Wednesday, May 7, 2008

There Will Be Music

Last night I watched There Will Be Blood. It was incredible. Daniel Day Lewis was amazing as oil man Daniel Plainview. I can fully see why he won best actor for his performance. However, what struck me the most was not the acting, but the music. The story takes place mostly during the turn of the century, early 1900s. Classical music during that time was in a very strange state. It was music that didn't really fit in anywhere. It wasn't pleasing to listen to and, I imagine, offered those who played it no aesthetic satisfaction. The Avant Garde movement in classical music was marked by strange techniques in composition, new and often unpalatable sounds, and an overarching sense of one-upmanship. Some composer would invent a strange technique, employ it in his compositions and gain brief fame. Other composers would scramble to outdo him by being louder, harsher, and just plain weirder! Composers of the Avant Garde were crazed by this notion. All concern for beauty and musicality were thrown out the window and replaced by obsession with these new ideas. For instance, a popular compositional technique during this time was the use of "tone clusters". The composer would notate that the players play any pitch of their choosing between a set pitch range. The result was a howling, eerie, volatile sound. It was music for music geeks (which is why the idea of it very much intrigues me), but it just wasn't pretty.

So what does all this have to do with the movie? First, I love that they chose to use classical music from the time period in which the story took place. This is a music without a home. Nobody listens to this music for enjoyment. It is studied in music history classrooms, cringed at, and then forgotten. However, it seemed very much at home as a backdrop to the oil crazed exploits of Daniel Plainview. Which leads me to the most striking reason I loved the music in this movie. It represented the main character perfectly. In a general sense, the whole idea of the Avant Garde composers clawing at each other to see who could be the best is a direct reflection of the outlandish and sometimes heinous behavior of Plainview. Each time, he would do something more shocking than the last time as long as it got him what he wanted; be it oil, or the pipeline to carry the oil. Under the microscope, the music itself is an auditory representation of the main character. The film music opens with a large tone cluster. Strings play indeterminate pitches slowly moving to a unison strain, only to reverse and widen back into the horrible howl from before. This happens multiple times in the film. The aural instability one experiences represents Daniel Plainview's own emotional odyssey. One minute, he's a smooth talking oil man convincing an entire town to drill for oil. He's in unison. The next, he's flying off the handle at a Standard oil man who barely makes a comment about his son. It was brilliance.

I don't like classical music from the early twentieth century. It isn't pleasant to hear. But this wasn't a pleasant story. It was a very real story, made only more real by the superb musical score chosen to accompany it. An unpleasant, but perfect fit.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wow. I've never wanted to see that movie, but now I am interested just to hear the music! How you inspire . . .

Anonymous said...

Goldstien would be VERY proud :)

Anonymous said...

Goldstein* oops.

Chip Michael said...

Very interesting. I wasn't overly impressed with the film, but did very much appreciate the music. It was integral to making the film work - and it does work, just not as great as everyone else seems to think.

This last year of film music was particularly good for interesting use of music. I also liked Atonement's music for use of the typewriter integrated into the score - and (believe or not) the machine sounds in Transformers. It would have been so easy to just create high-tech synths - but they didn't. The used samples from machines to give it the right quality.

Anonymous said...

Plainview was obsessed by a demonic passion for oil and ego. His son finally realized this and broke the connection. Religion is used as a metaphor for crazed and unpredictable character. The music reflects it all!!

chandler said...

you may already know this, but the score for "there will be blood" was composed by jonny greenwood, the guitar player from radiohead. so i think that makes it more impressive. if you still have the movie i want to borrow it. i'm coming over.

The Dyer Family said...

our netflix came in the other day - there will be blood and la vie en rose. we have not watched blood, yet - but saw rose last night. funny that both movies we got were for best actor and actress oscar winners. anyway, see la vie en rose asap if you haven't already. it was eye opening to see the insane life edith piaf lived, and the music was spectacular. they used original recordings, so cotillard lip synced the songs. i thought i would hate it, but it was very well done. i think it would be impossible for anyone to recreate piaf's voice.
ok - bev just called and i lost my train of thought. but i'll be sure to give you my review of blood after tonight. :)

Dr. Borschlin said...

The music in No Country for Old Men was way better...