danny Boyle: “Danny wanted me to collaborate with her…She is like a tank of ideas.”
--On Boyle: “What I liked was he captured the spirit of Mumbai, which is undying. It was great.”
Composer Alexandre Desplat went backwards and forwards to capture the magical story of life and love in The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.
--On Director David Fincher: “David Fincher is a director who has a very precise point of view on every aspect of his art history and the music is one of them… he didn't want the score to be overdramatic, overwhelming to the audience.”
--On Benjamin Button’s Theme: “This whole idea of time reversing was ticking in my head and I just suggested to David that I could maybe try and find a tune, a little pattern, a little hook that could be played forwards and backwards.”
Milk Composer Danny Elfman tells Jason he considers the title character an American hero and jumped at the chance to work with Director Gus Van Sant again.
--On Van Sant: “Getting into any project with Gus means I'm going to go in a lot of different directions and mess around with a lot of different ideas. With another director, that can be very frustrating. Trying to hone in on ‘What do you want for this movie?’ With Gus it's more of a process of fun experimentation.
--On his creative process: “I don't do research going into a movie. I think the least I know the better. I like to forget that I've even read the script, even though I do read the script because the more prepared I am in the beginning, the more it sends me down a specific direction which may not be the right direction…So I started with a real blank slate other than -- don't mess this up. Except I didn't use the word mess, but we're live on the air.”
World-renowned composers Hans Zimmer and James Newton Howard are deeply philosophical in their discussion of creating the music behind The Dark Knight, especially one of the most notable characters – The Joker, as played by Heath Ledger.
--Zimmer on the Joker’s Theme: “I kept churning around…how do you describe anarchy, how do you describe a villian and not do it in a way that’s been done before? One of the things I got very much from the character was a fearlessness, and an evenness in a way. The Joker is the only person you can trust in the movie. The Joker is the only one who will never lie to you because he is consistent about his philosophy.”
“I really wanted to do the whole thing just with one note. I had this idea that rather than what a note is in the context of the notes surrounding it, what could I do emotionally through a performance within one note? How much can I stretch the meaning of a single note and get it down to such minimalism. I failed slightly. I had to use two notes in the end.”
--Howard on their avoidance of a traditional superhero theme: “We actually received a lot of grief about that, from a lot of people. ‘Why didn’t you write a big theme for Batman? Because it wouldn’t have worked.”
The 81st Academy Awards® ceremony airs on February 22.
In the days leading up to the Academy Awards®, Director Jason Reitman dropped by KCRW to play us a handful of songs that have inspired him and contributed to his creative process for “Juno” and the critically-acclaimed “Thank You For Smoking.” He brought in his laptop and sat down with DJ Jason Bentley for an eight minute guest DJ set. LISTEN HERE
Find out why music is his drug of choice, his soundtrack to crafting a lead character in a dark satire, the lengths he will go to track down a song that gets his attention, and how lo-fi music is the new punk.
Reitman’s passion, enthusiasm and knowledge of a variety of music made for some interesting and surprising choices, including tracks by the Penguin Café Orchestra to Steve Winwood and RJD2. If you’ve ever wanted to get into the musical mind of an Oscar nominee, now is your chance!
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KCRW's very own Jason Bentley is the first DJ in the history of Academy Awards® Governors Ball! He will spin between performances by Pink Martini at the party following the show this Sunday, February 24. He will mix timeless film scores and tracks from the year’s best films with popular music. Jason will be archiving his first set online so you can hear it the next morning (Monday) on KCRW.com.
Here are some pics from the Governor’s Ball preview. It was a blast – swarms of photographers, Wolfgang Puck cooking up the most delicious crab cakes ever at 10am to be enjoyed with a glass of champagne and, of course, the gold guy.
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I was screaming and cheering and nearly crying when our friends Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova won the Academy Award for best song last night. I can tell you after getting a chance to meet them when we taped their session this summer, they are as nice, modest and talented as they seem in their acceptance speeches. As a music lover, this movie truly made my year and proves that when you are passionate and follow your heart, anything is possible. Watch their acceptance speech here if you missed it.
Also, you MUST check out their Morning Becomes Eclectic set if you haven't already. The stunning set of songs from the Once soundtrack includes the Oscar-winning "Falling Slowly," as well as a cover of “Into the Mystic,” which is included as an extra track on the second pressing of the soundtrack. Their version of the classic Van Morrison track will make your heart turn over a few times. It is the second to last song of the set (right before their cover of Bob Dylan’s “You Ain't Going Nowhere” – neither of which aired live that day) and, with our new media player, you can now skip ahead! Listen/Watch
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