---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
" To balance that music on the other end of the spectrum, the LOTR
team turned to the Indian composer A.R. Rahman. Chris Nightingale had
worked closely with Rahman as musical supervisor for the London
production of Bombay Dreams.

"Yes, I'd been working with A.R. in London, and that experience made
me aware of what he is capable of. A brilliant composer, but also a
wonderful chameleon, capable of taking on many colours - of absorbing
and transforming any music, any style and giving it his own, unique
signature "

" I spent a lot of time in Finland with Värttinä and a lot of time in
India with A.R. Rahman – long before any work began in Toronto –
talking over the show, exchanging ideas. I'd bring things from
Värttinä to A.R., and from A.R. back to Värttinä… and take ideas from
all of them back to London, to Matthew and to Rob Howell, the
designer.  A wonderful thing about this experience is the way all
elements of the show have influenced the development of each other as
they've evolved; Rob Howell will hear something in the music that
affects his ideas about the set and costume design; the composers will
see something in Rob's drawings that gives them a new idea about the
music; everything has grown together, building a whole and complete
new world. In the finished score, I hope there will be no song you can
point to and say `that's by A.R. Rahman,' or `that's by Värttinä.' You
may hear a melody originally written by Rahman, but to which Värttinä
has applied its own, unique interpretation, and vice-versa. In the
end, these two very distinctive composers have come together to share
a vision of the oneness – and complexity – of this imaginary world
that their music has brought into reality."

--------  Complete Transcript below  --------------------

Christopher Nightingale is the orchestrator and musical supervisor of
The Lord of the Rings, the person responsible for the music of
Middle-earth. He worked with the composers – A.R. Rahman and Värttinä
over the course of two years and the music would not be there without
him. Chris is one of theatre's most experienced and highly regarded
masters of his craft, with past credits that include some of West End
London's best plays and musicals, despite his never having imagined a
career for himself in either theatre or music.

"I didn't set out to pursue a career in music. In fact I studied
sciences. I did have a musical background - and I went to Cambridge on
an organ scholarship – but I took a degree in Natural Sciences.
However, it was at Cambridge that I discovered how much I loved the
theatre when I became involved with the Footlights, the amateur
theatre club at the university. The truth is that I spent a good deal
of the time I should have spent with my science books playing the
piano with the Footlights, instead."

Actually, Chris Nightingale did far more than just play the piano. He
was musical director of the Footlights for three years – and the
Footlights was (and is) far more than an "amateur theatre club"; it
has provided Britain's professional theatre with some of its brightest
talent for more than 120 years.

"Going into the theatre wasn't a conscious choice, but when the
opportunity came along, it felt like the right thing to do. After
university, I messed around for a bit, playing piano here and there,
skiing… and then Richard Brown, who's working with me now on The Lord
of the Rings, gave me a job playing piano at the Royal Shakespeare
Company. And here I still am, sitting at a piano in a theatre, almost
20 years later."

But even 20 years of theatre experience wasn't quite enough to prepare
Chris fully for the proposal he would receive from producer Kevin Wallace.

"I had worked with Kevin before but when he first approached me to ask
what I thought of the idea of a stage production ofTolkien's books,
possibly a musical, my first reaction - and I think it was our
director, Matthew Warchus's as well -  was `You've got to be kidding!
The idea is crazy!'

"I found it difficult to imagine The Lord of the Rings as a stage
production - the work is so vast - how would you put a thousand pages
of text into a theatre? But I found it impossible to imagine it as a
musical. How could you find a route in - musically – that could do
this work justice, and avoid cliché and cuteness? Frodo singing about
how heavy the ring is and how he just can't go on? It seemed to me
like a very bad idea.

"Then I looked back at the books. I had forgotten how filled with
music they are. Music - both literally and as metaphor - is central to
the tale. In The Silmarillion, Tolkien's introduction to his imaginary
universe, Middle-earth is called into being in song, and each new act
of creation - of Elves, Men, Dwarves - is a new theme in a divine
symphony. Evil is introduced into the world as a discordant theme that
disrupts the harmony. Musically, perhaps the whole project wasn't such
a bad idea, after all. I began to realise that you couldn't actually
tell this story without music.

"But what would the music be? It was going to have to be something
quite unusual. We certainly weren't going to manage it within the
bounds of a conventional `musical' – it couldn't sound like any
Broadway or West End show any of us had ever seen before – and I was
grateful to realise that that's not what Kevin Wallace ever had in mind.

"We talked it over and came to an agreement on where to start. Evil -
the dark stuff - seemed for us the key to the music of Middle-earth. 
How do you express this darkness musically? What we wanted most of all
was to avoid the obvious - the clichéd stings and chills of horror
films. We didn't want something `scary', but something brooding and
visceral - something more Brothers Grimm than Hollywood.

"The breakthrough for us came in a stage production called The Black
Rider, by Tom Waits. The interesting title is pure coincidence -
believe it or not it has nothing to do with the Black Riders of The
Lord of the Rings.  Waits' song is from an opera he wrote with the
novelist William Burroughs in the early `90s. It wasn't that we wanted
to adopt and use The Black Rider, or imitate it, or commission Tom
Waits to compose something similar for our score (although we did
briefly kick that idea around), but there was a dark and chaotic
quality tothe piece that clearly revealed how what we wanted to do
could be done. Here were tangible ways into music unlike anything we'd
heard before on a musical theatre stage.

"We'd been talking about an 'ethnic' sound for the music of
Middle-earth, but with no particular ethnicity in mind. In fact, what
we felt we had to do wascreate a unique voice for the show - voices
actually - that might represent the wide range of cultures, species…
the geographic size of the book. Tolkien had given us a clean palette
to colour with our own imaginations. With this in mind, what had first
seemed a scary and very bad idea suddenly began to look like an
extremely good and exciting one. We were being given the opportunity
to invent our own world. "

In the end, the "dark" music Chris Nightingale and Matthew Warchus
sought as a starting point almost fell into their laps. It came with a
recording, from Finland, of a group called Värttinä.

"We knew that J.R.R. Tolkien, in writing The Lord of the Rings, had
been fascinated and much influenced by The Kalevala, the epic of
ancient Finnish legend and mythology, but that really had nothing to
do with the choice of Värttinä. That the group is Finnish, that its
songs and music are influenced by the same folklore and mythology that
influenced Tolkien is just a happy coincidence. I'd never heard of
them until John Havu gave me a record and said, 'You've got to listen
to this'.

"Who knows what it is that makes you say 'yes, that's it'? But that's
what we all felt when we heard that record. When Matthew, Kevin and I
first heard Värttinä, we knew that they were right for The Lord of the
Rings. Their approach to the sound of the 'dark' was just what we were
looking for."

To balance that music on the other end of the spectrum, the LOTR team
turned to the Indian composer A.R. Rahman. Chris Nightingale had
worked closely with Rahman as musical supervisor for the London
production of Bombay Dreams.

"Yes, I'd been working with A.R. in London, and that experience made
me aware of what he is capable of. A brilliant composer, but also a
wonderful chameleon, capable of taking on many colours - of absorbing
and transforming any music, any style and giving it his own, unique
signature.

"In Värttinä and A.R. Rahman we had the two extremes of our musical
spectrum: They are earth and air.

"But imagine the scenario… putting together two sets of composers from
two different cultures on opposite sides of the world. I don't think
anything like this has ever been done before. The challenge was tough.
For both Rahman and Värttinä, taking on a project like this was an
incredibly brave thing to do, professionally. But it's where those two
contrasting styles meet and collide that things really get interesting!"

In the centre, at that very point of collision, stands Chris
Nightingale. As musical supervisor and orchestrator, it's his job to
referee the clash, smooth over any rough edges, create a synthesis and
make all the pieces fit together.

"Sometimes I'm like a referee, and at other times I need to be glue.
My job is to ensure that the fabric of the score is seamless, that
there are no disjoins, that it's all cohesive and consistent. 

"I spent a lot of time in Finland with Värttinä and a lot of time in
India with A.R. Rahman – long before any work began in Toronto –
talking over the show, exchanging ideas. I'd bring things from
Värttinä to A.R., and from A.R. back to Värttinä… and take ideas from
all of them back to London, to Matthew and to Rob Howell, the
designer.  A wonderful thing about this experience is the way all
elements of the show have influenced the development of each other as
they've evolved; Rob Howell will hear something in the music that
affects his ideas about the set and costume design; the composers will
see something in Rob's drawings that gives them a new idea about the
music; everything has grown together, building a whole and complete
new world. In the finished score, I hope there will be no song you can
point to and say `that's by A.R. Rahman,' or `that's by Värttinä.' You
may hear a melody originally written by Rahman, but to which Värttinä
has applied its own, unique interpretation, and vice-versa. In the
end, these two very distinctive composers have come together to share
a vision of the oneness – and complexity – of this imaginary world
that their music has brought into reality."

miracle 2
This page printed from:
http://www.lotr.com/content/html/behind_musicofmiddleearth.html









Explore, Experience, Enjoy A.R.Rahman - The Man, The Music, The Magic.
Only at arrahmanfans.com - The definitive A.R.Rahman e-community.

Homepage: http://www.arrahmanfans.com
Admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To Subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To Unsubscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/arrahmanfans/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to