• Bear McCreary

    Composer for film, television and videogames. Credits include "Battlestar Galactica," "The Walking Dead," "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles," "Caprica," Step Up 3D, "The Cape," "Human Target," "Dark Void," "SOCOM 4," "Trauma," Wrong Turn 2, "Eureka" and the Rest Stop films. This blog focuses on the scores to "Battlestar Galactica" but other projects and various aspects of film music are frequently discussed.
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    BG4: “Someone to Watch Over Me,” Pt 3

    Posted by Bear McCreary on February 27th, 2009

    (Continued from Chapter 1 & 2)

    CHAPTER 3: POST-PRODUCTION

    *** Post-Production: Dealing with the Piano ***

    After I spent months helping David Weddle and Bradley Thompson write their script, and weeks helping Michael Nankin shoot it, my work on Someone to Watch Over Me was temporarily finished.  I spent the following summer scoring the most recent episodes while post-production work began on Someone to Watch Over Me. 

    Director Michael Nankin worked with editor Stewart Schill and supervising editor Andy Seklir to cut the episode and used the tracks I’d recorded at the piano in Joe’s Bar as a temp score.

    The temp tracks were very useful,” editor and associate producer Andy Seklir recalled.  “In addition to the specific pieces that Slick played in his scenes, we had also come up with idea of recording some of the other ‘character themes’ on the bar piano and this was helpful in editorial and ultimately influenced the final score.”

    Someone to Watch Over Me was the first time editor Andy Seklir was on set for the production of an episode.  Being on set and having a chance to collaborate with the director and composer from early on in the process was fantastic,” he told me.  “I definitely wish that we could to do it more often. It gives the editor a deep understanding of the material that he is going to work with and an amazing insight into the mind of the director.  So much can be learned during prep and shooting.”

    By October, a relatively locked cut was ready for me to begin composing to.  I sat down with my usual cohorts, co-producer Paul Leonard, sound designer Daniel Colman and music editor Michael Baber, and watched the cut (or “spotted” the episode, in industry-bizz-speak).  Obviously, our biggest concern was the piano.  In some takes, the actors were playing the piano while speaking, and in others they weren’t. 

    I insisted that all the scenes involving the playing of piano be done live — with the actors playing the piano as they spoke — the way it would really happen,” Nankin said.  “This created a reality that couldn’t be faked and allowed me complete freedom with the camera. The actors loved it. Bear loved it. The director of photography loved it. The sound department hated it.

    ‘The sound department wants clean tracks. They want talking without music and music without talking. This give them control in the final mix. They freaked out. Then they calmed down and set up some mikes in the piano and put radio mikes on the actors and did their best to keep things where they belonged. But anytime I isolated an actor’s face — or his hands — they asked for a clean take. It slowed things down a bit, but the final mix sounds pretty damn good.”

    Andy Seklir added “as an editor, I’m accustomed to adding music after the fact, either temp score or source music as the scene demands.  The sound editors demand clean dialogue to work with, not dialogue tied to a live piano track: 1) it affords them maximum flexibility during the mix, it allows them to find just the right balance between dialogue and music and 2) it allows them to make a mix that can be used for delivery in foreign markets where the dialogue will be dubbed into different languages.

    ‘The way Michael [Nankin] directs is to let the actors explore the scene and bring a lot to it in terms of their own spontaneity. This results in very fresh, truthful performances from the actors as well as some variation in how the scene is played from take to take. Because of the music we had to be careful about noting when Slick started playing and on which lines and made an extra effort to get clean dialogue when needed, this meant recording the dialogue as ‘clean’ wild tracks after the scene was done shooting, just to protect ourselves.”

    As I discussed earlier, I had sampled the piano while I was up in Vancouver, which means I made multiple recordings of each note in order to re-create it digitally in my studio in Los Angeles.  So, we thankfully had the option of replacing the piano performance in the scenes where the dialog or editing had, by necessity, screwed up the music. 

    Daniel Colman pointed out that the piano recorded during production was in mono,  and any pieces re-created with the sampled piano would be in stereo, or even surround if we wanted.  Clearly, the sound of the piano had to be consistent throughout the episode.  I was presented with a choice.  We could take my piano music recorded with samples and fold it down to mono to match the music recorded on set, or I could re-perform every single piece played on the piano with the samples, so they would all be in stereo.

    I’m an audiophile, so I easily made the choice to re-record all the piano music.  This would also allow me to correct any mistakes made by the actors in the musical performances and for me to completely control the harmonic and melodic content of their playing.  In essence, it gave me total control over every single note you hear in Someone to Watch Over Me. 

    The actual process of replacing the piano performances was more difficult than I had anticipated.  I had no idea what I was getting myself into.  Many of these shots are extreme close-ups of virtuosic playing by Roark Crichtlow.  In the final mix, none of the notes you hear were recorded on set.  I recreated it all in my studio, note by note, finger by finger.  I analyzed each shot down to the frame, in a mind-numbing process that reminded me of what it must be like for a computer effects artists to hand paint something out a scene, frame by frame. 

    This also presented an incredible challenge when I mapped out my tempos for a given sequence.  Certain scenes contained close-ups of fingers playing.  Therefore, regardless of how fast or slow I wanted the piece to be, at those precise frames, the piano had to match Roark’s exact movements and contour (meaning if Roark was playing up the keyboard, the pitches got higher and vice versa).  I also went out of my way to avoid obviously incorrect leaps.  For example, if Roark played an ascending interval of a second, or minor third, you will not hear a huge octave leap in the music.

    One of the most challenging shots was the opening of the second act. Slick plays the end of his current sketch in a blazing set of arpeggios that he improvised on the set.  This single thirty-second shot took me about three hours to re-perform, for every note is clearly visible.  But, frame by frame, I recreated the performance, and recomposed it as well, replacing the simple arpeggios with more interesting harmonic patterns.  But, visually the result is flawless.  At the final mix for this episode, I’ll never forget editor Andy Seklir turning to me in utter disbelief when he saw that I’d replaced that performance.

    Going through this process for the entire episode took me days on end, and nearly drove me crazy. But, look at the results yielded.  Typically, to capture a musical performance on camera, the actors lip-sync or pretend to play along with a pre-recorded track.  In this case, Roark and Katee learned the music, actually played it on camera, and then I re-performed it in post-production, perfectly lining up their fingers with the notes you’re hearing.  Their visual performance is natural, relaxed and authentic and the music I added is flawlessly performed and integrates seamlessly into both the characters’ world and the episode’s score.

    Having spotted the episode, and figured out my approach to the piano performances, I was finally ready to compose the score to Someone to Watch Over Me.

    *** Post-Production: Writing the Score ***

    Someone to Watch Over Me begins with a close-up on hands playing a beat-up, dusty old upright piano.  From this opening shot, we can tell that music will play an important role in the episode. 

    (Notice the brand of the last tube of toothpaste in the universe: “Felgercarb”)

    Once those hands begin playing, we cut to an extended montage of Kara’s daily routine, designed to capture the repetitive and dreary routine her life has become.  Personally, I think this one of the most daring teasers since Kobol’s Last Gleaming, Part II, one that allows music and editing to do the heavy-lifting.  This opening scene immediately tells the audience that this episode is unique.

    Inspired by an idea Nankin had on the set, I wanted this opening montage to sound not like a finished composition, but like a composer struggling with a musical idea that simply refuses to be written.  However, I also had to meet the narrative needs of the scene, which required a piece of music that was elegantly dark and moody but not dreary or glum. 

    The main melodic idea Slick plays in this “Elegy” is this simple ascending phrase:

    This idea, harmonized in D minor, is one of several musical building blocks that eventually form his Sonata, revealed at the episode’s conclusion. 

    Before the teaser ends, we begin the episode’s other plot line.  Chief Tyrol learns that the cylons wish to execute Boomer for her role in the cylon uprising.  At the moment he realizes this awful truth, listen for a subtle statement of the Boomer Theme in the gamelan:

    theme-boomer.jpg

    This theme is one of the oldest in my toolbox and, in combination with the Tyrol Theme, will play an important role in their arc this episode.

    The next scene introduces Kara to Slick.  She sits at the bar and snaps at him for continuing to play “the same Lame-Ass Song.”  The idea he’s working through is, in fact, the main melody of “Elegy,” from the teaser.  However, this time it has evolved and is now re-harmonized over a much more exotic augmented Eb tonic:

    He looks up from the piano and begins a conversation with Kara, while continuing to noodle around with his idea on the piano.

    This scene presented a classic pitfall for portraying music on film.  Very little in this world irritates me more than when an actor casually speaks dialog while pretending to play an instrument.  It screams “We Faked This!!!!” (For a perfect example, look no further than Jeff Bridges in Iron Man.  They can make a dude in an iron suit fly, but Obadiah Stain playing the piano flawlessly, his hands conveniently off camera, while simultaneously having a conversation with Tony Stark was simply ridiculous). 

    Speaking and playing even relatively simple music simultaneously is actually very difficult, not that you’d ever know that by watching movies or TV.  I wanted Someone to Watch Over Me to move past these clichés, so I studied the scene carefully and found the moments where Roark’s piano performance would naturally ebb and flow.  I took my cues from his mood, his tone of voice and most importantly from his body language.  Shifting his weight, turning his head, his every gesture was interpreted as musical signal.  If he briefly looks up to say a line, my piano performance hesitates slightly.  If he looks down at his hands, the tempo pick ups and become more confident, just as would happen in real life. 

    This may sound like I’m over-analyzing (I probably am), but the resultant music blends in flawlessly.  Even when I watch it now, it’s hard to believe that I manipulated the music within the scene at all.  The illusion that Slick is playing while he speaks to Kara is complete.

    Their conversation ends when she taunts him, “you want to be an immortal composer, you better learn how to play that thing first.”  And play it, he does.  Originally, the script called for a virtuosic burst of showmanship.  But, that would merely prove he can play.  Instead, David and Bradley wrote he would perform a piece of music that, yes, required a proficient pianist, but one that resonated so deeply with Kara that it would break through her defenses and move her deeply. 

    The piece Slick plays is the next building block of his Sonata:

    This piece will not only serve as the climactic cadenza of her father’s Sonata, but the top melody line of this passage will eventually reveal itself as Slick’s Theme.  The theme serves as the A Theme for the Sonata, and as Kara listens, he also plays the B Theme:

    At the end of the B Theme, we cut to the Chief’s storyline.  He’s welding in a hallway, but thinking about his past relationship with Boomer.   Here, the score takes an interesting turn.  We are no longer in Joe’s Bar, and yet we continue to hear Slick play the piano.  But, it moves from the physical space of Joe’s Bar to sounding like it’s in a concert hall.  It has, in essence, transitioned from being a real instrument in the ship, to a part of the score itself. 

    While the Tyrol Theme would have been an obvious choice for this montage, I felt it was more important to establish the piano music as a thread tying this episode together.  So, Slick’s piano plays the Sonata A Theme throughout the entire montage, although joined by percussion, yialli tanbur, duduk and the other BG score instruments.

    At the end of the montage, we again witness Boomer dying in Chief’s arms and the piano slowly echoes away, playing an ascending figure that we will hear again when the Chief / Boomer storyline reaches its climax at the episode’s conclusion.

    An episode about Starbuck is bound to have the Starbuck Theme in there somewhere:

    theme-starbuck.jpg

    The first place it can be heard is a solo duduk statement when she picks up her belongings from Helo.  This scene is important because she gets the DAT tape of her father’s performance, and also Hera’s drawing that ultimately reveals to be my Final Four Theme, standing in for “All Along the Watchtower.”

    Over the years, the Starbuck Theme has represented many different aspects of her personality (and I’ve still needed three other themes to accurately capture her complex character in music).  But, generally speaking, the Starbuck Theme represents the more heroic, balanced, sweet-natured side of her personality.  In Someone to Watch Over Me, it signifies her happiest memories of her father.  You will never hear it in a dark, or tonally ambiguous setting.  When she sees her father’s DAT tape, she realizes that there is really nothing else in the physical world that she cares about, and that seems to bring her a certain amount of peace.

    From there, we cut to the first big step in the Chief / Boomer storyline.  He goes to the brig to visit her and has an unintended projection, taking them to the dream house they never had the chance to build together.  In this scene, Chris Bleth plays the Tyrol Theme on the alto flute:

    theme-tyrol.jpg

    This theme has an interesting and convoluted history.  I originally composed it for Season One’s Litmus, intending to write the definitive Tyrol / Boomer Love Theme.  However, unbeknownst to me, they had no more love scenes in the season, and she was killed early in Season Two.  At the end of Season Two, I re-tooled the theme to serve as a Tyrol / Cally Love Theme, underscoring his heartfelt apology to her for breaking her jaw.  After occasional uses in Season Three, the theme was basically put to rest when Cally died in Season Four. 

    However, in Someone to Watch Over Me, the Tyrol Theme comes full circle and again functions as the Tyrol / Boomer Love Theme, just like I’d originally intended. 

    After his initial bad projection experience, Chief comes back and tries it out again.  This scene represents the most complete, lyrical and romantic version of the Tyrol Theme since their relationship together at the end of Litmus.  The simple arpeggiated accompaniment in the gamelan, piano and harp is also a reference to that Season One cue.

    Chief walks through their dream house, basking in every last detail.  However, he’s surprised to see a growth chart on the wall for what must be their child together.  At this touching, suspenseful moment, the Tyrol Theme is played by an ethereal piano… Slick’s piano!  I did this to further blend these two storylines together, as if Slick were in the score as well, commenting on the Chief’s discovery of his daughter.

    And what a discovery it is.  As he moves up the stairs, the score modulates upward and swells to a big statement of the Tyrol Theme in electric violin, erhu, duduk and bansuri accompanied by gamelan, piano and harps.  This kind of romantic musical gesture is rare on Battlestar Galactica, but the incredibly moving performances from Aaron Douglas and Grace Park allowed for me to write bigger musical gestures.

    The story then takes us back to Kara, who now sits besides Slick while he struggles to compose the second movement of his Sonata.  He noodles around with a bit of “Nomion’s Third” and she calls him on it.  Fans of the classic Battlestar Galactica should recognize it as well, since its actually Stu Phillips’ score, “Exploration.” 

    Slick is surprised to learn Kara has such a wealth of musical knowledge and begins a conversation about her musical upbringing.  We cut to flashbacks of young Kara taking piano lessons from her dad.  Again, a solo duduk states a warm and lyrical version of the Starbuck Theme, representing her happiest memories of her father.  As the small fingers play the piano, we hear distant and reverberant chords from Slick’s piano (produced with the samples recorded on set).  I certainly didn’t intend for this to give away that Slick is Kara’s father, but the clue is there, if you can recognize the specific timbre of that instrument.  I made the deliberate choice not to use a generic piano sound for the flashbacks.

    This scene is also important because she mentions the piece her father used to play, one that made her “happy and sad, all at the same time.”  This piece is, of course, revealed before the episode ends.

    The piano takes another unexpected step in Kara’s dream (or nightmare) sequence.  She’s walking across the completely empty hangar deck towards a young girl playing the piano.  As I mentioned earlier, actress Erika-Shaye Gair who plays young Kara, actually played the piano on the set.  She played a piece she’d learned in her own private lessons. 

    Ever since I first heard of this sequence, I planned on scoring it with a horrific blend of digitally altered piano sounds, something like “Chopin-Meets-John-Zorn-Meets-Trent-Reznor.”  In the temp score, Stewart and Andy simply played the live production track of Erika-Shaye playing the song she knew.  And oddly enough, there was something even creepier in her performance that anything I could’ve done with crazy sounds.  The cliché of a kid singing or playing a creepy song has been done to death in horror films.  But, there was an authentic, child-like simplicity to her performance that was genuinely spooky and unnerving.

     

    So, I revised my approach and decided to write a piece of music in the style of the one the little girl played on the set.  I stripped out all the insane horror-inspired sound design elements and allowed the musical performance to feel more “real,” despite the fact that the sequence is clearly a dream.  However, I did preserve one part of my original concept for this scene.  I always wanted the tune young Kara plays in the dream to be a disguised version of “Watchtower,” and so it is.  Here is my Final Four theme in its recognizable state (for the sake of demonstration, in the key of G):

    Now, invert it.  That means, take every step upward and go down instead and vice versa.  If the melody leaps up a fourth, now it leaps down a fourth.  You end up with this melody:

    This upside-down melody is what young Kara plays in her dream, set to a child-like simple piano arrangement.  Its an extremely subtle clue, but it’s there nonetheless, like a code, hidden with the music.

    We return briefly to Chief’s storyline.  Roslin informs him that she’s releasing Boomer to the cylons, and he doesn’t take the news well.  He decides that he must rescue her.  The cue underscoring this decision begins with low strings, synths and frame drums, a very typical Battlestar Galactica texture.  However, as he puts his plan into action, Slick’s piano sneaks into the score, playing arpeggiated phrases against the ever-intensifying percussion backdrop. 

    Chief turns out the lights in a hallway where cylons are working and clubs a Sharon over the head with a wrench.  At this point, the piano accelerates out of control.  It breaks free from the percussion groove and takes on a life of its own.

    We cut to Joe’s Bar to reveal that the piano we’ve been hearing in the previous scene’s score was, in fact, Slick composing.  The arpeggios stumble and eventually dissolve into frustration as Slick slams the keys.  This was a fun, and very therapeutic, cue to write.

    Kara initially tries to comfort the frustrated composer, suggested he “get laid or something.”  (I can attest that when creative frustrations get this bad, nothing helps.)  However, their conversation turns sour quickly when he reveals that he left his wife and child to pursue his music career. 

    In their next scene, Slick argues that, although she had a right to be angry, her father still left her with a gift, he taught her to play piano.  Underscoring this moment, Chris Bleth performs a lyrical statement of the A Theme of Slick’s Sonata.  This is the only time that Slick’s Theme (also Kara’s Father’s Theme, clearly) is played on an instrument other than the piano.

    He asks her to play the song and, in an intimate and heartfelt scene, coaxes her to play a few notes.  I obviously took many liberties with the piano music throughout this episode, adapting the music however I felt necessary.  But this scene between Roark and Katee was so magical, so personal and genuine, I wanted to preserve every aspect of it. The pitches you hear Kara play are the exact same pitches Katee played during production.  I composed an ambient cue to underscore them, and framed them in such a way that they are suspenseful and dream-like.  But, I perfectly preserved her notes.

    Back in the Boomer storyline, we watch as a half-conscious Athena must witness Helo having sex with Boomer impersonating her.  The score is comprised of ambient beds and pads, with sporadic tabla phrases.  But, the most important “musical” sound actually came from Daniel Colman, who provided the groaning, creaking ship tones, which provided a horrific, nightmare-like quality.

    *** The “Watchtower” Reveal ***

    The sequence where the song is revealed was by far the most difficult scene in the episode, for everyone involved.  The scene would live or die depending on when we gave away the reveal of the song.  I didn’t want to tip it too early, nor did I want to risk a portion of the audience not getting it at all. 

    At the beginning of the scene, Kara has an epiphany and realizes that Hera’s drawing is music.  She puts it on the piano before them, and Slick helps her perform it.  The instant he starts playing the left hand accompaniment could have easily given the whole thing away. 

    During production, Roark had been teaching Katee to play my duet so effectively that they had basically mastered it.  As a result, they started playing the recognizable riff far too early in the scene.  I was left with the challenging task of still matching their every movement, note by note, but also diluting the thematic quality and allow it to build.

    With Slick coaxing her along, Kara begins to noodle around on the keys, struggling to bring the melody up from her oldest memories.  These shots are inter-cut with Boomer retrieving Hera from the nursery and sneaking her aboard a raptor, unbeknownst to the Chief who is helping her escape. Throughout the whole montage, the mysterious piano strains slowly become more and more familiar, underscored with a haunting bed of strings and synths.

    Finally, Kara remembers.  The music gains momentum, and now BG score instruments begin to rise up from the shadows of the music.  We zoom in on Col. Tigh as he slowly recognizes the melody that switched him on.

    And with that, the score bursts alive.  The entire arsenal of percussion blasts in, accompanied by Paul Cartwright on electric violin, John Avila on electric bass and Steve Bartek on electric guitars and electric sitar.  Kara’s right hand melody is doubled with Chris Bleth’s wailing duduk, zurna and Martin St. Pierre’s erhu.  The arrangement is the most aggressive and rockin’ version of the Final Four theme since Season Three’s “Heeding the Call.”

    “That’s the song,” Tory says, in shock.  But, the remarkable thing is that’s not.  As I mentioned earlier, there was no instrumental melody in Bob Dylan’s “All Along the Watchtower” that would work for this episode’s needs.  As a result, the music they’re hearing is in fact, my music: The Final Four Theme.

    The scene culminates in Kara finally recognizing her father.  The writers, Nankin and I had tried to come with up a unique performance technique that could be used to trigger the realization.  David Weddle recalled We looked at Chico Marx for his style of piano playing.  And one trick of his that we kept in the script and that made it to the final cut was Chico’s trademark of ‘shooting a key’ by miming that his hand was a six gun.  Nankin came up with the brilliant topper of having young Kara pretend to blow the smoke from Slick’s fingertip/gun barrel.  This is the moment that she realizes Slick is actually her father. 

    ‘Very early on, I had wanted this moment to be a visceral and silent one – like the devastating moment at the end of Charlie Chaplin’s ‘City Lights,’ when the blind girl realizes the tramp is her secret benefactor by recognizing the touch of his hand.  This is why we wrote the moment where Slick squeezes the rim of Kara’s ear.  In the script, that gesture was the instant. Kara realizes it is her father and hopefully the audience does too because they’ve seen the same gesture in a flashback.  Nankin added Kara blowing on Slick’s gun barrel/finger and it was brilliant because she does it before she even realizes what she’s doing, a subconscious act that awakens a realization.”

    In the score, Chris Bleth’s solo duduk returns again, stating the Starbuck Theme, in a warm and romantic statement, tying this moment together with all her fondest memories of her father.  However, Tigh snaps her out of her trance and we realize that Slick was never really there at all.  Kara had played that song all by herself.

    This reveal is the most important in the episode.  Nankin confessed that, from reading the first draft his “only worry about the script was the possibility of the audience guessing too early about Kara’s dad. This concerned me during production, and now that I’ve seen the final cut, I’m still worried.”

    I must add, I’ve been shocked at how much Sci Fi Channel has publicized the musical aspects of this episode.  I am disappointed to see so many forums (including my own blog here) where fans have speculated that the mystery pianist in the photo is Kara’ dad.  And why wouldn’t you?  You’ve had weeks (or has it been months?) with these photos to think it over.  Nevertheless, I am curious to hear from all of you.  Did this reveal work?  Did it surprise you?  Did you guess the “Watchtower” reveal, and if so, at what point in the scene did you suspect?

    From the climactic moment of Kara’s storyline, we cut back to the Chief and Boomer one last time.  He helps her aboard the raptor and kisses her.  Even though the audience knows that Boomer is kidnapping Hera, the Chief is totally ignorant of this, so the score comments only on his emotions.  We hear one last warm statement of the Tyrol Theme as they kiss, before the score takes a detour into more tense and dissonant territory.

    From here, the episode takes a suspenseful turn as Boomer escapes in a raptor with Hera on board.  This entire sequence is underscored by an energetic percussion groove, a mysterious ethnic guitar riff played by Steve Bartek and held down by an intense electric bass line by John Avila.  The sequence and score build intensity as Adama squares off against Boomer.  The guitars, bass and percussion become gradually more and more aggressive with each line of dialog.

    The only melodic or thematic content of this cue are statements of the Final Four Theme played by duduk, bansuri, erhu and zhong hu: 

    theme-watchtower.jpg

    Of course, this theme is also connected to “All Along the Watchtower,” Kara, Kara’s Father and now we realize that it is also connected to Hera, because she drew it!  It no longer seems appropriate to refer to this theme as the Final Four Theme, because it has grown to mean so much more.  This theme has seeped out of the score and into the very fabric of our characters’ universe.  At this point, I have no idea what to even call it any more and I’m open to suggestions.

    The cue reaches its peak when Boomer decides to go for it and escape through the closing bay doors.  The entire ensemble blazes along and builds to a ferocious climax at the instant before Boomer jumps.  The music is then totally gone, leaving room for Daniel Colman’s chaotic and explosive sound effects.

    As the pandemonium dies down, we see a close up of Roslin, shot in high speed.  Martin St. Pierre’s lonely yialli tanbur sings a solitary statement of the Final Four theme against a dark, ambient, dissonant bed of synths and strings.

    After the pandemonium, Chief Tyrol discovers that he inadvertently helped Boomer kidnap Hera.  Here, Chris Bleth’s also flute states a creepy version of the Tyrol Theme against shifting, minor chords.  This is his darkest moment, and thusly the most dissonant arrangement of his theme yet.

    *** Slick’s Sonata ***

    As Someone to Watch Over Me concludes, Kara puts on the DAT tape of her father’s concert and listens to it beside the comatose Anders.  This is a way of returning to her roots.  She had been able to connect with her long lost father and put to rest her many conflicting emotions about him.  She can listen again to this music with a new appreciation for it.

    This cue represents Slick’s completed composition, the one we’ve witnessed him struggle to compose the entire episode.  The man we saw was a relatively young and energetic composer, and the man on the cassette tape liner notes is clearly older and even wiser.  The composition we’re hearing now has been polished and refined over the years.  His performance is confident, virtuosic and powerful.  The older man in that photo chose his life in music over a life with his family, and all those years of regret and experience were channeled through his hands and across the keys.

    For me, this piece also represents coming full circle.  Slick’s completed Sonata was the first piece of music I wrote for Someone to Watch Over Me, so it’s fitting it would be the last we hear before the credits.  After writing the thematic ideas in this piece, I worked backwards and arrived at all the different stages of composition we heard throughout the episode. 

    And Nankin very brilliantly allowed me to continue the composition from Kara’s storyline to the closing scene of the episode.  The Chief, stunned and heartbroken, stumbles into their projected dream house.  He finds his way into his daughter’s room, but she’s no longer there.  The house is an empty shell, the façade it had always been. 

    The Sonata, lush and romantic on its own, provides painful, bittersweet counterpoint to the visuals.  Kara’s father had given up everything he ever had so he could write this piece of music.  And now it underscores the pain Tyrol experiences at losing the family he might have had if life had turned out differently.  He falls to his knees, a broken man.  But, the piano performance, fluttering through half-diminished chords like a butterfly, descends gently to its graceful concluding chord as we fade to black.

    I only had the chance to write the last few minutes of Dreilide Thrace’s Sonata, but I hope that one day I have the opportunity to go back and write the complete work.

    *** Conclusion ***

    “I am extremely proud of the final product,” David Weddle told me recently.  “I don’t know of any television episode that utilizes music in such a sophisticated manner.  I think you could find some feature film musicals that do this – Bob Fosse’s ‘Cabaret,’ perhaps.  You have greater expertise in this area than I do.  But I doubt there’s another episode of television that approaches what we have done.  This is not because we are geniuses – okay, Bear, I think maybe you are – this is simply because after four years of intense collaboration we trusted each other enough to allow it to happen. 

    ‘Brad and I knew we could bring you in at the earliest stages of story development and bring in Michael Nankin.  We had no fear that you would take over the project or force the story in a direction we didn’t like.  By bringing in people who had different skill sets and strengths, we could only enrich the piece.  And this could only happen because, above all, Ron Moore let it happen.  He trusted all of us and stepped back and let us contribute everything we could to this episode.”   

    “At the end, when we were seeking the moment of recognition, there was considerable concern about the line between going too far, drenching the audience, and not going far enough, having them leaving the show going, ‘Huh?’” Bradley Thompson recalled.  In the end, we simply told Bear to run with his instinct. And it turned out frakking brilliant. As always. After seeing the mix, all I can say is the results are awesome.  The performances are seamless, the music motivated and tremendously effective.”

    “David and Bradley wrote the first series I ever did when I was eighteen,” Katee Sackhoff told me recently.  “It’s only fitting that they be the ones to write the most challenging, fulfilling storylines for Kara. I can only hope to work with them again. I would love to steel them from their new job and bring them to mine. I need those guys on every project I ever do. And I miss Kara. : (  But I’m happy with Tessa.”

    Someone to Watch Over Me was not only David and Bradley’s last script for the series, but Michael Nankin’s last turn behind the camera on Battlestar.  I know I’m going to spend a lot of frustrating time trying to re-live our experience in other venues,” he wrote in an email to all the cast and crew after shooting wrapped. “But there is no recreating the best writing staff I’ve ever seen; there’s no reassembling a cast of equal generosity, talent, soul, and graciousness. There’s never going to be a crew of such gentle souls and real artists — or producers who know the meaning of loyalty and quality and artistic freedom – or executives who allowed it all to happen. I’ll always be grateful to everyone for the chance I’ve had to thrive, for the openness to all my crazy ideas, and all the love and support I’ve felt from every department.


    (Nankin directs in the CIC)

    ‘Battlestar has been the happiest time in my career and the people involved my second family. We’ve all told ourselves and each other that we will work together again soon, but we say this to save our hearts and not to break down in each other’s arms. We all know the business has a will of its own and who we want to work with isn’t always who we actually work with. This show has been the rare exception and I can only hope that since it has all happened before… well, you know the rest.”

    So Say We All,

    -Bear

    211 Responses to This Blog Entry:

    LOVE the piano tonight Bear! The wait was definitely worth it. Aaron D. did a great job looking like your music sounded in the final scene.

    -Rich

    Anyone else notice the nod to the original BSG opening theme, when Starbuck was sitting at the piano talking to the piano player ?! When he was tinkering around on the keys, trying to clear his mind before writing the 2nd movement !?

    I was hoping we would see Bear’s debut, but I guess not.

    OMG I’m all teary eye’d just listening to my DVR playing the episode again from the living room.

    dave
    CFPrez
    http://bearmccrearyfans.yuku.com/directory/default/t/yuku-community.html?new_community=true

    Okay so Bear told us about “Exploration” in the above article. I was just too excited to read it before I posted !!

    D’OH

    dave
    CFPrez
    http://bearmccrearyfans.yuku.com/directory/default/t/yuku-community.html?new_community=true

    “The arrangement is the most aggressive and rockin’ version of the Final Four theme since Season Three’s “Heeding the Call.””

    Bear
    The above song should be a lock for that 2 CD set !

    dave
    CFPrez
    http://bearmccrearyfans.yuku.com/directory/default/t/yuku-community.html?new_community=true

    Hey Bear, it’s Andrew. I want to read through all three blog posts before I say too much else, but this episode was AMAZING!!!! I may have found a new favorite piece…That piano piece playing over the opening montage was one of the most beautiful songs I’ve ever heard. Please, please tell me that you’re going to release it as sheet music, like with “Battlestar Sonatica.” This whole episode was just…I dunno, I need a synonym for amazing. Especially for me, as a pianist, it felt more…intimate? Like I had a greater understanding of the music…Oh, and you migh like to know that I totally called that Hera was writing music from as soon as I saw her drawing. Oh, and one quick question; did you write a full piano arrangement of “Watchtower?” That would make for great sheet music, too. I’ll be back tomorrow with more comments, but that’s my initial reaction.

    I don’t think I’ve ever been as emotionally invested, musically, in an episode like this before. Your scores and creative chops were one of the main reasons I started watching the show in the first place. I’ve wholly enjoyed every bit of aural harmony provided thusfar, from frantic, sweeping melodies of fast-paced scenes, to the deep, classically moving tones of Passacaglia.

    But all of it never hit me quite like the simple piano chords so lovingly and carefully executed in tonight’s episode. I “understood” the music, on the level that Kara did, and the fact that you’ve been given such leeway and breathing room to mold these songs into your vision is such a great testament to the show as a whole.

    Simply put, and even moreso by this episode, the music you’ve written or Battlestar Galactica has given me endless enjoyment, an outlet for a range of emotions, and some truly amazing pieces that I will never forget.

    Thank you, Bear.

    I always enjoy your work on BSG, Bear, but the music in this episode *blew me away*. Please be sure to include the pieces from this one on the S4 soundtrack. I’ll happily buy a multi-CD set just to be able to listen to the music. I simply loved the way the various themes were woven into the episode. Gorgeous, gorgeous work.

    Frakking awesome! Nothing much else to say. I keep thinking that I’ve heard and seen the best BSG has to offer as the show draws to a close, and it seems that since returning from the fall break, every episode has raised the bar.

    Maybe it’s because I already anticipated some form of Watchtower or Heeding the Call, but I caught it early, long before Kara thought to take a look at what Hera made for her. Sometimes all it takes is a couple notes played in just the right way (even if they’re played on an abused and out of tune piano) to know what the song is. And when Slick and Kara get into the groove… man, that was simply awesome. I think I had the same look as Saul and Tory when they realized what was coming out of the piano.

    Keep this up and you could do a release of only Watchtower variations. A full piano arrangement would be great. And the accordian version you did a while back, along with every other time it’s crept into the show.

    Nice touch, getting Stu Phillips involved as well. I must admit, I was never a big fan of the original Galactica. I watched it a few times as reruns, but it didn’t draw me in, which is probably part of why it took me so long to get into the reimagined version. Still, it should make fans of the original happy to know that the original hasn’t been completely left behind.

    Sounds like you had a good time doing all this, even if it wasn’t all easy.

    It was worth it.

    This was incredible. I don’t think I have ever been this moved by a piece of music on television or in a movie, and coupled with the visuals, the result was amazing. The episode aired four hours ago, and I’m still at a loss for words. Bravo, Bear.

    Bear, I’m a first time poster. I had to register to tell you that this episode’s music just rocked me to the core. I love piano, I played for a few years when I was a teenager. I’ve always had a very deep appreciation for music and especially piano. This makes me want to play again so very badly…As soon as I can afford it, I am for sure buying a keyboard so that I can start playing again. Is there sheet music available for your work? Oh and I want that piano from the bar!

    I didn’t realize it was “Watchtower” until after they copied Hera’s notes and Roarke joined Katee for the duet.

    Katina

    Holy FRAK.

    You have outdone yourself this time, Bear; and I’m usually unfairly reserved with my outlandish compliments on this blog!

    :)

    I’ve been reading your blog for some time, but this was definitely the one (er, three) that pulled me in far enough to comment. And while I’m feeling like a man of few words tonight, nevertheless I felt the urge to thank you for this wonderful series of entries.

    I don’t think I’m quite suited for helping you rename a theme, since I have next to no musical background as far as the mechanics of it all goes. I’ve been writing lyrics for years, sure, but someone else ought to assist you in such an endeavor. Still, if I had to throw around a couple of things for kicks, as I’m really only commiting myself toward since it’s the least I can do for you, I’d say something which evokes synergy would be smart; maybe ‘Synonymous’ in reference to the link between the characters, or taking a similar approach, ‘Characterization’… no, scratch that one, that’s not even remotely case-specific.

    Well, I tried. Really, I’m not at all fond of my recommendations because they don’t mesh so well with the traditional tone you set your soundtrack’s etymology toward. Here’s hoping you come to some form of cohesive state with a potential, er, retcon of the title in question? Regardless of what it winds up being called, I’ll love it to death for the rest of my life. Hey, even ‘Tauron Toothpaste’ has a ring to it; it’s the music, not the name, which defines itself.

    Why I’ve gone on such a particular little rant when there’s so much else to comment on in your entries is beyond me. Maybe sometime in the future I’ll talk about some of the myriad of other issues raised here and elsewhere on the site. In the meantime, a heartfelt thanks for all the years of terrific, memorable music; right now, my girlfriend and I are tuning into a Bear McCreary playlist we frequent with about as much consistency as our favourite band, Nine Inch Nails. (Kudos to the Trent reference; I feel all the more eclectic for enjoying your style and his now that things have come inadvertently pseudo-full-circle.)

    I’m appropriately psyched for the finale’s score. Your pieces have truly become a character of their own in the same way the Galactica has; it will be every bit as savory in the future to replay them on my computer as it will be to rewatch the series on DVD.

    Aha, the intensely musical episode you alluded so many months ago! I remember your posts before “Revelations” aired when you mentioned a very special musical episode you were working on!

    Bear, I was definitely surprised by the Final Four/Hera/All-Around-The-Watchtower-stand-in theme (maybe it should be called the “All Purpose Theme” :-). I loved the piano throughout and was so happy to read through all three parts of your blog post. I’m sitting at my piano right now playing the above-mentioned theme and now can’t get it out of my head.

    I too hate it when movies use stand-ins for instruments and am so psyched to read about how Roark and Katee were really playing the piano.

    Is there any case we’ll get to see more BSG sheet music published aside from “Battlestar Sonatica” (which I have and love!), especially from this episode? Here’s one fan hoping for a lot more sheet music from you!

    If you’re not nominated for an Emmy next year, there is absolutely no justice. And I can’t imagine what the next final episodes’ music is going to sound like…I know I continually get blown away by your talent! Thank you for sharing so much of your process with us as always!

    I agree there should be sheet music for the music throughout this episode – particularly the Final Five/Four theme.

    Also an appearance on the soundtrack.

    Bear,
    I have read your blog only sporatically but have greatly appreciated the work you have done on BSG. But tonights episode is something else, man. I sit here in awe over the overall production and storytelling of the episode. What haunts me the most here is the piano and the music used throughout the whole episode. Goddamn, I have no more words but Goddamn.

    “‘What the Frak is Happening?’ Theme”

    As for guessing it was Kara’s father, no I was more interested in the music, to be honest. I didn’t really get it until he held Kara’s face and when Saul grabbed her shoulder and he was gone. I’m not a big fan of reading that speculation crap. The show is much more enjoyable without it.

    Bear, bravo.

    Bravo, bravo, bravo!

    What a wonderfully intricate and deeply moving episode, and it has your score to thank for its impact!

    Truly, you are the most talented composer in television! Congratulations on a great episode.

    A new title for the Final Four Theme…. Hmmm…

    Well, my own pathetic attempt would be “Something in the Universe”, as it seems to be directly connected to that mysterious force that’s driven the miraculous events of the series thus far. It also echoes several lines of dialogue in the show, with Baltar’s “*Something in the universe* loves me… There’s *something in the universe* that loves the entity that is me…” and Hoshi’s “*Something in the universe* led us to earth, that as it is…”.

    Again, congrats on a fantastic ep!

    Bear, you stunk. Absolutely stunk. Which is good, since if you’d nailed the acting gig we’d have not gotten probably your best reveal cue of the series. And think about this too – if you’d actually had a spoken part, want to bet you’d have been so obsessed with getting that right that you would have tried to convince sound to rerecord your voice? Glad it all worked out. :)

    You’ll be happy to know that I didn’t catch on to Starbuck’s dad until very late, and based on the early comments I’ve read on other blogs a number of others didn’t as well. Good job. You deserve a great honeymoon, but you’ll have to take a break first and get married!

    And Kara’s “Something out there wants us to find Earth *with* the Cylons” in Revelations.

    Really Enjoyed the final four theme along with the creepy piano music. I did not understand who the guy at joes bar is. is he kara’s father or just some guy.
    whatever happend to baltars six ? she doesnt just appear at random anymore & last weeks deadlocked was the first time since baltars trial that weve seen her?

    Bear asked:
    “You’ve had weeks (or has it been months?) with these photos to think it over. Nevertheless, I am curious to hear from all of you. Did this reveal work? Did it surprise you? Did you guess the “Watchtower” reveal, and if so, at what point in the scene did you suspect?”

    We’ve also speculated that Starbuck’s Dad will turn out to be Daniel, the Cylon Cavil thought he killed. And before the final 5th Cylon was revealed a lot of people were thinking Baltar.

    It was not a complete surprise, but there is so much speculation, much of it wrong, I’m never really certain about anything so there is still some surprise left to enjoy.

    As soon as I was sure it was Starbuck’s father (a head-Dad) I expected “Watchtower.” For me being sure he was her father, that came with the way he guided Starbuck’s hands, there were even flashbacks of him doing it the same way when she was younger. And before that, the Phantom of the Opera scene where Starbuck sneaks up on the childhood version of herself and spins her around I was thinking he has to be her father but I wasn’t sure. There was just so much focus on her childhood. And that conversation Starbuck had about her father with him provided a huge clue.

    For expecting the “Watchtower”… It was because of the way the music had become so integral to this episode, that’s the way it was the first time we heard “Watchtower.” It almost couldn’t have not been there.

    It was still a very effective episode. Very haunting and your music really worked towards that feeling most effectively of all the elements.

    As for a rename for the theme — “The Cylon Cryptograph.” It’s still pretty cryptic stuff that’s happening around that music.

    Bear,

    You really outdid yourself on this one.

    That reveal of the Final Four theme (or perhaps the Cylon Revelation Theme) made the hair on the back of my neck stand up.

    The revalation seen had better be on the … oh you know already ;-)

    Nice tip of the hat to the original series also.

    Bravo !!!!

    I love getting behind-the-scenes perspectives on TV and movies, and I have to say, this three-part series is some of the most in-depth and fascinating coverage I’ve ever seen. It was a rare treat for me as both a fan of music and BSG to get to see how much the music played an intricate part of the episode.

    As for the reveal of Slick as Kara’s dad, I have to admit that I guessed it pretty quickly. I don’t think that was necessarily a bad thing; certainly, I don’t think it was the result of sloppy work. The interactions between Slick and Kara became more poignant as soon as I hit upon it. It was less about the shock value and more about the expanding of Kara’s character.

    Anyway, it was a stellar episode, and probably one of my all-time favorites for the show.

    I’m speechless.
    What you did in this episode musically is a reinvention of television soundtracking, and it boggles the mind how everything fits in to place perfectly, including the music.

    I think this one will go down in the history books as the most innovative use of music in a television series, and seriously – if you don’t get awarded for this, something’s wrong with the world.

    -Elad

    Final Four Theme/Watchtower copmletely blew me away! I watched that one snippet 14 times in a row. Any chance you’re going to compose a fully fleshed out version for piano? Maybe release it free on the internet?

    Zaij.

    Don’t know how to edit, but what I meant was the score (though a full audio version would be fantastic too!)

    I’ve rewatched the opener and the Watchtower revelation scene multiple times purely to listen to your music. To be able to listen to those pieces clean, without dialogue or background sounds would be absolutely glorious. I’ve been pining for the S4 soundtrack since “Revelations” and this has only increased my anticipation. It’s been said above, but since you asked for feedback on pieces we hoped would be included from the first half of the season, I’m definitely casting my vote for the score from the opener and the segue from the piano to All Along the Watchtower and back to the piano again as pieces the soundtrack should not be without.

    I’m a huge fan of your Starbuck theme, too, and I thought it was beautifully articulated in this episode. I was thrilled every time I heard it.

    Not only are you a musical genius, but you take the time to compose such warm, humorous and compelling posts, that take us from the first phone-call, to the set, to the auditioning couch, and the bins behind the set, and into your hotel room, and into the post production suite… Quite a whirlwind! Thanks so much for doing that, I feel like I really know the process and the people who make BSG so awesome and lovely (such as yourself!).

    To answer your question about if guessing that it was Kara’s father ruined it I don’t think it did. I did guess fairly early on that it was her father simply because i’m so used to looking for those sort of things these days. However what might have ruined another episode didn’t effect this one in my mind. The whole episode was edited and acted so well that it didn’t matter that I had an idea where it was going. I did not think it would be the “Watchtower” theme though, and the reveal of it coupled with the realization Kara has was just great to watch. Just didn’t matter that I knew.

    Wow, man. What an incredible series of blog posts. I think it took me a couple hours to read them. Hearing your stories about working on this episode has inspired me. I’m a struggling 22 year old composer and hearing this sort of stuff is uplifting. I’m not struggling in the sense of making a living, but creatively. Even though I’ve studied every conceivable textbook and torn apart hundreds of classical scores I suffer from that same paralytic perfectionism that you mentioned, and it’s extremely frustrating not being able to create something satisfactory even though you have worked so hard to acquire a comprehensive knowledge of the craft. But knowing how you worked through your perfectionism and are now having such great experiences in musical creation is really encouraging. I want to be doing something as great as the stuff you did during the creation of this episode. So thanks for sharing everything in such detail, it was both interesting and personally motivating for me.

    Ok…ok…I literally JUMPED off the couch when I heard “Exploration” that on the commercial break I whipped out my Ipod and listened to it on my copy of the Stu Phillips Anthology….wish more of it could of been included but that was freakin awesome Bear! You had alluded previously to the fact another original series music nod was coming and you delivered.

    This episode HAS to rank up there musically as one of my favorite episodes, and these blog entries, as you have described what went in to the creative process, only solidifies my opinion that it Galactica is not only deserving of an Emmy this season, but you should get one as well.

    The piano was CLEARLY the right choice of instrument. I only hope that some of the material gathered during the creative process of this episode can be included in the “extras” of the DVD. Please express that to the powers that be if you could.

    Clearly a great collaborative effort all around.

    Bear,

    Regarding Romantique and heirware’s suggestion about sheet music, I think a great compromise would be making available condensed lead sheets for the music from the show. Some pieces can be more thoroughly notated than others.

    If you’re not sold on preparing a commercially available release, consider selling it as a PDF on your site (or any vendor you choose). That way, people can print out only the pieces they want to work on (how environmentally friendly!), and it’s not such a huge hassle to deal with a publisher’s specs and schedule. Also, PDFs can be watermarked with the purchaser’s name during download to protect against someone distributing it freely online (a lot of scientific journals use this measure on downloaded articles).

    Of course, if you want to make “Battlestar Galactica: The Complete Scores” available as a PDF (which I’d love, if just to see how a lot of it is orchestrated), I’ve got my wallet at the ready. Name your price.

    Again, brilliant work on this episode. I am so going to miss this show. I am glad, however, that you’ve teamed up with the “Caprica” production. You and the Colonials need to stay together for a little while longer.

    —Romann

    P.S. I saw the news elsewhere on your blog: Congratulations on your engagement! That’s one musical family you’re making!

    Hey Bear,
    Love the blog. The piano player being Kara’s father was pretty evident in the episode. I hadn’t been spoiled so I wasn’t looking for it. I’m fairly sure who HE is but no spoiler’s here. Just like to say how much I love finding the cues from the original series hidden here and there.

    As a fellow (yet decidedly less talented) musician, I want to offer my heartfelt thanks for the effort you went to to make the music match the visuals so seamlessly – it wasn’t until I read this blog that I could truly *know* whether it was dubbed or played live on set. So major kudos to you, and you can rest assured that people *do* notice and appreciate it.

    Likewise, the intensity and brilliance of the music in this episode is nothing short of amazing – I honestly feel I could write a 2000-word essay on the use of music in this episode alone. How things shift in and out of diegesis… it’s a true credit to the sublime quality of the writers and your good self, not to mention the rest of the crew.

    As to what to name that little ear worm-y piece of music… the only thought I had was the scene with Ellen and Saul towards the end, where Ellen describes Hera’s ability to scribble the music as being “plugged in” to whatever it is that’s guiding them. So my humble suggestion is ‘Connections/Connected’, whichever takes your fancy.

    Looking forward to the final three eps!

    - Julian

    Kara’s line to Slick the piano man about songs that make you happy and sad at the same time could not be more true about the music of the last few episodes. The response, “the best ones do” fits perfectly with how I’m sure all fans of the music of the show feel, we love it, but it fills us with a sense of loss in light of the looming end of the show.

    I could not help but be moved by the music underlying the scene of Chief’s projection into what could have been with Boomer, especially when it was contrasted with the simple piano rift at the end following her betrayal. I agree with the others that the final CD set will have to be epic, there is just too much to leave behind.

    I got the chills once I realized that it was the Final Four theme on the piano, and just when I thought this episode would answer some of those “what is she” questions, this opened up more as to the nature of Kara and this weird music that keeps pulling her and the five towards some unknown destiny.

    Bear, what was the name of that piano rift that played over Tyrol’s final projection, are you going with Slick’s Sonata?

    Left by empireofdc on February 28th, 2009

    Brilliant, as usual, but this time … this time was fantabulous. I can’t believe I was tricked yet again into a big “Watchtower” reveal. But that’s OK; it was great.

    Yes, I guessed the piano player was Kara’s father but it didn’t hurt my enjoyment. (I predicted a few episodes back that the Cylon “Daniel” would be revealed as Kara’s father. I’m closer to being proven correct on that count, I believe.) I didn’t know, however, if he’d actually be there or if he’d be in Kara’s head.

    As for a rename for your rendition of the Watchtower/Final Four theme, just call it, “That Song.” As far as dialogue goes, that’s how it’s always been referred to and we’ll know exactly what you mean.

    I’ve also got to add that I once got Passacaglia stuck in my head for three days straight. Was whistling it and everything. I could only eject it by playing very loud Muse on my train-rides in and out of work. My poor fellow train travellers (even with my iPod).

    Bear this episode was so artistic and poetic, i loved every single second of it as your music just seemed to flow through and mature as the episode went along.

    I didnt catch onto the Final four theme until the other instruments kicked in and it cut to Tigh and Tory realising it. Fantastic job !

    I sort of thought that was Kara’s father, only because i read alot of forums etc and people have been speculating over that pic for months. But it was still very well unveiled (i’ll see my sisters reaction as she doesnt read any forums or anything).
    There are still questions though, was Kara’s father cylon, who is Hera etc.

    This is up there as one of my favourite episodes of all time, one that i can show people what BSG can be, that its not some random scifi show.

    You did an incredible job, im so sad i wont get to see your work in BSG for much longer, but all good things, looking forward to the finale.

    Hi Bear,
    I just watched the episode and read your blog entries.

    Well, what you did on this episode is simply fantastic on a technical level (sampling the piano, re-playing all parts, etc..)

    Even more amazing however, is the emotional level… and what is the essence of music if not emotion?

    Let me just say that I felt it all!

    Bravo!

    Well, since you asked, yes, I picked that the piano player was Starbuck’s dad from the first scene in the show. Not because it was obvious or I’m brilliant; it was just one of those things.

    But once the episode got to the two-for-one reveal, I didn’t care. There’s this little pause, like an intake of breath, where the camera cuts in close on Starbuck and Slick, just before he nods his head and they launch into the recognizable “Watchtower/Final Four” theme. That moment hit me so hard, I nearly fell off my couch. The whole “yeah, yeah, he’s her dad and it’s all in her mind” thing seemed like an irrelevant red herring, a head-fake that served to make the musical reveal just that much more powerful. And significant, from a story point of view. Okay, fine, Kara’s hallucinating or projecting or whatever, that’s interesting. But that Kara’s father would have taught her the same song Anders composed back on Earth … THAT changes everything. THAT’s a reveal.

    So to answer your question, the not-entirely-effective twist of Slick being Kara’s father served to completely conceal the INCREDIBLY effective musical twist.

    Bear,
    All of us responding give you a standing ovation! Not simply for the music which to quote above is fantabulous, but for the time and care, the proverbial blood sweat and tears you lavished on this episode. Nothing like it has ever been done before. This is a milestone for BSG and for your career.
    Thank you too for this incredible three chapter blog. You needed all three chapters to chronicle this incredible journey, a journey in time, space and music. Wow! You have outdone yourself on this one, and the accolades should come in arrpeggios.
    Bravo!

    It worked beautifully.

    Did this reveal work?
    It was probably the best reveal of the series, actually. Don’t get me wrong, Boomer, the final four, Ellen, etc. all were certainly engaging and original, but they didn’t have the emotional depth provided by the father-daughter relationship that this reveal was able to so successfully communicate. Adding in music was, and I honestly don’t use this word often, ingenious. Kara’s father had been a musician, which would suggest that music was a part of their relationship, part of who Kara is. Utilizing that as the vehicle for the reveal, especially in such a way that’s so important to the overall narrative of her story, was highly original and deeply touching. Too often we get Father of the Bride types of father-daughter relationships in entertainment, somewhat shallow and lacking in realism.

    Did it surprise you?
    Absolutely, kinda. The truth is that this reveal had been a really long time coming, especially considering that the pieces had been dropped here or there since the beginning of the series. Kara’s father was a musician. Kara’s father left suddenly. Kara is in some way supernatural, separate from the cylon and humans due to her connection to the maelstrom and resurrection. Since we’ve seen Hera has her connection to the other world, the supernatural world, it’s not unlikely that Starbuck could have been a hybrid (since we already know the identities of all the human-form cylon). But it was still deeply mysterious, and that was good. I’ll admit that I made a very lucky guess as to who Kara’s father really several episodes back in “No Exit”, but it didn’t spoil anything really. It’s part of the fun of watching Battlestar. And now, for those who also guessed, it really brings Kara’s arc into focus and it has incredible repercussions for the whole series.

    Did you guess the “Watchtower” reveal, and if so, at what point in the scene did you suspect?
    I didn’t think it would be Watchtower until they dove into the duet. “What the frack?!” had my entire living room rolling with laughter as we all simultaneously recognized your theme. Gotta love Michael Hogan.

    I hope you’re proud of what you’ve done here, because it’s something unique and beautiful, at least in my experience. I look forward to the series finale, the release of the Season 4 soundtrack, and your future projects.

    Challenger2090… “Oh, and one quick question; did you write a full piano arrangement of “Watchtower?” ”

    Hey Andrew… I didn’t really write out a whole version, because without the lyrics it doesn’t have anywhere to build.

    However, since many are asking, I’m considering releasing the piano sheet music for this episode, like I did for “Battlestar Sonatica.” It won’t be for a while, though, since I’ll have to expand some of the shorter sketches into workable compositions. But, I imagine that some pianists out there would want to try them out.

    Katina… “As soon as I can afford it, I am for sure buying a keyboard so that I can start playing again.”

    I’m honored to serve as such an inspiration. Start playing!

    ACyclicUniverse… “Well, my own pathetic attempt would be “Something in the Universe”

    I don’t think that’s pathetic at all. In fact, I’ve been thinking along those lines myself. This theme seems like a thread that is woven throughout the universe by some higher power, people on Earth thousands of years ago and characters in the present day all hear it for different reasons. I don’t know that “Something in the Universe” Theme feels quite right, but its definitely in the right direction…

    Norman Doering… “As for a rename for the theme — “The Cylon Cryptograph.””

    Another great suggestion!

    -Bear

    Ciel… “I suffer from that same paralytic perfectionism that you mentioned, and it’s extremely frustrating not being able to create something satisfactory even though you have worked so hard to acquire a comprehensive knowledge of the craft. ”

    I was not exaggerating when I discussed how crippling this was for me when I was getting started. Our ambitions often outreach our technical prowess, but don’t let that stop you. Remember, composing music (like any other art) requires a small amount of talent, and an enormous amount of skill. Talent is luck-of-the-draw, you’re born with it or not. But, skill can be acquired. Keep working at it until your skills become as second-hand and naturally accessible as your talent already is.

    Sqrnookle… “‘Connections/Connected’, ”

    Another good theme name idea.

    empireofdc… “Bear, what was the name of that piano rift that played over Tyrol’s final projection, are you going with Slick’s Sonata?”

    I don’t know yet. “Slick’s Sonata” sounds trivial, but it is an accurate title. I’ll think of something more profound by the time the album comes around.

    angela… “I could only eject it by playing very loud Muse on my train-rides in and out of work. M”

    Freakin’ love Muse. They rock. My favorite album is “Origin of Symmetry,” although they’re all good.

    -Bear

    Like everyone else has said, you guys knocked it out of the park. I’ve watched the episode at least a half a dozen times now and the reveal still makes me tear up every time. Frakking amazing work!

    I can in no way claim to have come up with this, as I’m sure I’ve read it referred as this somewhere before (Battlestar Wiki maybe), but “The Song of Awakening” would get my vote on what to call it. Every time we hear the song it seems to bring revelations.

    Bear, thank you for giving us non-professionals a window into your world. In this age of specialization (mine happens to be accounting and taxation), I appreciate it greatly when a doctor or a lawyer–or an audio expert–takes the time to explain what he’s doing in terms that a layman can understand. Despite your voluminous posts, no doubt you’re leaving a lot out.

    At this point BSG requires intense concentration from its fans. Events are occuring fast and furious, and we’re constantly having to fit them into what we know of the BSG universe, all the while questioning whether the now richly developed characters are behaving truly. Your music, great as it is, must support and not overwhelm what we see. At times it must be frustrating for someone who is as good as you are to be second fiddle (hah). I will definitely rewatch, or rather re-listen to,”Someone to Watch Over Me” on my Tivo.

    Speaking of fiddles, what’s painfully a lot phonier than a fake pianist is a fake violinist or cellist. I shudder every time an actor playing Sherlock Holmes picks up the violin. The bow movements are totally unrelated to the sound, and you hear a rich vibrato on the track without seeing any left hand movement.

    Thanks again, Bear.

    What about a little riff on “Heeding the Call” and just name it “The Call”

    Thomaslilly beat me to it. I like “Song of Awakening” because a) it always foreshadows a huge reveal and b) the revelation comes from within.

    [[Nevertheless, I am curious to hear from all of you. Did this reveal work? Did it surprise you? Did you guess the “Watchtower” reveal, and if so, at what point in the scene did you suspect?]]

    First things first: I love and am enormously grateful for this blog. I’ve been pulling film scores apart for fun since I was six and first saw “Return of the Jedi,” (and that approach, from listening to scores and soundtracks and trying to transcribe them for my french horn, eventually took me to an MFA in cinema studies) so having it here in black and white is just phenomenal for me. I also got to gloat to my fiance that I’m NOT insane and really WAS hearing hints of Gershwin in a BSG episode. He nodded and smiled. This episode, and this wonderful three-part post, inspired me to register and comment for the first time.

    This episode is possibly my favorite of the whole series. And depite my familiarity with movies, games, and (rarely) TV using big black Sharpie lines to draw aural connections between characters and events, I didn’t see the reveal coming until just a fraction of a second before it did. I thought, perhaps ignobly, that BSG was rehashing the character-just-like-daddy trope on Starbuck. Not until Tigh et. all approached the half-empty bench did I realize that it wasn’t “just like” daddy at all. That was a huge “Sixth Sense” moment and I think probably the best, most deftly handled twist-reveal of the series so far.

    When Kara started playing Hera’s drawing I teared up a little bit. And all of the piano work… this episode is the best combination of source music and thematic scoring I’ve seen since I fell in love with the Lord of the Rings score. I would say “keep it up,” but I know too well that all good things come to an end, and the rest of BSG’s story is already in the can. I hope to continue reading beautiful blog posts about all your future works. :)

    Bear,

    I’ve finally registered after following your blog since the start of this season. The latest episode was incredible, and your score was absolutely beautiful. I felt compelled to congratulate you after having just viewed it, and the amount of hard work you put into it is nothing short of inspiring.

    The moment where Kara and her father start to play the ‘Watchtower’ part completely floored me. It was amazing. I hope this makes the CD, along with all the other stunning piano pieces from this episode.

    Thanks for all the great work! All your music through all four seasons has been wonderful, and it’s only getting better. Looking forward hearing what else you have in store for us.

    One question upon rewatch – was that you playing the Sonata at the end, or did you outsource that to someone else given your comment on your abilities on that instrument?

    And by the way, the reveal worked for me. Even now, I still don’t know if Slick existed – just that he was Dad at the very, very end. Well done.

    HaroldS… “was that you playing the Sonata at the end, or did you outsource that to someone else given your comment on your abilities on that instrument?”

    Actually, yeah it was me. I planned on bringing in a concert pianist, but I found that by the time I wrote all these difficult passages, I had reached the point where I could play them. So, I played everything in the episode.

    ThomasLilly… ““Song of Awakening””

    Another good suggestion. Sounds a little like it should be new-age yoga music, though. :) Don’t know if it reflects how bad-ass this theme usually sounds.

    -Bear

    How About “Cylon Revelations” as a name?

    Bear,

    I thought that the musical integration into this episode was absolutely brilliant, from the sampling of the piano on the set to the reversal of the “Final Four Theme” during the dream sequence.
    I didn’t have time to read through all the comments, and if I repeat anyone’s post, I apologize. I, essentially and desperately, am hoping that the piano arrangement of the to-be-renamed “Final Four Theme” gets onto the season four soundtrack. I listened to both your arrangement of “Along the Watchtower” and “Wander my Friends” for days on end each, and still do. I pray you put a full-fledged arrangement (since you have all the samplings of the set-piano ;-) *hint hint poke poke*) onto the soundtrack.

    Also, if you are really looking to suggestions as to renaming the theme, here’s what I’m thinking. Since this song seems to permeate the entire mythology so thoroughly, you could throw and epic and cosmic title to it. “Hymn of the Universe”, though that’s a bit pretentious. “Hymn of the Awakened”, “Ballad of the Awakakened”, et. al.
    This doesn’t neededly apply to the awakened cylons, but even to Hera and Starbuck. Hera obviously knows something deeper than any of the characters are getting at, and Starbuck is now growing into her destiny, whether she knows it or not. I think that “The sleepers [that] awaken” (“that” is optional) is a bit more wordy, but sounded good in my head. Also, its a little too Frank Herbert/David Lynch.

    Essentially, this was absolutely fantastic, and I can’t wait to see and hear more from you, both in this series (for what remains of it) and others.

    ~Rob Mayer

    “Kara initially tries to comfort the frustrated composer, suggested he “get laid or something.” (I can attest that when creative frustrations get this bad, nothing helps.)”

    In hoc verbi, veritas!

    “fans have speculated that the mystery pianist in the photo is Kara’ dad. And why wouldn’t you? You’ve had weeks (or has it been months?) with these photos to think it over. Nevertheless, I am curious to hear from all of you. Did this reveal work?”

    Yes.

    “Did it surprise you?”

    That “Slick” is Starbuck’s father, no. That he’s a… non-corporeal manifestation (figment of her imagination? “Head Dreilide” to go along with “Head Six, Head Baltar & Head Leoben?” Angel of God?) – well, I’d been suspecting earlier in the ep, but only as one theory among many. The confirmation at that moment was… powerful.

    “It no longer seems appropriate to refer to this theme as the Final Four Theme, … At this point, I have no idea what to even call it any more and I’m open to suggestions.”

    Hmm… the Destiny Theme? But perhaps “Something in the Universe” (Left by ACyclicUniverse) is better.

    “Kudos to the Trent reference”

    I enjoyed seeing the Zorn reference.

    “…Dreilide Thrace’s Sonata, but I hope that one day I have the opportunity to go back and write the complete work.”

    So say we all.

    - M. \”/

    “That “Slick” is Starbuck’s father, no. That he’s a… non-corporeal manifestation (figment of her imagination? “Head Dreilide” to go along with “Head Six, Head Baltar & Head Leoben?” Angel of God?) – well, I’d been suspecting earlier in the ep, but only as one theory among many. The confirmation at that moment was… powerful.”

    I agree. It wasn’t a surprise, however the way it was executed, both musically, and production-wise, made it not matter that it wasn’t a surprise.
    Also, Don’t forget about Head-Elosha in the president’s vision before she came back to Adama in the raptor. I really believe that all these entities are in fact all the same being, as well now, as Slick. Also, during Sam’s nearly incoherant ramblings, the final five all saw beings that only they could see, saying that they appeared as different people to each of them. There’s at least five more “head” entities.
    If anyone is familiar with the original series, I really believe that the beings of light are going to make their reimagined appearance.

    I think one key thing to remember is that the reveal was not just about showing that Kara was envisioning her father, but that the music he taught her as a kid was Watchtower. I might have seen the first one coming, but definitely not the second.

    What really sent shivers down my spine, was that overhead shot of Kara and Slick at the piano, and his hands hit the keyboard with the same rhythm of the drums. Man, that was explosive. I don’t think there was any percussion throughout the entire episode until that point and when it hits, that song just blasts out of nowhere. Excellent work.

    What a great musical episode… it’s fun how every character in the show has had a centric episode, and this feels like the Bear McCreary centric episode, the music just feels like it’s injected in the veins of the whole hour, and the fact that most of the score is played in piano makes it just sound so melancholic, which works perfectly for Starbuck’s distant memories of her father, and just the general feel of the show’s final days (I was really scared with Slick being Kara’s father, cause that would have been one coincidence to many for the show, but when I noticed that Slick was just having dialogue with Starbuck it became pretty evident that he probably was just a memory or a head character at the most), and just reading how the writers used your own frustration as inspiration for a character’s writer’s block in a show where you are the composer is just gold, talk about serendipity.

    I must admit that I never imagined that the final four theme was going to be the song that Kara was going to remember, but the second they decoded Hera’s painting and he started to play the piano I instantly recognized it, and I was just pumped by the time all the instruments came together (This is a soundtrack must by the way, if you’re still asking around), and the little gunbarrel moment at the end was just visually great, and just reading the story about how it came to be, makes it ten times better.

    I just wanna ask if there was a moment that anyone considered using the Philip Glass song heard back in season 2 for any of the Starbuck/Slick scenes or that would have brought unwanted attention to that particular song? and does every basestar has a Bear McCreary clone playing piano or was it just Baltar’s particular basestar?

    OK, that’s all, as always this show is just to great in so many levels its almost unbelieveble, I’m happy/sad to know that the end is near, great job and good luck Bear.

    PS: Well now that bad-ass has been used by the composer himself to describe the ex-Final Four Theme, how about “A Distant bad-assery”, or to use Prince as inspiration, THE THEME formerly known as the final four theme, or maybe we all should just wait to see where the theme actually leads everyone involved to decide the new name, for all we know it’s actually the “Holy frak everyone is INDEED going to die” theme.

    hi!

    first of all, awesome awesome awesome music! your music is always awesome, but the score really blew me away this particular episode. the montage at the beginning worked wonderfully, everything flowed together in a manner reminiscent of both “kobol’s last gleaming I” and, emotionally, “scar”.

    i have a question though: do you know by any chance why is dreilide thrace’s name “dreilide”? instinctually i broke the word in two “drei” and “lide”, because in misspelled german it would mean “three songs” (songs in german is spelled “lieder”). and then it made me think of the french lieds (debussy and faure and whatnot). maybe the name isn’t tied to any of these things – over-analyzing things is a hobby of mine – but thought i’d ask if you know, especially since he is , certain ways, connected to you. :)

    thank you for a great score, and for the detailed blog entries. love reading these saturday morning after watching the show.

    best, annie

    ExquisiteAgony,

    Dreilide is German for “Third Eyelid” referring to the third/mysical eye. The third eye is typically linked to clairvoyance and visions.

    I for one didn’t get the father reference until I read this blog. The Watchtower reveal was simply so epic that it swept everything else away. It was done so well, I’ve rewathced the scene a dozen times now and yeah, the melody is there but in its slowed down, gentle mode I couldn’t recognize it at all before Slick picked up the pace and slammed on the keys to bring it to life.
    This moment was such a profound and unique experience. I can’t think of anything to compare it to. Basically it reconfirmed that whatever supernatural entity has been orchestrating everything up until now is still pulling the strings and there’s more to Kara’s destiny before the end.

    Thank you for this very elaborate description of the whole creative process in 3 movements ;) and most of all thank you for making this episode work so well.

    PS. So you like NIN, huh. ;D

    Bear, I keep on saying this.. but that was some of the best music you’ve made so far. Hearing the piano piece evolve and move in to the FF theme was amazing, as was hearing callbacks to the TOS theme and a (I thought) Metamorphosis at the start.

    Please, please please pleeeeeaaaaase bring us a two-CD Season 4 soundtrack.

    ..and on a sidenote, I will go back to the piano for the first time in about 10 years if you could release some sheet notes of that FF piano : )

    Now that I’ve had several hours of sleep (and some listens to stuff from season 3’s soundtrack), a few thoughts occur.

    Was Kara playing the piano the whole time in the bar, or was the whole thing in her head up until she started playing at the end? Why didn’t she recognize her father sooner (I think she realized who Slick was right as she remembered the song).

    Is this what makes her the “harbinger of death”? She has some connection to the Cylons, whether he’s a half breed herself, an experiment or something else entirely.

    Daddy’s in her head, she “died” and came back with an intact Viper, she was glowing along with the Cylons before Sam passed out and she knows how to play that special song. Baltar and Roslin also have some connection to the Cylons, but it looks like Kara has even more.

    If you look at the tape, it’s titled “Live At The Helice Opera House”. Is this supposed to be the same Opera House that has featured Six, Laura, Athena, Hera and Baltar?

    I can’t wait for the final three episodes, yet I’m at a point where I don’t want it to end either.

    What does one usually say here? “Long time reader, first time writer”?

    Anyway, such a monumental achievement (and blog post) could not go unmentioned by me. As a die-hard fan of film scores (60% of my music collection consists of soundtrack and score albums) I have to tell you that your work on this show is, in my opinion, the most epic and profound music ever written for a television series, and could easily stand against numerous feature film scores. As soon as I first heard the strings enter on “Prelude to War” in season two I knew the soundtrack had gone from fantastic to genius.

    Anyway, about this episode. Congrats on just being able to finish it, what with sampling the ENTIRE PIANO (!) and re-recording all the pieces. I’ve always felt film, as a medium, is at its strongest when music is used to enhance the emotions and characters and not just “underscore” the actions or tell the audience what/how to feel at any given moment. The opening sequence of this episode is brilliantly organized and edited and lets you know “oh man this is gonna be a good one!”.

    I played piano for about 8 years and ever since my band in high school dissipated I haven’t touched it much, but this desperately makes me wanna go back. Got any recommendations for a good keyboard unit that could be plugged into a Powerbook? lol

    As for the “Final Four Theme” being renamed…I too like “Something in the Universe”. Hmm…there are those who believe that life here, began out there…”Those Who Believe” theme? “Far Out Across the Heavens”? “The Quest”? “Patrick Macnee”? Alright I’ll stop. :)

    Great to hear you’re a Muse fan as well. I’ve often fired up “Knights of Cydonia” after many a BSG ep. Can’t wait to see what’s to come in the final 3!

    Outstanding work on the episode and the three blog posts Bear. This episode is just what Battlestar does so well – everything is believable, engaging, and absorbing. I noticed the authenticity of the piano playing early on in the episode because it just wasn’t shot in the same manner as is typical for TV shows/movies. I think that it really added to the episode.

    I had guessed from all the information given that Starbuck’s dad was Daniel. I had not predicted that he was only a ‘head-character’. This was the most surprising and well performed reveal. I recognised the final four theme as soon as they both started playing.

    As for the new name, I propose: “The Instant of Realisation”

    Also, how about running a poll on the blog of the best names and have the readers (listeners) chose the final name?

    Bear, the episode was beautiful. I’ve been thinking about it all day. There is something so intimate about playing a piano that I have never seen captured on film until now. Thank you. It was a wonderful aesthetic experience.

    As a composer myself, I always pay attention to the music in film and on TV. I’ve done some small indie filmscoring, from time to time, and always enjoy reading about your process, including the musical examples. You can never “geek out” enough in terms of music theory, as far as I’m concerned.

    But this episode was a milestone in incorporating an existing score into the dramatic continuity of a series. I’ve never seen anything quite like it. (Even on “MilleniuM” or “X-Files” which were scored by Mark Snow, and in which the music sometimes played a very central role.) I always listen for your themes in each episode, and catch bits and pieces in various forms. Whenever the Final Four theme comes up, I know there’s something really integral going on, and some invisible driving force is at play.

    My nomination for a new name for that theme is the Earth Cylons theme, as those activated by and associated with that theme are all associated with the dead 13th Colony.

    The reveal of Slick as probably Kara’s father came over very well, especially at that climactic moment when they played the Earth Cylons theme together. I wondered if the music was going to head that way. (I did catch the Stu Phillips theme, too, from the original show.) I wondered if he was going to be revealed as her father. I also have to wonder if Kara’s father isn’t going to be revealed as Daniel, the “missing” Cylon that Ellen Tigh had talked about with Cavil/John in her return episode. I suspect that might be the case, but who knows.

    Anyway, I’ve never commented here before, even though I’ve been reading your blog for months. I think it’s one of the best “books” on “how to compose music for film” I’ve ever read. I love reading about your process. Please keep up the good work.

    And just know: This episode really was a landmark, a powerful masterpiece. Rarely does the score get so integrated into the action, and so well done. (I agree with everything you said about “faking it” when music is acted onscreen. It’s been one of my pet peeves for years, too. I’m really glad the actors were able to actually play the music this time. What ad difference it made!)

    Best wishes.

    Just finished reading your blog entries for this episode and enjoyed every minute of it!
    I am amazed that you were able to re-create the music with the samples you created from recording the piano. And you pieced it together perfectly!
    Your score was frakking flawless!
    These blog entries make it all the more meaningful, thank you!
    You should definitely win some type of award for this amazing achievement!

    Bear: [i]“I don’t know that “Something in the Universe” Theme feels quite right, but its definitely in the right direction…”[/i]

    Yeah, I thought about that afterward. When ‘Theme’ is tagged onto the end of it, it doesn’t really work as well. I suppose it would sound best as the title for a suite of all the variations.

    Whatever the case, I second all the demands for a 2-disc CD release! :)

    Gahh, HTML doesn’t work here…

    Oh well.

    Okay, now that I’ve read all the way through all three posts…

    I think that this episode really did work well. On first viewing the reveal that Kara and Slick’s song was “Watchtower” wasn’t at all obvious…the second time around, since I knew what to listen for, I picked it up much sooner. The reveal that Slick was her father also was a surprise. Like you said about the promo materials, however, the thought had crossed my mind before. So in a way I was expecting it, but I was still surprised, as much sense as that makes.

    I dunno…there’s not too much else to say, this episode was amazing, just that. I really look forward to a clean audio of that track that plays over the opening montage.

    Oh, and how does one pronounce “Dreilide?”

    Bear
    I think you have the title for that piece of music as I’ll quote you from above -

    “For me, this piece also represents coming full circle. Slick’s completed Sonata was the first piece of music I wrote for Someone to Watch Over Me, so it’s fitting it would be the last we hear before the credits. After writing the thematic ideas in this piece, I worked backwards and arrived at all the different stages of composition we heard throughout the episode.”

    “Coming full circle”

    Now that I know Slick is Kara’s father I just cannot NOT cry during that final piano “duet.” Bravo Bear, Bravo.

    dave
    CFPrez
    http://bearmccrearyfans.yuku.com/directory/default/t/yuku-community.html?new_community=true

    To answer the question about how the big reveal worked, I can’t say I was surprised. It isn’t because of SciFi’s website, because it’s not too friendly to fans outside the US. We can’t even watch the Webisodes, so what’s the point of going there?

    No, the biggest clue was that he was a guy at the piano, playing things her father played. The piano is related to her story. Even if it wasn’t a surprise, it was still awesome. :)

    To answer the question of what the Final Four Theme should be called: Watchtower. It’s not a part of the original song, but you’ve made your own version, and that’s what it is!

    It’s mind-boggling what you went through to get it real and to make it real for this episode. It’s a far cry from some movie where the sax player has his mouthpiece on backwards, or the trumpet player has his trumpet in his lap during a big trumpet solo. :-)

    Hello Bear,

    I wanted to thank you for the wonderful work you have been doing and for your blog. I find it great that we can actually follow your work and understand the process of composing and scoring. This is very enlightening.

    While I listen to and appreciate all styles of music, I have to admit that I had not played piano in thirty three years (I wanted to play the harp, at the time, my parents who were too poor to buy a harp, but had a piano convinced me that a piano was a harp laying down :) and I resented them and stopped playing), but I recently bought “Battlestar Sonatica” music sheet and I am taking lessons again to be able to play it. I absolutely loved the music of this episode. It was great.

    Your music drew me to the show, which I did not know much until last fall. I watched it on-line and got hooked to the music. it really did it for me! And I went to buy the dvds and the cds.

    The show also resonated with me for a more personal and emotional reason. I immediately identified to the character of Laura, who is someone the same age as me, also a teacher in a position of power, and also suffering an illness. As my illness (not cancer but Multiple Sclerosis) got more serious this spring, I was in a great deal of pain and was sent to the hospital for 3 days to receive some MS chemotherapy. I could not read, so I took my ipod and listen to your music the entire time I was there, through the side-effects of the meds. Your music helped me through the hard times and that is the only thing that made and continues to make me feel good.
    For this I will be eternally grateful.

    Thank you so much,

    Christine

    I just watched the episode, and had to comment that I really hope the pieces for this episode are included on the CD for the season. The duet piece I found very powerful, replayed the DVR just hear it several times. And as a fan of the original I did catch the Stu Phillips piece.

    For me, the episode worked on all levels. I couldn’t guess what was coming until they really startet on it after the nod from Slick — but then it hit me instantly, with chills running down my spine. When soon after all the other instruments joined in with full force, I got tears in my eyes – and then Saul Tigh took the words right out of my mouth: “What the Frak?”.

    Also the reveal of Kara’s dad and Boomer kidnapping Hera — the whole episode was a work of sheer genius, IMO. And your unbelievable blog post explaining it all in detail… That episode was an excellent team effort! Kudos to ALL who were involved!

    As for the name: how about “Ancient Correlations”?

    Stephan, still bewildered and awestruck

    Another long-time reader and first poster here. I noticed something you said in your comments:

    “Freakin’ love Muse. They rock. My favorite album is “Origin of Symmetry,” although they’re all good.”

    I’ve been wondering for a long while if Muse was a band you’d like. Why? Because everytime I listen to “Fillip” off of their first album “Showbiz” (1:43 into the song, when they slow it down), I always think of BSG, specifically Baltar’s theme. :)

    Anyway, what a fraking awesome episode. I was quite moved by it. I guessed early on that Slick was Kara’s father, but when it all came together and we all hear the Final Four theme…wow, just wow. Absolutely brilliant.

    I too suffer from that paralytic perfectionism you talk about. It affects me in all forms of art: music, painting, and photography. I dabbled in a bit of composition when studying music at college and remember having all this awesome music swirling through my head but I couldn’t get it down on paper. Anything I wrote down just couldn’t compare to what was in my head and it was never good enough. You’ve clearly articulated some of the things I’ve felt in the past.

    Like others this episode makes me want to drag out my keyboard and do some more playing (like the copy of “Battlestar Sonatica” I have” but I’ve recently moved across the pond to England and have yet to get a power transformer for it. :(

    Some comments I’ve been wanting to say for a while:

    Your perfectionism has driven you to write what I consider to be the best TV/film music out there. It has been such a pleasure to see how your music progresses and grows. I think your biggest strength is your ability to compose many different genres of music. I absolutely love the blending of classical and rock and thoroughly enjoy being able to listen to beautifully pure classical sounds such as “Passacaglia” or “Battlestar Sonatica” but later be able to rock out to “All Along the Watchtower” or the drum cues. Your music has beat out Muse to be the most listened to music on my iPod!

    I also appreciate you taking the time to write about each episode’s music. It’s fascinating to hear your thoughts and learn about the behind-the-scenes processes.

    So a very deep thank you from me for writing such gorgeous music. It’s going to be so sad when BSG is over but I’ll be very much looking forward to your future endeavours. I can’t imagine how good it’s going to get! :)

    This episode was one of the best things I’ve ever seen on television, and the use of the score was nothing short of revolutionary. As to the reveal, I pretty much knew that the piano player would be Starbuck’s dad, and I kind of figured that the final four theme would somehow be involved. But I think that just added to the suspense and the anticipation. Truly brilliant piece of television. Congratulations on this achievement. I really think it’s a landmark in television scoring.

    About the reveal: I saw the SciFi promos, and read enough spoilers ahead of time that I wasn’t surprised that the piano player was Kara’s father. But when your “Watchtower” riff snapped into focus, it was a full-goose-bump shock. I completely didn’t see that coming. I also didn’t anticipate that the piano player wasn’t physically there, so both reveals were a delicious one-two punch to the gut.

    Bear, I registered here tonight simply because I couldn’t remain a lurker any longer.

    The use of music integrated so tightly as a narrative device is probably unprecedented in television. Most _films_ don’t bother to integrate their score so completely with the narrative. Kudos to you, sir.

    As far as the story goes, I picked up very early on that Slick was visible to Kara only, but did not pick up on the tune until just before the full reveal. If I had been paying attention to Slick’s left-hand part, I probably would have picked up on it sooner. Instead, I was listening to Kara’s right-hand melody, which you managed to successfully obfuscate (for me anyway) until just before the intended reveal. In short: mission accomplished!

    As far as naming the tune goes, it already has a name. It’s “All Along the Watchtower”. It’s just the Bear McCreary version. Each of the major renditions of the song, from Dylan, to Hendrix, to U2, to DMB, have included their own version of the lyrics and music (I listen to classical almost exclusively, so I may be off a bit here). You’re just the most recent in the series, and I’m betting that your additions are incorporated into the next generation of renditions.

    Oh, I forgot to add this. Add another voice to the chorus requesting a _two_ disc release for season four! And if you want to go back even further and release additional material from seasons one through three, I’ll buy that too!

    Congratulations on (a) composing such an intricate, nuanced, and moving score for this episode, and (b) writing about this process so thoroughly, and with such passion and insight.

    I study theatre sound design, and agree with you that occasions when the dividing line between “diegetic” and “extra-diegetic” music is unsettled are always rewarding and intellectually fascinating. Not to mention intertextual (indeed, meta-textual) associations…

    Like a couple of people above, I’ve read your blog off and on but this episode compels a response.

    Bear asked:
    “You’ve had weeks (or has it been months?) with these photos to think it over. Nevertheless, I am curious to hear from all of you. Did this reveal work? Did it surprise you? Did you guess the “Watchtower” reveal, and if so, at what point in the scene did you suspect?”

    For me at least, I hadn’t seen any of the pics, the reveal worked like gangbusters. When the shot pulls back from Kara, her father and the piano and all the instruments joined was a moment of musical heaven.

    As for a title I’m probably not the best person but I can think of two. They are quotes from the first hybrid in Razor. “Glorious in Awakening” and “Not an end but a Beginning”.

    Did the reveal work, you ask? Why, it completely made the episode!

    As to when exactly I realized it was the FF theme, it was precisely when we cut to the four in Joe’s Bar, because that was the first time that most of the melody was intact. I had a very strong feeling that this was building to a recognizeable melody, and that sealed the deal. BUT, even after that, the slow improvement on the performance was just brilliant. It still delivered the “oh my GODS this is chilling!” effect, even though I figured out what it was building to. That’s the beauty of BSG: it just oozes awsomeness in the execution of a complex idea…and from every aspect of production (score, editing, cinematography, acting, EVERYTHING). That reveal really was increadible. I cannot wait to see how music and destiny are intertwined!

    Monumental work, Bear!

    P.S. I couldn’t resist after that scene…I went to my piano and played the FF piano licks by ear. That truly makes me a music geek. :P

    To clarify, it was the FIRST time we cut to the cylons in Joe’s Bar (while the music was playing) that I realized what was being played. It was just intact enough to distinguish for me (well, combined with instinct).

    What an amazing episode…

    Thank you for taking the time to share your journey with us online :)

    Oh, and PS:

    Yes, I’ve been living under a rock and hadn’t heard any of the speculations…the reveal TOTALLY worked for me. Frakkin’ awesome.

    Bear,

    Thank you for making me feel happy and sad all at the same time. I can’t even fathom how much genius it took to pull off this episode! I hope that you’re able to turn the corner into your next musical achievement with the same feeling of accomplishment.

    Anyways, how about “To Those Who Forgot” or even, “Call to Remembrance.” Maybe, “Notes on a Memory”? Or if it even becomes more important to the cycle of time, “Saecula Saeculorum”? Hope you find a good one!

    A fan of not one but two of my all-time favorite bands, and the mastermind composer behind my all-time favorite television series to boot.

    What are you, me in a perfect world!?

    Loved the piano score of the whole episode!!! Another audio-visual orgasm!!

    Only three episodes to go… :-(

    I realize it is unlikely that I will say anything that hasn’t already been said, but I had to add my two cents. I have watched this episode about 5 times now on my DVR, skimming through to pick up all the musical nuances I missed the first time through. It has rapidly become my favorite episode of the series, 99% because of the amazing score.

    I have read your blog for a while now but never felt that I had anything to say worth reading, but this episode compels me to thank you profusely for the music you have given to this show. I have each of the soundtracks on my iPod and listen to them as I study in the library between classes. For some reason I can’t really explain, the score settles me down and helps me to focus, and I’ve no doubt that when the Season 4 soundtrack rolls around, these pieces will become some of my most often played.

    The musical reveal was totally unexpected, although after my multiple viewings since, I kick myself for not hearing it sooner. Wonderfully done there. I did suspect that Slick was her father pretty early on, but because of his musical inclination, my mind raced to the (not yet disproved) conclusion that her father was once upon a time the “artistic” Daniel, the final Cylon we have yet to see. While I knew that was a leap, I was glad to see I was right about the father part.

    Really I just want to congratulate you on another brilliantly well done job and say that I cannot wait to see where you audibly take us on this final leg of the journey. Thanks!
    -EvdO

    P.S. As for a title for the work previosly known as the final five theme. I was thinking about something Ellen said to Saul about a force manipulating them (as the means by which Hera was able to write the song down). That seems to be a theme that occurs when this song plays. It is like “Heeding the Call” but something more tangible than a call from a distance. It’s like someone pulling the strings of these cylon marionettes. Perhaps a title like Pulling the Strings or some other title that just conveys the fact that this song appears in moments of people following an instinct or memory they can’t really explain. Plus the hand movements of manipulating the strings look vaguely like playing a piano lol. Silly idea probably, but it just hit me.

    Well if I had to throw in my two cents for a FF Theme rename…it would be “A Path To Discovery”….

    Just my humble opinion….

    I utterly adored the music in “Someone to Watch Over Me”. Wonderful, wonderful job Bear! You asked us fans a little while ago to choose the music for the next soundtrack. I have at least two tracks to add to my wish list:

    The piano version of YOUR version from “All Along the Watchtower” rocked my socks, as well as the piano piece that was used in the beginning of the episode. I actually wouldn’t mind having a LOT of that piano music on the next album.

    The music gave this episode a very special feel. I can only emphasize again – you did a MARVELOUS job!

    I’ve been reading your blog for a while now, but this is the first time I’ve been inclined to post. Even before I read your mini-memoir of the process for STWOM, I realized that I was witnessing magic.

    I knew “Slick” was Kara’s dad pretty early into the episode, unspoiled as I was, but I had NO IDEA that the tune Kara was trying to remember was the Final Five theme until it all sorta gelled together at that big climactic moment.

    “Something in the Universe” seems like a good re-naming for that theme now.

    And again, thanks for all you do. I keep the BG soundtracks playing on my computer and on my iPod, and whenever someone asks me, “Wow! what’s that from?” they can’t believe the music is from a TV show.

    Even though the Final Four theme has evolved and now has greater significance, I still like that as its title.

    I caught the Stu Phillips piece immediately and smiled when I heard it!
    I didn’t pick the Final 4 theme as the final piece until it became obvious and those Starbuck’s father started pounding out those chords.

    I guessed that he was Starbuck’s dad, not sure when but before the reveal. Same with Hera’s drawing, sometime before Starbuck realized it, when they were at the piano. I remember when Hera handed it to her, the music swelled a little and I thought then…hey that’s important.
    And wow, I can’t believe I watched it with absolutely no inkling at all about all the time and effort put into the music of that episode… Bear, you’re a legend!

    Is a double CD still a possibility?
    I just can’t imagine how 1 CD could do justice to all this great music you’ve blessed us with.
    Still, if a single CD does come out, it’ll be one of the best soundtrack CDs of the century.

    Hello Bear!

    I’ve been following your BSG blog for some time now, and I love the insights into the creative process that you’re sharing with us. Now I don’t know jack about composition or music theory, so it keeps amazing me how you manage to make these things understandable to a layman. So, first of all, thank you very much for this blog!

    These entries about “Someone To Watch Over Me” finally got me to register because your work on this episode is so frakkin’ amazing I can’t even put it into words. A little history: I remember back in the 80s, “Miami Vice” changed the way music was used on television forever. There was this iconic scene with Crockett and Tubbs driving through the night on their way to a showdown, Phil Collins’ “In The Air Tonight” brooding in the background, with these somber shots of their faces, Tubbs loading his shotgun, closeups of the Daytona Spyder’s hubcaps rotating… This moment has been the greatest synergy of sound and vision in TV history – until “Crossroads Part II”.

    The way the Final Five Theme pulled at the characters, the score building to a climax as they met in that storage locker – that was incredible. And then the full-blown rendition of “Watchtower” towards the end, totally BSG-ized by its instrumentation, haunting and powerful, climaxing with the reveal of Earth… that totally blew me away. I’ve literally been spending hours (!) just rewatching act four of that episode lately, and the music still gives me goosebumps. That was the new iconic moment in TV music that finally pushed Vice off the throne it had been clinging to for decades!

    And now you’ve outdone it. Totally. I agree with another poster above who called the whole “Slick = Kara’s dad” thing a red herring. It was so obvious from the beginning. Ever since “No Exit”, I’ve been 100% certain that Daniel was Kara’s father, and that we would get to see him, so there was no surprise for me here – in fact, throughout the episode I wanted to smack Starbuck up the head because I couldn’t believe she didn’t recognize him! Okay, him being a head character was a surprise – I really thought there was still a Daniel body around (since Cavil destroyed the “production line”, I always assumed Ellen was able to save the “prototype” somehow). So, Head Daniel was a nice reveal. But it had nothing on the REAL stunner in this ep. I often have difficulties picking up varations on a theme, so Kara’s noodling around on the piano meant nothing to me… until Head Daniel came in with the left hand, starting that unforgettable bassline of the Final Five Theme. Now THAT moment absolutely gave me the shivers, and when the full orchestra and guitar kicked in, I was totally floored. Not just the most powerful musical moment in BSG, this was possibly the most powerful moment in the whole series so far. BEST. REVEAL. EVER. Seriously, I have been watching just this short segment of the episode again and again and again and yet, each time the camera switches to the crane shot and the music really starts blasting, it still blows me away. So – congratulations on once again totally redefining the relationship between TV and its score.

    Okay, now I got that out of my system, here’s my idea for renaming the Final Five Theme: “Synergy”. Because it is the music that pulls everything together in a fusion that will be so much more than the sum of its parts. Just like the incredible synergy between visuals, music and characters achieved in “Someone…”.

    Oh, and talking about “Watchtower” – you and your brother absolutely nailed that thing, both in the broadcast version and the one on the S3 soundtrack. Seriously, who’s Hendrix?

    So say we all!

    Hey Bear,

    Loved the music tonight, after two painfully quiet episodes you truly treated us with your work in ‘Someone to Watch Over Me’. Here are my Recommendations for the name of the song:

    1.The Shape of Things That Came
    2.When You Wish Upon A Battlestar
    3.A Melody for Machines

    Looking forward to these last few episodes! Thanks!

    [Another first-time poster]…

    Bravo!!!!

    This was just a gorgeous episode.

    In answer to your question: I got the “Starbuck’s dad” reveal very early….probably in the scene where they talked about abandonment… but that didn’t make the moment when they finished playing, fingers smoking, and Tigh spun Starbuck around one BIT less emotionally satisfying.

    I did NOT pick up on the Final Five theme, though… I started to get clued in exactly when Tigh did; so, the overhead shot of the piano, with the full score, sent chills up my spine. One of the best moments of the series (so far) for me (along with the end “Crossroads, Part II” and a few others). My husband “got it” much more quickly, as soon as Kara started messing around.

    Thank you (and everyone involved!) for this amazing episode. I loved the way both main story lines were about parents and children. (The scene of Tyrol running through the house in his hangar deck clothes, with the Sonata in the background, was just devastating). Watching Starbuck and her dad brought me back to my childhood, watching my dad play “Maple Leaf Rag” (very slowly), and made me long for a piano again (like many others here).

    I loved reading about the making of this episode. Incidentally, I write (boring academic prose), and when I’m stuck, I often listen to “Passacaglia” and “The Shape of Things to Come.”

    Oh, and here’s my second post already ;) with a question for Bear.

    I’ve been listening to the S3 soundtrack again today and I distinctly hear the Final Five Theme in the intro to “A Distant Sorrow” but I can’t find that musical cue in the episode. Did you put it there just for the album (an “audio retcon” so to speak) or were you already working with that theme in the beginning of the season?

    Hey guys and gals,

    Wow! What an overwhelming response from all of you. I’m thrilled that so many fans out there felt the same about this episode as I did.

    I’ll probably be a little slower than usual responding to questions this week. I’m in Europe, for the premiere of the ‘Battlestar Galactica’ Ballet I wrote: “Prelude to War” (details here). I’m actually in London Heathrow airport right now as I write this. Its been fun to cope with jetlag while reading all your insightful observations about the episode.

    I hope to have some sort of blog entry ready for next week, although I must admit that it took me WEEKS to prepare these three entries for “Someone to Watch Over Me” and I’ve got nothing ready for Friday. But, I’ll try to get something written while I’m here.

    Sagen sie so wir alle!
    -Bear

    Nice try with the German ;)

    Actually, it’s “So sagen wir alle!”, or, a little less archaic, “Das sagen wir alle!”

    Being German, I have to say it sounds about a gazillion times better in Englich.

    Furyofaseraph: “If anyone is familiar with the original series, I really believe that the beings of light are going to make their reimagined appearance.”

    “…a shining angel of God…” (Leoben to Starbuck, on the Demetrius)

    “I really believe that all these entities are in fact all the same being”

    Me too.

    raftrap: “…talk about serendipity.”

    Destiny… “Kismet”… not just in the story, but in its production as well.

    bignosebob: “I played piano for about 8 years and ever since my band in high school dissipated I haven’t touched it much, but this desperately makes me wanna go back. Got any recommendations for a good keyboard unit that could be plugged into a Powerbook?”

    If you don’t currently have a keyboard, get one ASAP (I found a frakkin’ fantastic one at a thrift shop for only $5.) just to get re-started. Look for Powerbook compatibility at your leisure.

    “how does one pronounce “Dreilide?”-”

    Dry-LEED (maybe Dry-LEED-uh) would be my guess.

    Bear: “Sagen sie so wir alle!”

    I was about to take that to BabelFish, but I made the IQ roll. (\”0)

    - M. \”/

    Meowlin–5 bucks!!??! I had no idea you could find one for that little money. Now I just need to keep my eyes out for thrift shops…

    And I’ll add my voice to say that a 2 disc season 4 CD would be frakkin sweet, though I’d gladly settle for a 1 disc release sooner. I hear that the complete series is due to be released on Blu-Ray this summer…dare we hope the CD could find it’s way to us around then as well? :)

    Being a piano player myself, this was a great episode. I really liked seeing the hands for a change. Makes it seem much more realistic.

    I have one question though: In Kara’s dream sequence, you see young Kara play the f multiple times. However, when I tried to recreate what she was doing I noticed it was an e that was being heard. Was the piano tuned down, was it a small mistake by you or am I blind/tonedeaf?

    about the reveal: I vaguely recognised the pattern that Hera drew (that open “star” at the end was what made me realise those were notes) since I always play the themes you display in your blog on the keyboard next to me. The moment Kara’s father played the first 2 chords for the first time was when I really knew what it was.

    I’m looking forward to the concert. I won’t be at the premiere sadly, but I will be there 22nd March. Yes, just after the series finale. :)

    There is little to say that hasn’t been said about the music itself, so I’ll say this:

    To me, your blog offers not just insight into the process of scoring music, but into your creative process specifically, a process which is quite remarkable. The way you jumped headfirst into extremely onerous tasks—sampling the piano, recreating the arpeggios—just because you instinctively know it’s the right thing to do, even if others think you’re crazy… it is the hallmark of someone so comfortable in his art that he’s no longer aware of the barriers he’s breaking. But, even if only a fraction of your audience notices such touches, I’m pretty sure everyone will have felt that piano leap out of the TV and right into their heads, without knowing why.

    Perhaps the only thing more important than the creative process itself is how you end it, both to others and to yourself. I think in writing your blog in such a detailed and heartfelt fashion, like a true storyteller, you have found the perfect way of doing so.

    Hi Bear, long time lurker, first time poster – although, if you remember settling a bet involving the overtone series and the perceived tonality of the final chord of Gaeta’s Lament, I’m that “other guy”.

    I can say without hesitation that the combination of media involved in the buildup and “reveal” of the Final Four theme was probably the single, most moving, gratifying and vulnerable moment I have experienced as a musician. This even tops the final chorus in Mahler’s 2nd Symphony, which can move me to tears (and I’ve had the opportunity to sing it in performance with orchestra.)

    That centered crane shot of Roark Critchlow and Katee Sackhoff, where the band and orchestra comes together, to me, signifies that two people sitting at a piano making music together IS tapping into the very meaning of the universe. If you really think about it, the Final Four theme has effectively become a Cantus Firmus, plucked from “The Divine” by the chosen interpreters (yourself, the final four – five, with Ellen, and the hybrids.) As you know, music was such a tremendous and sacred force in the times of early music and Renaissance, and it can be argued that music as a language is not necessarily being as well preserved through our mainstream education system (well, I speak for those in North America, I suppose.) To bring things full circle and have music become such a pivotal force, once again, in an already groundbreaking Gesamskunstwerk (total art work) is awe-inspiring and nothing less than life-changing. As I’m writing this, I am still experiencing shivers from the experience, and to be able to read in detail of how it came to be and the dedication you put into its realization (as well as the dedication of all others involved) is just so moving.

    Couple this with living vicariously through that moment, of being a child taught a song on piano by their father, from someone coming from an overall non-musical family, well, words can’t express how much this has touched me. I can’t wait to see and hear what happens next.

    Oh, to answer your question, I guessed early on that the “stars” Hera was drawing was notation – mostly because there were solid dots and one circle at the end, which wasn’t filled in. That was what gave it away-it looked liked quarter notes and a half note, just missing stems. Another thought I had, is that I’m sure many viewers knew early on that it was Kara’s father… and to expect the Watchtower reveal. I think it’s like any of the great works in music or literature… just because you know what happens next doesn’t mean the moment is ruined. It’s about how the fulfillment of the expectation occurs. All involved made this moment perfect. I am sad to report that browsing on other movie/TV talkbacks, in particular Ain’t It Cool News, that there remains a debate as to whether or not Slick was really Kara’s father. I respect and admire all involved for going with the “show, don’t tell” philosophy, though.

    ***Possible Spoiler***The next question: Is Dreilide, in fact, Daniel? This would make Kara the first true hybrid! “You over-sensitive jackass” plays well into how Cavil described the Daniel model… this was left more in the grey, kinda.***Spoiler Ends***

    I could probably write so much more… but I think I’ve shared what I wanted to share. Thank you so much for everything you have done for the series, for the genre and for music itself. I wish you all the best in everything you do, and with your life with Raya!

    Sincerely,
    CgjK

    p.s. Holy frak – BSG ballet?! Any Canadian shows?
    p.p.s. Please include as many CDs of material that you can offer for the next Soundtrack release! Will the release of extra material through iTunes be possible, now that it seems licensing agreements were patched up for sale of episodes online (last I heard)?

    Bear, you´re amazing. The amount of work you not only put into your compositions, but into this blog as well, is nothing but astonishing. It certainly is the most satisfying read ever after watching the show; much more so than skimming through message boards and dealing with all those idiots who just don´t get it.

    This single episode alone is proof that BSG is so much better than everything else that´s out there. I just hope they paid you well enough for those extra hours…

    And congratulations for everything going with your private life! Enjoy!

    Greetings,
    Ralph

    Wow. So much blogging-goodness from you Bear, and then way too many comments to take in, in one sitting. GREAT job on this score. Hearing piano on BSG is exotic, you’re right – it was such a treat to hear an almost all-piano score. I loved even more that you kept the original piano sound in there.

    I’m speechless as far as this score goes – but back in the Sometimes a Great Notion blog, there were a bunch of comments on the Watchtower theme (the scene about 19 minutes in when Anders picks up the gee-tar finger board): it was brought up that it sounded like a bar out-of-tune piano. Is that in any connection with this episode?? Was that piano sound purposely put in that episode’s arrangement of Watchtower to foreshadow Kara? The theme used there in SAGN is the same (Final-Four-but-attached-to-watchtower-Hera-Big-Cylon-Reveal-)Theme that Kara played at the end of this episode…I’m thinking that this was the musical clue back in SAGN.

    Absolutely right about the theme having developed into a character of its own. I can’t remember which part of three that was in or who said it, but it was crazy amazing.

    Hey Bear or really anyone who has worked out the keying. I am curious what set of chords Slick plays during the “Activation Theme” when it picked up, to Starbucks right hand. Would you, or really anyone, mind shedding some light on them?

    I can help you out with the chords, I’ve been playing around with them a bit. The first chord is C#-E-G#-C#, the second is B-E-G#-B, I’m pretty sure the third is A-C#-E-A, but that sounds a little too…Major, I suppose, to my ear, and I haven’t figured out the fourth yet. I think its base is D, but I’m not yet certain.

    Bear,

    I met you in 2007 when you came to visit one of my film classes in LA that Paul Leonard was teaching, and at the time I had only seen a few episodes of BSG. I remember you showed us some clips from “Hero.” I was immediately fascinated with your work, and now I’ve more or less seen the entire series three times through. There are three episodes left, but I feel I can say without a doubt that this one is the crowning achievement of your work on the entire series.

    I have such a deep respect for people who love their job and take it as seriously as you do, willing to stay the extra hours to sample the entire piano or re-create every single performance if it’s going to mean a quality product in the end. Your invaluable contribution to this episode in particular is readily on display. From the opening chords, I was put in a very specific, somber mood, and minutes later I was tearing up over a tube of toothpaste. Your music and Katee’s performance are truly an unbeatable combination. All I have to say for this episode, and the entire series is: Thank you for sharing your talent on screen and your thoughts here on this site. I will truly be sad to see this show go.

    As for some questions you posed in your post, the reveal mostly worked for me. I wouldn’t be too disappointed over the speculation that the piano player was Starbuck’s dad – the internet is a big place and I think any and every theory has been thrown around at some point. However, being a pianist myself, as soon as we got a clear shot of the staff that Slick pencils in, I yelled, “that’s the riff from Heeding the Call!” Everyone I was watching with thought I was crazy, until about 30 seconds later… but the moment still worked from a dramatic standpoint, and Michael Hogan’s fantastically crazed one-eyed performance totally sold it for me. Honestly, that riff is so perfect that my heart starts thumping whenever I hear it, even if I’m expecting it.

    I can’t wait to hear what the next three episodes have in store for us…

    Andrew

    Damnz, Bear. You really outdid yourself with not only the episodes, but these blog posts of epic. I’m super impressed, and they’re endlessly fascinating, but never superfluous. Your dedication and love for the show really shows and I can’t wait to see what the next three episodes have in store for us.

    Hey all,

    For those of you trying to figure out the underlying chords being played by Slick, here is my attempt:

    Most of the chords have a pedal of C#

    4x C# E G# C# (LH) E G# C# (RH)
    2x C# E G# B (LH) E G# B (RH)
    3x C# E A C# (LH) E A C#(RH)

    Do that 3x, then the 4th time, the 3rd chord is something like:

    1x (lower octave)
    D A D (LH) E F# A C# (RH)
    (The high D is played by Starbuck an octave higher to give full color to the chord, I think)

    Once the band kicks in, I’m not sure at all about the chord tone doubling, but I know the standard bass line for the Watchtower riff is

    DDDD-(8ve down)DF|BbBbBb—–
    DDDD-(8ve down)DF|BbBbBb-(lower octave)Eb—

    So there’s some breadcumbs for you. I’d try to notate it and post it, but I’m not sure if that would be breach of copyright somehow… :) but I think the primitive scribblings above are safe.

    I forgot to mention that it’s also awesome reading everyone’s comments, experiences and feedback on this blog!

    So say we all,
    CgjK

    Oh my, please drop my misquoted Watchtower bass line down a step… I’m learning something in baroque tuning so my keyboard is sometimes transposed to 415! Feldercarb!

    HiBear,

    just wondering if the sheet music for Kara’s Dad’s piece that you play at the end will be available? If you could post some of it here or release it for purchase like the Battlestar Sonatica music. I’d really love it!

    Thanks,

    Leif

    I’m pretty sure that C# isn’t the base for anything other than the first chord…it would sound rather discordant with the second chord.

    “It no longer seems appropriate to refer to this theme as the Final Four Theme, because it has grown to mean so much more.”

    Bear, what about “Waking Song”, “Waking Theme” or something like that?

    I definitely hate spoilers, but i love trying to unravel the mystery as it plays out. i had a hunch slick was kara’s dad… but that they would play Watchtower, and that slick wasn’t really there at all… frakkin’ amazing. i had chills and just sat gaping at the tv once Watchtower exploded in full force. everything it was, everything it represented, totally blew my mind. and it was so satisfying after such a piano-heavy score… it practically felt like everything was right with the universe for those few moments.

    and i’m voting for a multi-disc season 4 soundtrack. hey, it’s what the people want. ;)

    so say we all!

    I’d like to suggest the title “Chiasma”, which is the moment in biological reproduction when two different sets of chromosomes are together and are starting to exchange traits, prior to dividing.

    It makes me think of Kara and her dad, and of the Cylons and humanity splitting off into their own unique beings, but sharing some traits.

    And of course, there’s the association in the word “Chiasma” to the root of the word “chasm”, which ties in to the need for there to be a “Watchtower” between them!

    (Wiki it.)

    As for the episode, when the episodes started and I saw the piano I unconsciously steeled myself for the cliches that I expected would soon come — that artificial blend of actor and performance that as you say never works. My astonishment grew as the actor seemed to play and speak naturally. I was so wonderstruck by this that I didn’t really think ahead to whether the man was Kara’s father until about half the way through, when the lighting on his face was so consistently shadowy that it suggested that he wasn’t entirely physical. And that didn’t ruin things AT ALL. It became a richer experience as the knowledge grew.

    And then I watched the episode again. I’d watch it a third time if it wasn’t past midnight tonight. Thank you, Bear. And I hope you get an Emmy for this ep.

    Firstly I have to say: Thank you. That’s was amazing, you are the no.1. Make more….

    bignosebob: “Meowlin–5 bucks!!??! I had no idea you could find one for that little money.”

    Well, I suppose that depends on what you consider a “keyboard” too. This was – is – a Casio SA-38: 32 sub-standard sized keys, but 100 vices (typo stet! I meant voices) in the tone bank. Five percussive buttons, Several each; rhythm pattern (just percussive) and “super accompaniment” pattern (percussive and tonal). Integral speakers as well as heaphone output (which could be used to feed the signal to an amp, if you turn down the volume on the KB a bit). Something like this might be considered a “toy” by a pro keyboard player, but (IMAO) it’s better than nothing.
    But check the thrift shops – frequently. Like Forrest Gump’s box of chocolates – you never know what you’re gonna get. They might get a full-sized keyboard in (not likely it would go for $5 though).

    CgjK: “just because you know what happens next doesn’t mean the moment is ruined. It’s about how the fulfillment of the expectation occurs.”

    YES! Frakkin’ A, muc!

    And… Felgercarb is … TOOTHPASTE?!?

    - M. \”/

    P.S. – bignosebob – Caveat emptor – anything you find in a thrift shop, check to see if it actually WORKS before you buy it. I saw the SA-38, checked to see what batteries it ate, went home to get them, returned and tested it before I actually bought the thing.

    - M. \”/

    Bear,

    The music from this episode was incredibly powerful and very striking. Your take on the Final Four theme this time around was so perfectly aligned with the expressions on Starbuck’s and the final fours’ faces as she was on the piano. The piano music elsewhere in the episode was also beautiful, and I’ve loved the bits of piano we’ve gotten from you in the past, such as “One Year Later” (one of my favourite tracks of all four seasons).

    ~Tanya

    (Very quickly) skimming some of these remarks, I don’t think I can add anything that hasn’t already been said. Great ep, great work, and thank you!

    Theme title suggestion: “The shape of things past”.

    ~ Saché

    I’ve been a casual reader of your blog for months, but an enthusiastic listener of your music both on the show itself and as standalone music.

    With this episode, you’ve inspired me to pick up the piano again. I had a knack for it, but I stopped when my teacher died.

    Do you have any ideas on how to tell a born-again pianist how to start? I revolt at the idea of learning individual songs; I feel like I’m missing the underpinnings of music theory that most musicians seem to have, but I have no idea where else to start.

    “Dreilide is German for “Third Eyelid” referring to the third/mysical eye. The third eye is typically linked to clairvoyance and visions.
    Left by Furyofaseraph”

    That is very interesting, thanks so much for that info Furyofaseraph!

    On a side note, Bob Dylan’s tour uses an “eye” theme logo on the backdrop of the stage. Coincidence? ;^) hmmmmmm.

    Maybe the Cylons were the Masons?

    As for potential song titles for the combined “Final Four/Watchtower” song:
    Simple Twist of Cylon Fate
    Every Grain of Cylon Sand
    ;^)
    Just kidding, I vote for “Something in the Universe”.

    Happy travels Bear, no worries on posting for us this week, you’ve got your hands full, we’ll just expect you here to hold our collective hands for the finale, we’ll need you!

    Also, everyone here fixated on “Daniel”:
    you might want to go listen to the Ronald Moore podcasts from this part of the season (they are on the SciFi Channel web site as well as on iTunes). If you go too far out with your theories you may be disappointed, as least from what I can glean from his podcasts so far.

    Just watched it for the 4th time.

    1. Thank you for the attention to detail, the Iron Man comment captured it perfectly – knowing a little about production I was blown away by how real everything looked (actually I really wasn’t sure until I read your breakdown here). As a musician there was some great stuff here – from compositional aspects to the dialog/on-screen music.

    2. Theme name: Convergence. (sorry if someone else already suggested it, didn’t read every post)

    Incredible post(s) on this episode, Bear. Thank you.

    I am repeatedly blown away by most of the show’s endings.
    I never put it together, that Slick was talking about leaving Kara and her mother.
    The song at the end was so beautiful, that playing it again seems kind of sad… never having the same feeling about it again, the first time it blew me away. Seeing Tigh’s face while the music builds was awesome.

    Hi Bear,

    First off what an amazing episode man. Your influence was abundantly clear throughout and the music definitely made it one of the most amazing episodes to watch.

    Nothing you did in the music gave it away, it was all in the writing. Hmm so there is one more cylon we haven’t seen and we’ve never seen Starbuck’s dad… hmm there is a song she listened to that her dad taught her and what is THE song on the show right now… It kind of answered itself but you definitely teased out the final five theme until the last possible moment.

    As for a possible new name for the theme… Why not the Antikythera Melody. As you might know the Antikythera Mechanism is the oldest known mechanical computer designed to calculate astronomical positions and the device dates back to ancient Greece and technological artifacts of similar complexity did not reappear until a thousand years later. No one knew who came up with it or where it came from so they named it after the island where the shipwreck it was on was found. It’s oddly similar to the story of the final five, earth, and the colonial cylons… So I thought it kind of fit for a renaming of the theme where the implications of what it might mean aren’t known yet.

    Can’t wait to see what you have in store for us in the final few episodes.

    Also wanted to take a minute to say I’m loving what you are doing on Terminator the Sarah Connor Chronicles and was just wondering if you had any plans to keep blogging about your musical experience on that show?

    Congrats on the engagement as well!

    “I must add, I’ve been shocked at how much Sci Fi Channel has publicized the musical aspects of this episode. I am disappointed to see so many forums (including my own blog here) where fans have speculated that the mystery pianist in the photo is Kara’ dad. And why wouldn’t you? You’ve had weeks (or has it been months?) with these photos to think it over. Nevertheless, I am curious to hear from all of you. Did this reveal work? Did it surprise you? Did you guess the “Watchtower” reveal, and if so, at what point in the scene did you suspect?”

    I suspected that the “pianist” would be Kara’s father given it is revealed in the dialogue between Kara and Helo on Caprica in season 2. When SciFi said a pianist would be important in Kara’s storyline, I simple felt it would bare more on closure with that part of her and help her, emotionally, through what ever destiny she has.

    I did not, however, expect the twist on this mundane fact to be that Kara’s father is the original author of the Final Four’s theme, or the theme/music had been passed to him. I instantly knew Hera had drawn Kara music notes, but the idea that she had written the music for the awakening wasn’t even a possibility to me. When the music all comes together in the last scene form the Final Four’s theme, I was so shocked and astonished that I got tears to my eyes.

    My brother (who is a graduate from the audio engineering school of SAE LA) is such an avid admirer of yours and his love of your version for the melody of “All Along the Watch Towers” is surpassed by very few musical pieces. He is behind on current Battlestar episodes, but I know that once he sees “Someone to Watch Over Me”, he just wont know what to do with himself, the writing and music is just too amazing once the climax is reached.

    I am just flabbergasted and in complete awe of how “…we wanted to use that song in a show at some point,” (Ron Moore & David Eick) has turned into one of the most defining pieces in the conclusion of Battlestar Galactica. I can’t wait to hear more, and to find out how Kara’s father knew a song Ander’s wrote/played 2000 years prior! This mix of the Final Four’s theme is my favorite right next to one version that plays when Saul/Sol chooses to confront Adama about being a Cylon in “Revelations”. I can’t wait for Season 4’s soundtrack…

    Hi there Bear and the rest of you!

    I’ve been reading this blog a long time but never got round to posting anything. Love the series, love the music and love this blog though. Being a musician I really appreciate the amount of detail that goes in to these reports. Very inspiring and educational.

    Now for the important part! I’m mainly a guitar player but I play some piano. I’ve loaded a piano sample in to my Kontakt sampler and I play a pseudo-version of the watchtower/final four/cylon cryptogram/whatever -theme but it just doesn’t sound right played with a Steinway grand piano. I just realised that the ULTIMATE blog bonus-material would be for Bear to release the sample program of that old beat-up piano that’s used in the show. It would be so thrilling to actually get to play those samples. If I only got the wave files I could through a program together in different formats (Kontakt being an obvious choice but sfz would be nice since there are free sampleplayers out there).

    Ohh well.. thanks for the music anyhow and regards from Sweden!

    /Kristoffer

    Hey guys, any luck with the last chord? I can’t seem to lock it down.

    Once again ‘Magnifique’.
    It was really intense through the whole episode! Thank you Bear and thanks to everyone who help you :)

    What more can be written about your work here, Bear?

    Add my comment to the resounding typing ovation that this immediately became my favourite episode of the season, and perhaps the series!

    I knew from the first opening piano notes that something special was going to happen in this episode, and you certainly delivered. Maybe it was the A-mazing synergy between writers, director, composer, and editor that helps this become a throughly integrated episode in a way I am not sure we have ever seen before on television. Bravo! Although I hesitate to point out to you that you’ve raised your own bar that much higher once again, which will certainly lead to many more moments of composing frustration and despair. However, I somehow think that the many fans here will agree with me that I suspect you are quite up to the challenge and we look forward to following your journey post-BSG.

    Bear, from the first few moments of this episode I knew I was going to love it. You VERY effectively set a different tone for the opener, and really for the entirety of the episode. It’s inspiring to read about all the work that went into it and all the careful thought you devoted to the individual moments. As a fan I’m hugely grateful to you for it.

    To weigh in on a question you post in your post: I was privy to the fan speculation that this would be her father or some representation of him prior to seeing the episode, but the fact that she didn’t seem to recognize him threw me off and I wasn’t certain until he began to help her play. The reveal of “Watchtower” or whatever you decide to call it, though, THAT was a surprise — I didn’t recognize it until Tigh and the others did. So that totally worked for me.

    Well, Bear, it looks like you’ve drawn out more fans from the woodwork, similiar to how “All Along The Watchtower” did. And the music has taken a life of its own since then, leaving you with little choice but to make the Season 4 soundtrack a double. Or so most seem to hope.

    As for a title, I like “Something In The Universe”, “In Saecula Saeculorum”, “The Call” or some variation of “Awakening” the best out of what’s been put here already, although they’ve all been good choices.

    At the same time, I kind of have to add “Third Eye” to the ever growing list, to play off of Dreilide’s meaning. Plus, it works (well, sorta) with the Cylon projections, the headjobs and perhaps even when certain characters glow for some people.

    Or what about “Leitmotif”, since that’s what the song’s become since the end of the third season or “Cylon Diegesis”, as the song is diegetic in nature.

    Unless “Holy Frak” is a suitable song name…

    Perhaps…

    “The Message”? hmmmm, this is a tricky one.

    Great work, and I can’t wait to see and hear the finale!

    Or even better, “Cylon Diegetica.”

    I had to register just to make my comments! Like everyone else who has written, this episode was beyond magnificent! It was quite inspiring to see the actors actually performing the music, and the thread of it running throughout the episode was brilliant! To read about your experience recreating the scores was brutal, but well worth the effort!

    I get the feeling (call it intuition) that the “Final 4/5 Theme” may have something to do with the lost 7. If I’m right, perhaps the theme could be renamed “7th House” (borrowed from 5th dimension’s “Age of Aquarius”) which seems fitting with the religious undertones. There are a few lines in the “Age of Aquarius” that might serve as an appropriate title.

    Just a thought…

    Meanwhile, though, I was so enraptured with the music, that I let the entire episode sweep me away with its bittersweet notes; I only began to suspect the “father” reveal when Kara was ranting about her father’s abandonment, and the camera showed the emotion on his face. Excellent acting!

    Definitely award worthy episode for music and anything else the “powers that be” might feel inclined to bestow on this great series!

    Hey, another possible title for that theme: “The Powers That Be”… :)

    Keep the music coming!

    Ok, I know I’m piling on to what everyone else has said, but the music was so damn good I have to just add my appreciation in with everyone else.

    The “Slick is Kara’s Dad” reveal worked for me even though I saw it coming, mainly because of Katee Sackhoff’s performance–the reveal of Slick may have been spoiled for me, but it wasn’t for Kara. Same thing with the Watchtower reveal–figuring it out a few seconds before Tigh et al. let me #1 feel a bit superior for noticing and #2 allowed me to really enjoy the reaction shot of everyone at the bar (bless Hogan and Kate Vernon).

    As for a name suggestion, how about “The Siren’s Call” (variation on “Heeding the Call”, has mythological and thematic overtones from “The Oddessy”–lost heroes trying to get home in a hostile universe and interfering gods, etc.)

    Bristohawk… “Speaking of fiddles, what’s painfully a lot phonier than a fake pianist is a fake violinist or cellist.”

    You’re absolutely right. At least the actor faking piano can hide their hands. The first film I ever scored (as a student at USC) had a shot of a little girl playing violin. She was holding the bow / violin in the wrong hands, holding the bow wrong and not even attempting to move her fingers. It was pretty funny. However, that film was awesome in every other aspect.

    -Bear

    Revelation 23: “Unless “Holy Frak” is a suitable song name…”

    There y’go. It’s concise, yet it says it all.

    Smeagolette: “There are a few lines in the “Age of Aquarius” that might serve as an appropriate title.”

    Hmm… “Love Will Guide”?

    - M. \”/

    I thought Season 3 was fantastic on CD, as well as in the show, and I suspect Season 4 will be at least just as good, probably even better !!!

    It seems, Bear, that each season, the music just keeps getting better and better, more sophisticated, more powerful, more inventive.

    This body of work you have built for Galactica is some of the best work ever composed for Television, bar none.

    Please, make this a quality, 2 CD release.

    The music, and your fans, demand it :-)

    So Say We All !!!!!

    I am not sure if anyone else posted this but:

    Battlestar Wiki calls it simply “The Music”. I think that that is an appropriate title since it has, as you pointed out, grown to encompass so much more than the Final Four.

    Also, awesome blog. I am looking forward to re-watching this episode with all your notes to guide me.

    BTW: here is the link to the BSG Wiki article:
    http://en.battlestarwiki.org/wiki/The_Music

    And lastly, congrats on your engagement.

    The “Watchtower” Reveal is probably one of my top 3 moments in series. I didn’t think the Final Four theme could get better…

    Please, Please…PLEASE include the piano mix on the next soundtrack?

    I don’t get it. I was talking to a friend and fellow fan of the show, and she went on about how awesome this episode was. I agreed and said I had a musicgasm over it. She replied “What was that thing that Kara and the guy played at the end??”

    She had no ears for it. She didn’t it at all.

    I’m sure many of you run into that all the time if you have an appreciation of music but have grown up in nonmusical families and have nonmusical friends.

    How can someone not hear the frakkin’ obvious? I was starting to go “Ahhhhh YEAHHHHH” by the time Slick started picking up the bass line.

    Ah well, you can’t win ‘em all, but she, and many others like her, must have gotten it on some level?

    I wish I could have afforded one of those cheap flights to the UK for Prelude to War. Bear needs to stop by Helsinki on his back. The grand piano in my university’s atrium will do.

    You know Bear, I’m beginning to think that you could make an entire CD of “Roslin and Adama” based cues, as well as an entire CD of “Watchtower” based cues…I’d buy both, lol.

    Bear,
    I’ve never bothered to register or comment before. On this occasion, I was compelled to by this episode. Each season your music grows, and becomes progressively better. This episode sent chills up my spine because of how good it was, especially near the end where Roark and Starbuck are playing together.

    This was easily the most music-rich and musically incredible episode of the entire series, in my opinion. Your labors paid off, Bear. I can’t wait to get the soundtrack for all of Season 4.

    To put it simply, “Frakkin’ amazing.”

    Or even better, “Cylon Diegetica.”

    Left by Andrew C. Ewert on March 2nd, 2009

    OHH, so close! Here’s the (quasi) joke answer!

    Battlestar Diegetica!

    Wow… I’m a long time lurker, but this episode forced me to join up and say how awesome the music was. Amazing job, congratulations! And like your producer said, I’ve never heard of a piece of TV or of a film where music was such a focus, and there’s nothing to match the way that (for me, at least!) this episode became such a musically-centred island in a series which is usually, necessarily, so heavily plot- and character-focussed. You did an amazing job, and I have lost count of my rewatches… or rather, re-listens, as I usually don’t watch it, except for some pivotal moments (Kara blowing the smoke off the gun, Saul’s WhatTheFrak etc) – it’s all about the music. You continue to impress, just showing more and more sides to your musical talents! I can’t wait to hear more McCreary-scored AV masterpieces.

    Sidenote – I had no idea about ‘The Music’ being played just until the moment when Roak half-nods at Katee and starts the bass line proper (not dropping the root from C# to B but pushing it up to D for the first time) – it was instantaneous recognition then, I got shivers up my spine… music is an awesome way to cue all the emotions and experiences from the past, here I was especially thinking of the scene at the end of S3 where Kara is ‘found’ again, as well as the Call to the F4 of course. Just perfect.

    And I just love how you develop the tinkered theme from the bar earlier into the fullblown jazzy Sonata at the end (I know you said you retrodeveloped it the other way round, but still – it sounded so organic, it was seamless!) – and it just tied the whole episode, and Kara’s past, all
    together perfectly.

    Question – in the ending sequence, do you switch the audio from mono (Kara at Sam’s bedside) to stereo (as the Chief goes into his imagined house by leaning on the wall) – at any rate, on my computer speakers it sounds like it, and the effect is just awesome (the nostalgia of the recording she plays Sam in mono for her, the vibrancy and more-real-than-life effect of the Chief’s dream)…

    I’ll say it again – congratulations for the awesome work. Best regards mate! and keep it up.

    raftrap… “it’s fun how every character in the show has had a centric episode, and this feels like the Bear McCreary centric episode.”

    This made me smile, since its exactly how I’ve always felt about this episode.

    “I just wanna ask if there was a moment that anyone considered using the Philip Glass song heard back in season 2 for any of the Starbuck/Slick scenes or that would have brought unwanted attention to that particular song?”

    I wanted to avoid that piece entirely because it would absolutely give away the reveal that Slick is Kara’s father.

    Furyofaseraph… “Dreilide is German for “Third Eyelid” referring to the third/mysical eye.”

    I didn’t know this. Thanks!

    Revelation 23… “Is this what makes her the “harbinger of death”? She has some connection to the Cylons, whether he’s a half breed herself, an experiment or something else entirely.”

    It was always my interpretation that the “harbinger of death” prophecy was realized when they found Earth and it was a nuked ash-heap. But, I may be wrong. :)

    Christine… “As my illness (not cancer but Multiple Sclerosis) got more serious this spring, I was in a great deal of pain and was sent to the hospital for 3 days to receive some MS chemotherapy. I could not read, so I took my ipod and listen to your music the entire time I was there, through the side-effects of the meds. Your music helped me through the hard times and that is the only thing that made and continues to make me feel good.”

    I’m honored that my work could have such a positive impact on your life. I wish you many years of health and happiness, and I’ll do my best to fill them with new and exciting soundtrack albums! :)

    Eruname… “Showbiz” is a great record, but my favorite Muse tracks are probably “Plug In Baby,” “Take a Bow” and “Hysteria”

    Capt Porridge… “I just can’t imagine how 1 CD could do justice to all this great music you’ve blessed us with.”

    I’m beginning to have trouble imagining that as well. I’m definitely leaning towards a double-album now.

    Darth Revis… “I’ve been listening to the S3 soundtrack again today and I distinctly hear the Final Five Theme in the intro to “A Distant Sorrow” but I can’t find that musical cue in the episode. Did you put it there just for the album (an “audio retcon” so to speak) or were you already working with that theme in the beginning of the season?”

    Yes, that a bit of “audio-retconning.” I wanted to create the feeling that you’d already been hearing “Watchtower” by the time you got to the end of the album. In fact, my original idea was to have whisps of it playing very quietly, like a ghost, in between all the tracks, but I wimped out at the last minute. I also think of the first 1:30 of “A Distant Sadness” as more like an orchestral “Overture,” a fanfare to kick off the soundtrack album.
    And funny you mentioned the music in Miami Vice. I guess Edward James Olmos has a habit of ending up in shows with great music!

    paideia… “Watching Starbuck and her dad brought me back to my childhood, watching my dad play “Maple Leaf Rag” (very slowly), ”

    That’s crazy, because I mentioned in Chapter 2 that I played a Joplin piece on the piano when I was with Nankin… and it was “The Maple Leaf Rag!”

    -Bear

    this piano duet is stunning on my i-Pod! Much like the “watchtower” MP3 file that was made available back in season three, I actually like the voices and (most of the) sounds from the actual show.

    T minus 4 hours and counting.

    very bitter sweet.

    dave
    CFPrez
    http://bearmccrearyfans.yuku.com/

    Furyofaseraph… “If anyone is familiar with the original series, I really believe that the beings of light are going to make their reimagined appearance.”

    Refresh my memory, did the beings of light look anything like the Final Five did in D’Anna’s vision?

    Thomas… “n Kara’s dream sequence, you see young Kara play the f multiple times. However, when I tried to recreate what she was doing I noticed it was an e that was being heard. Was the piano tuned down, was it a small mistake by you or am I blind/tonedeaf?”

    It certainly wasn’t a mistake, but a conscious decision. Remember, the girl played the only song she knew and I replaced it with a totally different composition in the final score. If you look carefully, you’ll see this in several places throughout the episode… where the pitches aren’t lining up exactly. It was as close as I could get, since there’s a point where I didn’t want to sacrifice the quality of the music just for the 100% accuracy of pitches and keyboard notes.

    Tashley… “but back in the Sometimes a Great Notion blog, there were a bunch of comments on the Watchtower theme (the scene about 19 minutes in when Anders picks up the gee-tar finger board): it was brought up that it sounded like a bar out-of-tune piano. Is that in any connection with this episode?? Was that piano sound purposely put in that episode’s arrangement of Watchtower to foreshadow Kara?”

    YES! That’s it! The piano you’re hearing in “Sometimes a Great Notion” is the sampled Slick’s piano from this episode. I wanted specifically to reference this episode. In fact, you’ll hear the piano playing the Final Four Theme also in “Deadlock,” so it’s been a subconscious clue for several episodes.

    Flightofheaven… “Do you have any ideas on how to tell a born-again pianist how to start?”

    I guess I’d recommend finding a teacher who can walk you through exactly what you need to learn. But, of course, just playing a lot will do wonders.

    19thNervousCylon… “Also, everyone here fixated on “Daniel”:you might want to go listen to the Ronald Moore podcasts from this part of the season (they are on the SciFi Channel web site as well as on iTunes). If you go too far out with your theories you may be disappointed, as least from what I can glean from his podcasts so far.”

    I’ve been keeping mute on this topic for 2 weeks, and I won’t say anything specific now… but I’d highly recommend all of you take a deep, calming breath and listen to what Ron’s telling you. :)

    mjack… “I’m loving what you are doing on Terminator the Sarah Connor Chronicles and was just wondering if you had any plans to keep blogging about your musical experience on that show?”

    I hope to. The last 6 episodes of this season are easily the best the show has produced, so its continuing to get better and better. The blog entries for BG have been so incredibly time-consuming it’s left me with no energy to blog about “Terminator” but I hope to start up again once the BG finale airs.

    Stolle… “If I only got the wave files I could through a program together in different formats (Kontakt being an obvious choice but sfz would be nice since there are free sampleplayers out there).”

    You wouldn’t need to. We created the instrument in Kontakt. :) Maybe we’ll release it one day.

    -Bear

    Another name possibility for the Final Four Theme:

    Maybe this one is the most accurate, since it is what all the characters seem to call it:

    “That Frakking Song!”

    :)

    -Bear

    ots7482… “Question – in the ending sequence, do you switch the audio from mono (Kara at Sam’s bedside) to stereo (as the Chief goes into his imagined house by leaning on the wall) – at any rate, on my computer speakers it sounds like it, and the effect is just awesome (the nostalgia of the recording she plays Sam in mono for her, the vibrancy and more-real-than-life effect of the Chief’s dream)…”

    Yes, that’s exactly what happened. Actually, the piano sound was not only mono, but “futzed” to sound like it is originating from the tiny boom-box speakers. Then, as we transition to Chief for the final scene, the piano goes to the full 5.1 mix, and the crunchy speaker effect goes away. Now, it has made the transition from being a “source” music instrument to becoming the “score.”

    This trick is used several other times throughout the episode, but that last one was the most pronounced.

    -Bear

    I like that idea about gradually amping up Watchtower throughout the soundtrack like a ghost.

    Something like that, in a sense might work for the S4 soundtrack, by interspersing Angers picking up the guitar piece, and a couple of other quotes of the theme, between other cues, culminating in the Reveal sequence before the big Finale stuff.

    One thing I really love about the S3 Soundtrack is the arrangement of the music on the CD. It sounds like an Album rather than a collection of cues (although I do like separate tracks that don’t mix into each other. I use Windows Media Player, and it sometimes has an audible gap or pop when changing cues), and this really heightens the listening experience.

    Also, might I suggest a Concert in the LA/Orange County Area to promote the 2 CD soundtrack when it’s released?

    The Roxy concert was a lot of fun :-)

    Hi Bear

    I loved how the music played throughout the episode, i didnt see the ‘watchtower’ them coming until the end, but once i heard it i was able to go back through the episode and pick up some of the clues left throughout

    Do you think there may be a more complete version of Nomian’s 3rd on the DVD? to compliment the Colonial anthem piece from the Razor flashbacks perhaps? i really get a kick out of all the little nods to the past you and the rest of the team give

    Oh and as a suggestion for a new name for the ‘Final Four’ Theme, perhaps Moebius? given the “All of this has happened before, and will happen again” nature of both the show, and the destruction the Final Five were trying to avoid?

    Looking Forward to the Season 4 Soundtrack

    Andy

    Bear,

    I just wanted to say THANK YOU for “Someone to Watch Over Me”. It was one of the best BSG episodes I’ve seen so far. The big reveal took me completely by surprise and I was ecstatic. I went back and re-watched the moment when the Final Four Theme comes alive and the camera pulls upwards – it’s a great moment.
    You do amazing work.

    Bear-
    Until I watched the ‘Someone to watch over me’ episode last night, I never knew who composed the score for BG. This particular episode, to me, ranked right up there with the film ‘Blade Runner’ (my favorite film). Thank you for composing that haunting score. When Slick started playing that piece after being challenged to ‘learn how to play the piano’ I was so moved that I kept rewinding the dvr to hear the chord progressions. I actually thought that maybe the show had snagged Vangelis to compose a special piece for this episode. The Blade Runner soundtrack features a piece called ‘Memories of Green’ that is played on a piano that has a similar “sound presence” (beautiful, and slightly out of tune- like an old sepia toned photograph). Anyway, I just wanted to thank you for the music- and for the sheet music notation as well. I learn by ear mainly and am a rusty hack at best, but I made an mp3 of the audio track so that I can play along with it on my midi keyboard in garageband. I’ve finally found something to inspire me to dust off the keyboard after years of disuse. Cheers! I will be keeping my eyes out for a music release from you. You’ve piqued my attention.

    Congrats on the wedding as well.

    Cheers,
    Mike

    PS- I’m really glad I read your blog- the explanation about Slick being dad caught me totally off guard. I went back and re-watched the scene and it was beautifully executed. Chico would be proud.

    Hi Bear!

    Another long time reader, first time poster… I just had to register to join the chorus and tell you how much I enjoyed the episode (which I watched 5 times now) as well as your blog posts. Both where a true pleasure and deeply inspiring! Thank you so much for your tremendous work!

    I play piano/keyboard myself and you pretty much convinced me that Slick and Kara playing in Joe’s bar was the real thing. :)

    Slick’s piano as sfz and/or Kontakt instrument would be frakkin sweet indeed!

    To answer your questions:
    - Didn’t guess it would be Watchtower
    - Didn’t guess Slick would be Starbuck’s father. In fact I was so overwhelmed when I saw it for the first time, I even missed that the piano man was suddenly gone.

    But even if I had known (and now that I do know and I watch it again), I think the reveal is still as powerful as any in the whole series. I sure looked just like Tigh… with both eyes!

    Here’s a question I have: zafyrgoalum mentioned the battlestarwiki entry for “The Music”: http://en.battlestarwiki.org/wiki/The_Music
    The last of the “notes” says that “The rhythm of the Colonial emergency locator beacon’s signal matches the rhythm of the Music”. If that’s correct, where you in any way involved in this?

    …and Please make it a 2 disc album!

    keytars_forever

    I like “that frakking song” lol – has attitude.

    Bear: “Maybe this one is the most accurate, since it is what all the characters seem to call it:

    “That Frakking Song!” ”

    Well… there it is, then. Can’t argue with Saul Tigh.

    - M. \”0

    For anyone who hasn’t seen this by now, Caprica-City.de has a sneak peek of the main theme in piano for “Caprica” http://www.caprica-city.de./index.php?pn_go=details&id=0002208 , and the cool Wondercon preview of “Terminator: TSCC” it’s on Youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MplkbA_zTgE and has an eerie version of a scottish song just at the end that I really hope appears in one of the episodes soon and commented on this blog by the man himself.

    keytars_forever says:
    …and Please make it a 2 disc album!

    I disagree!!!!!
    Please make it a 4 disc album!
    :^)

    Bear writes to ots7482… :
    Yes, that’s exactly what happened. Actually, the piano sound was not only mono, but “futzed” to sound like it is originating from the tiny boom-box speakers. Then, as we transition to Chief for the final scene, the piano goes to the full 5.1 mix, and the crunchy speaker effect goes away. Now, it has made the transition from being a “source” music instrument to becoming the “score.”

    This trick is used several other times throughout the episode, but that last one was the most pronounced.
    ********

    This episode stands out in so many ways, but this “trick” that Bear is describing completes the emotional journey in my opinion, it is the kick in the pants which is a jolt of awareness, I can’t really describe it properly, but seeing The Chief running through the “home” he only just recently found IN HIS ORANGE WORK CLOTHES is such a visual stunner that having the compliment of the music go from “boombox” to full 5.1 at that moment is just sheer brilliance on the production team’s part, without Bear this episode and this moment might have been good, but Bear’s contributions right at this moment prove how powerful sound and music are in delivering that emotional kick in the pants and what makes the episode truly epic.

    I can’t wait for the BluRay dvd set!!!! (it is supposed to come out this summer, I think.)

    “I disagree!!!!!
    Please make it a 4 disc album!
    :^)”

    Haha, I wouldn’t complain! But remember, much of the soundtrack has to be re-recorded and re-arranged, so it IS a lot of work, I immagine. But, Bear, if the pain of having to leave stuff out is greater than the work it takes, by all means, feel free to make it a 10 disc set… :D

    Would you be able/willing to record commentary for this episode? Even if it were just unofficial, I think a number of us here would be interested in hearing it.

    I just listened to raftrap’s Caprica preview, and I found what sounds to me like some inspiration from Philip Glass’ “Metamorphosis” movements. This is a pleasant surprise to me, as I “interpret” those particular songs to the evolution of the Cylons themselves.
    Was/Is that your intent, Bear?

    Bear the music was absolutely amazing. Please include as much of the piano music on the soundtrack as possible!

    “that” song, that piece of art, was unbelievable. it makes me cry everytime i listen, i can’t stop myself from listening it. you really should put it S4 ost. a much more long version of course :)

    Here’s a little off-topic fun tid-bit:
    http://www.physorg.com/news155309993.html

    Looking for a mate who in everyday conversation can pick up even your most subtle emotional cues? Find a musician….

    Bear, I think that this is the finest use of music in a TV Show I’ve ever seen. As this revealed itself, I actually had the hairs stand up on the back of my neck! Bravo, your scores to BSG have been second to none and I shall sorely miss them as much as the show. Sigh! all good things must come to an end I guess. Please do come and perform in the UK!

    P.S Please, please put this version of the final four theme onto the soundtrack!

    I was kind of amused to read that you originally wanted to write something kind of Reznor-esque for the piece little Kara would be playing in the nightmare, because I’ve been listening to a lot of Nine Inch Nails songs recently and realizing a lot of his lyrics can be perfectly applied to the themes of BSG. Haha.

    The way Ron Moore worded something when talking about “Watchtower” in the podcast commentary gave me an idea for a new name for it: the “intertwining destinies theme”?

    I’m loving the Caprica theme. It sounds more reminiscent of the “Battlestar Sonatica” than Glass’ “Metamorphosis” to me, which is probably an appropriate similarity.

    Bear, how about simply the “Destiny Theme” ?

    Hi Bear.
    I’m a fan of BSG and have always appreciated the music but the piano scene from this episode prompted me to seek out and buy all your scores from the show! I’m really hoping its in the next set of CD’s released.

    On another note “Storming New Caprica” is the best “running” music ever! Stick that on your iPod and you’ll smash your PB. Inspired. Thanks.

    Perhaps too wordy for a title but I think the line “sometimes lost is where you need to be” captures the emotion of Slick’s song perfectly.

    Hey Bear,

    I, like many other, loved your work on this episode.

    Do you ever put the piano sheets online (or at least for sale)?

    I would really like to get my hands on the notes for the opening of this episode. I’m actually most interested in the bits that aren’t part of his “same lame-ass song” or the conclusion of the episode. I’m talking about the stuff right when Starbuck sees the dead version of herself in the mirror, takes a shower and then proceeds to instruct the viper pilots. It’s really moving and beautiful.

    Cheers from Sweden!

    -Sebastian

    Andy3E… “Do you think there may be a more complete version of Nomian’s 3rd on the DVD? ”

    Probably not on the DVD, but eventually I might release the longer piano solo version. It probably won’t make the S4 CD, but will certainly be on the future release of BG odds’n'ends that I release afterwards.

    keytars_forever… “The last of the “notes” says that “The rhythm of the Colonial emergency locator beacon’s signal matches the rhythm of the Music”. If that’s correct, where you in any way involved in this?”

    I hadn’t heard about this, and I can almost certainly assure you its a coincidence. Still, maybe the stars aligned and it just happened anyway!

    Macker… “I just listened to raftrap’s Caprica preview, and I found what sounds to me like some inspiration from Philip Glass’ “Metamorphosis” movements. This is a pleasant surprise to me, as I “interpret” those particular songs to the evolution of the Cylons themselves.
    Was/Is that your intent, Bear?”

    I must say that no, that was certainly not a conscious connection. I think the theme to Caprica is far more melodically and harmonically active than “Metamorphosis.” About the only thing in common is the minor third ostinato and the fact that I’m playing it on the piano. Also, I’m surprised that you connect that piece to the evolution of the Cylons, since there’s no concrete evidence yet in the series to suggest Kara’s dad was involved with the creation of the Cylons at all. Interesting. :)

    CatsOnMars… “I’m loving the Caprica theme. It sounds more reminiscent of the “Battlestar Sonatica” than Glass’ “Metamorphosis” to me, which is probably an appropriate similarity.”

    Another interesting comparison. I wouldn’t have thought of that. The melody lines are certainly similar, since I wrote them both. Honestly, I think the only reason the theme is reminiscent of these pieces is because I was playing it on the piano. When you hear the full orchestra playing it, I think it will sound very different. :)

    -Bear

    hi Bear!

    Daniel’s long-haired Joseph here. I don’t think I have commented before, but I’ve been reading since the midseason finale screening at Universal. I’ve really enjoyed your work, and the view from this blog, watching its influence and significance increase and blossom, has been an added layer of fun for my enjoyment of the series.

    I write to say three things: one, this was an extremely satisfying episode for me on many levels. strikingly, it’s the kind of episode I adore BSG for — it has a compelling emotional core with realistic characters I care about, and at the same time, has that suspenseful action-adventure adrenaline zing. and then just behind that is the delivery. the music is interwoven throughout in such a clean, elegant, and appropriate style that the whole episode (dialogue and sound effects inclusive) feels like a complete work. a concept album, or a symphony. much like a good musical, I would listen to this episode start to finish without the picture and still enjoy it.

    and then you have Starbuck in the shower. the consummate BSG episode (though an illustration of boringness that ain’t.)

    I did miss the Roslin/Adama scenes (it felt strange to visit them briefly, like I was intruding) and I hope they surface somehow.

    second, to answer your questions about predictability. for me, I figured out he was her father right around the moment I was supposed to. I thought for a while the relationship had an interesting oedipal/electran subtext (adding to the growing pile of entertainingly incestuous implications on the show), which means the red herring worked for me, but then around the reveal moment, it clicked. on a second viewing, after reading about it, I found it lovely and affecting.

    I did notice that the piano was overdubbed; once or twice (no more often than that!) the notes seemed to be struck with slightly more pressure, or quicker, than what showed on screen. I also think I picked up on the surprisingly delicious stereo clarity – the beating of the out of tune strings having a nice left-right motion, maybe, coupled with my experiences with my own small studio here, as and I’m fairly used to how mic placement sounds. essentially, it sounded just a little too good, which helped it lift beautifully into the rest of the score, and I think sort of struck a chord with a sense of alienness of a piano from the BSG universe. I’m just surprised nobody cut the corners off it.

    (oh, and I did also predict that the little girl would turn into the Charbuck image. I enjoyed it anyway, but I wish I hadn’t seen it coming from the moment the scene began.)

    for a piece title: scanning Dylan’s lyrics, found “This Is Not Our Fate”, or perhaps “Let Us Not Talk Falsely”. *nods sagely*

    were those all the questions? I feel like there may have been more, but I’ve been going on too long already without getting to the very most important part:

    thirdly, that’s not a DAT — that’s a doctored microcasette (left). :)

    it would have been just a little bit cooler to doctor up the older and more obscure minicasette (right in photo), whose corners (unlike a piano’s) could fairly easily be cut without harm, but yes, I know that’s not your department. :)

    such greatness, though; enough for so many of us to delurk.

    bravo!
    J

    You say several times “but this isn’t Watchtower, this is the music I made” and to me seems almost in surprise. I’m not sure if it’s modesty or what but I think you seem to be stepping around the point, you are as right when you say it’s the music you came up with as the other staff were when they called it Watchtower. In my mind, the mind of those (spectacularly talented) people and many of the fans of the show this piece of music IS Watchtower.

    Many covers tend to just be another band playing a well known song, but every so often someone comes along and does something that stands out as something in its own right, as Jeff Buckley is to “Halleluja”, Pendulum is to “Voodoo People” or Black Mages is to the Final Fantasy music, in my mind Bear McCreary is to “Watchtower”.

    I got the season 3 sound track for this song alone and have played it to several friends (who don’t watch BSG) who all liked it. I honestly believe this should be released as a single, it would be a great tribute to the end of Galactica, the fans of the show would ecstatically go to the shops to buy it and it would reach a lot of people that would otherwise never hear it.

    And maybe you could put that finished Sonata as a B side ;)

    In response to the reveal:

    I have religiously avoided any spoilers I can on Galactica for a long time now so had no clue as to what was coming up. From this perspective I was questioning if Slick was Starbuck’s father about halfway through, but in that way that the idea was floating in the back of my head and was just pulled forward into realisation just as Starbuck is, and while Galactica does love the unexpected reveal that suddenly slams you with understanding, I think this approach worked perfectly for the emotional result you were aiming for. As far as the Watchtower reveal itself goes, I cottoned on just about when Tigh did.

    This is by far one of my favourite episodes of the series and thank you to everyone who made it what it was. Emmys all round.

    You wrote:

    “I’m beginning to have trouble imagining that as well. I’m definitely leaning towards a double-album now.”

    Thank the gods! There’s too much seriously awesome music in season four for one disc to do it justice, especially when you consider that season one didn’t have nearly as many episodes and still filled a full CD.

    Now what you really ought to do is do what Howard Shore did with Lord of the Rings: release the complete BSG score on CD and DVD audio! Now that would be frakking awesome!

    You totally have my vote for the Final Four theme to be named “That Frakking Song”. It’s perfect! :D

    “I honestly believe this should be released as a single, it would be a great tribute to the end of Galactica, the fans of the show would ecstatically go to the shops to buy it and it would reach a lot of people that would otherwise never hear it.

    And maybe you could put that finished Sonata as a B side ;)”

    Chao, that is a GREAT idea!
    - BSG fans and people in general know the song
    - It has the unique sound of the BSG universe
    - It stands out most, of all of BSG’s soundtrack (IMO), so fans DO want to have it (even those who wouldn’t get the whole album)
    - I want to put it in my cd rack

    It could be big.

    I am still haunted by the music in this episode. I don’t follow the fan-sites and although I did guess Slick was her father (since he’d also left his family for music), I didn’t know for sure. Then when they started playing the piano together I was just blown away by the reveals… Boomer taking Hera, Tigh hearing THE song, and Kara realizing who she’s playing with. I loved it! And I can’t stop thinking about the music. Thank you so much.

    I’d name it “The Call” theme or “The Awakening” theme. It makes me think of the tagline, “They have a plan.” But that doesn’t work very well as a theme name. I can’t wait to see and hear the finale.

    Bear-
    keytars_forever… “The last of the “notes” says that “The rhythm of the Colonial emergency locator beacon’s signal matches the rhythm of the Music”. If that’s correct, where you in any way involved in this?”

    Oops. Comment misfire.

    What I meant to say was that I think what keystars may be talking about is that RDM made a comment in the Revelations podcast (mistakenly, possibly) that the rhythm of the signal was identical to the All Along the Watchtower rhythm. He may have gotten confused with that fact that I know you HAVE mentioned where that beeping in the airlock control room snyched with the final beats of the drums in The Signal, which you said was indeed merely a weird coincidence.

    I did’t listen to the podcast (i should though), I just read it in the battlestarwiki article:
    http://en.battlestarwiki.org/wiki/The_Music

    Anyway, what’s more important is the implication. And the implication has already been verified by this week’s episode when Starbuck and the final 5 tell Adama about the “song that Hera wrote the notes for, the same song that Starbuck’s father told her to play when she was a little girl, the same song that switched the final 5 on AND the >song that lead them to earth<” – So there we have it. :)

    Bear –

    Keytars_forever is absolutely correct regarding the “That Frakking Song” coming out of Kara’s pristine viper in “Revelations” — That was scripted. Shot 40: INT. GALACTICA – HANGAR DECK – KARA’S VIPER – RETURN
    Kara flips the frequency selector. Same HISS. Again. Something’s there! It’s faint, the Colonial equivalent of Morese: DIT-DIT, DIT-DIT-DIT-DIT. DIT-DIT, DIT-DIT-DIT-DIT. the RHYTHM ECHOES THE RIFF to “All Along the Watchtower.” Good ears! – Bradley Thompson

    ngarenn… “Keytars_forever is absolutely correct regarding the “That Frakking Song” coming out of Kara’s pristine viper in “Revelations””

    Thanks Bradley and welcome to the blog! And thanks for confirming that, straight from the source. :)

    -Bear

    I don’t know if any of you realize how aggravating it is to try and figure out how to play that song on my iPhone’s piano application. Or maybe it’s just aggravating to other people around me. Either way, Mr. McCreary, thank you kindly for all your work.

    First of all, if the fact that you can’t get the Final Four Theme out of your head means that you’re a cylon, then I am a cylon.
    I’ve watched and rewatched the Kara/Slick scene so often I might just have (almost) crashed my streaming server.
    That particular rendition of the theme is by far the strongest and carries the most emotion (masterfully depicted by Michael Hogan in his reaction to hearing Kara playing the song).
    I’ve been obsessing about this for three days now and there is no end in sight.
    It even got me thinking about looking for the notes of the song and taking up the piano again (which I haven’t played in over 20 years).
    So, kudos to you, Bear. Don’t let anyone tell you that you didn’t achieve something great and beautiful, there, because you certainly did.

    And if you feel to bless us with more variations on the final four theme (or anything else for that matter…) I’ll certainly be there to listen.
    Thank you!

    Fantastic work, Bear. It was this episode that caused me to search for you and your music. Thank you! I want to buy a copy of the music that Kara played!!!

    Bear,
    I have to say that your music on this show has really moved me. As to a title for the “Final four theme” how about All of this has happened before. It’s a little long but it kind of brings things full circle. I can’t wait for the new soundtrack!!!

    Sorry if this has already been posted, but this shouldn’t be missed.

    http://www.scifi.com/battlestar/video/index.php?sub=blog&clip=21

    The Bear on Set
    David Eick’s Video Blog
    Composer Bear McCreary talks about bringing a song to life and teaching Katee Sackhoff how to tickle the ivories.

    Mr. McCreary,

    Since I was about 12 or so, I’ve been fairly partial to classical music and opera. More recently, I’ve grown very fond of more powerful piano. That being said, this was the episode that made me look for your soundtracks. I’m in love with every bit of piano in this whole episode, and I keep playing it over and over in the background just so I can hear the piano.

    I just hope you put them all on the Season Four soundtrack!

    Thanks for “turning me on” to your music. I can honestly say it’s changed me a bit.

    - Justin

    Is their or will their be a full version of kara’s song.

    where can i get it from?

    steve

    Hello,
    I don’t know if you will read my comment among all the ones you receive. I’m French, writing from France (so sorry for my English, I may not use the right words). I came here because I watch BSG4 and I felt in love with the song Kara Thrace plays at the piano that goes more “rock” on the tape. I can’t get it out of my head, this song rocks on ! Thank you for having created it ! I do hope this song will be on the Season4CD, I can’t wait for it (it seems to be years to wait T_T). So thanks for all your work, which plays in my opinion a huge part in the success of BSG.
    Best regards from France and good luck for all your works.

    Wow! 200 comments. Well here’s #201! :)

    Tommy… thanks for posting that link to David Eick’s video blog. I hadn’t seen it yet.

    vt2vx… “Is their or will their be a full version of kara’s song.”

    I don’t know yet. There isn’t a fuller version beyond what you heard in the episode, and I don’t know if I’ll have time to do one for the soundtrack album. Right now I’m guessing that the album will have the air version and a future CD release will include some kind of expanded version of the song.

    -Bear

    Wow, as Starbuck was punching in the jump coordinates the piano music very nearly brought tears to my eyes. Fantastic music. My brother and I want to learn the sheet music! Please release a full version.

    [...] dizisinin setindeki eski piyanoda bestelenmiş olması… Parçayla ilgili detaylı bilgiyi burada [...]

    anmend43… “My brother and I want to learn the sheet music! Please release a full version.”

    We will! Keep an eye out on the blog here in the coming months. We’re gonna do this!

    -Bear

    Is there any possibility that you’ll release for sale/make available to download the samples you created from Slick’s piano? I’d love to be able to use them in Logic/Garageband.

    jonathondezlalour…

    “Is there any possibility that you’ll release for sale/make available to download the samples you created from Slick’s piano?”

    It’s an interesting idea, and one that has certainly occurred to me. Maybe one day. It is a pretty useless piano, since its so out of tune. However, it would be fun to play “Elegy” on it, since you could essentially recreate the album version exactly.

    -Bear

    hi! i have compiled some basic stuff to make some sheet music you can preview at my youtube channel here: http://www.youtube.com/watchtoweranimation
    the download link is here: http://www.megaupload.com/?d=8VF870H6
    i am a big fan of this music, thanks for posting some of teh melody :D

    yahoooooooooooman…

    Wow, incredible work! But some of those E major chords should be A chords. But your transcription of the Kara line sounds like the notes are all there. Thanks for sharing this! Once I get the sheet music release finished, you guys can see the actual notes.

    -Bear

    Ok, I can’t wait to have the music sheet released for the song Kara remembers. Can you tell us when it is going to be? Please? :) This song is great!!! I’ve been tryin’ to write down the notes on my own, and I learned how to play some parts, but considering it’s one of my favorite songs I would really love to have the original sheet music.
    Alexandra

    zvezdfica… I don’t know when the release will be yet, but just keep checking the blog. Probably early next year, honestly. It WILL happen, though. I promise!

    -Bear

    Obviously I’m behind the times once again, but I just watched this episode for the first time today :)
    This was a beautiful episode. The interesting thing about owning the soundtrack before watching the season itself is that it means I’ve heard most of the music before I see the episodes it corresponds to. I actually recognized “Kara Remembers” when it was used very briefly a couple episodes earlier as a sort of foreshadowing; it was neat to be able to pick out something that wouldn’t have been immediately significant if I’d watched the episode back when it first aired. Hearing the song in the actual episode was wonderful, with the storyline there to give it new meaning.
    I read all three of your entries, and enjoyed each one. I often notice certain musical moments in episodes that are especially affecting, but not being a musician I can’t say exactly why that moment was special, I just know that it was because of what I felt watching it. So it’s neat to be able to read your analysis of those scenes and to understand musically what you did to cause a particular emotional effect, whether it’s an unexpected key change or something else entirely.
    Perhaps it’s because I also played the piano as a child, but it’s always been my favorite instrument to listen to and the pieces you wrote for this episode are lovely. Katee and Roark gave great perfomances, and that combined with your music resulted in something very special. This is definitely an episode to be proud of. As always I’m thrilled to be able to share in another fantastic episode of BSG. You do such incredible work, it’s a joy to be able to see (and hear) it come to life :)

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