• 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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    The Themes of “Caprica”

    Posted by Bear McCreary on April 23rd, 2009

    MODERATE SPOILERS AHEAD: The two-hour pilot / movie “Caprica” was released on DVD this week, and it gives us our first glimpse into the series that will expand the “Battlestar Galactica” universe. I was fortunate to write music for this exciting project, because it provided the opportunity to create a totally unique sound, one that pays tribute to “Battlestar Galactica” without imitating it.

    The varied entries on my blog are a testament to the evolution and growth that my “Battlestar Galactica” score went through over the show’s four seasons. I incorporated an ever-expanding palette of ethnic instruments from all over the world, as the fleet plunged deeper into uncharted space.

    My approach for “Caprica” would be the polar opposite. After all, the events of this series take place in an entirely different environment. Caprica City is a familiar society at its most decadent and opulent peak, hardly a rag-tag fleet of refugees struggling for resources. The audience knows that doomsday looms on the horizon for citizens of Caprica City, but the characters themselves do not. “Caprica was a city that on the outside was modern, structured, and efficient,” director Jeffrey Reiner told me.  “However, on the inside, things were rotten.”

    To highlight this idea, I stripped away the urgent, tribal, primitive and mystical elements of the “Battlestar Galactica” soundtrack to distance this new series from those taiko-drum-inspired pulses.

    Eliminating what would not be in the “Caprica” score was simple. But, deciding what instruments to use proved to be more difficult. Clearly, this series needed to be tonally and instrumentally different than “Battlestar.” But, the music of “Battlestar” had been carefully constructed to be different from everything else! Employing some weird, backwards logic, I concluded that to make the “Caprica” score more “different,” I had to make it more “normal.”

    As a result, “Caprica” is scored with an intimate, contemporary chamber orchestra, recorded at the Warner Bros. Eastwood Scoring Stage last January. Yes, there are many moments where ethnic percussion or solos sneak into the texture, but the score is, in essence, entirely orchestral. “Bear sent me very complete demos against picture that worked great,” Jeff Reiner recalled.  “But it wasn’t until I sat in the scoring stage at Warner Bros., and heard the maestro conduct his orchestra, that I was blown away.

    My harmonic language for “Caprica” is far more lyrical and rich than the simple drones and dissonant clusters that permeate the majority of “Galactica.” In fact, I must admit that “Caprica” had an undeniable influence on my score for the “Battlestar” finale: Daybreak. The tight post-production schedule forced me to commence writing music for the “Battlestar” finale within days of finishing “Caprica.”  I couldn’t get the lush harmonies out of my head! So, I threw caution to the wind and applied the orchestral sensibilities I used on “Caprica” to Daybreak, creating the best score of my “Battlestar” career. Ironically, my experiences on “Caprica” forced me to expand the harmonic language of “Galactica.” I think the similarities in tone between “Caprica” and Daybreak are quite obvious, which makes sense since I had to write both of them within the same five-week span.

    Despite my goal of distancing “Caprica” from “Galactica,” the similarities do not end with the harmonic language. The instrumentation may be totally different, but my approach to these complex story arcs was very similar. I avoided making overt or obvious emotional statements, and allowed the drama on screen to unfold naturally.

    Just like in “Galactica,” our characters in “Caprica” are deeply flawed. There is no “hero,” in the traditional sense. “The film is filled with the emotions of loss and the struggles with guilt,” Jeff Reiner explained. “I wanted the music to drive the story in a unrelenting manner, but evoke the inner emotions of the characters with out falling into schmaltz.”

    Rather than trying to compensate for this ambiguity, I embraced it with the score. Daniel Graystone and Joseph Adama are restrained characters, even during the most turbulent of family crises. Their emotions are kept hidden, out of sight from their peers and visible only to those closest to them. With the score, I strove to reach beneath their muted exteriors and reveal the longing, brooding emotions within. Having taken my cue from the nuanced writing and acting performances, the score is restrained and subtle, bittersweet and elegant. I reserved the sweeping, emotional phrases for only the most important moments.

    “It’s always nerve-wracking engaging in a new relationship with composer,” Jeff Reiner admitted. But, Bear erased any doubt when we talked story. He liked the ideas that I approached him with, but most importantly he seemed to have a deep understanding of the characters’ inner lives. He also has a great command of an orchestra and an instinct for using the right instruments.”

    Another similarity between the music of “Galactica” and “Caprica” is my use of character themes. If you read my blog entries about recent “Galactica” episodes, you know that literally every character has their own theme. However, this was not always the case. In Season One, themes were not so loosely connected to a single character, but tied to emotional arcs, or narrative lines. The musical themes of “Caprica” also begin this way.

    The story is about two families, and so I wrote two thematically meaningful melodies: The Graystone Theme and The Tauron Theme. These melodies are held together with a series of ostinatos that are thematically connected with each family. (MUSIC TRIVIA: “ostinato” is a musical term that refers to an idea that repeats. In previous entries, I’ve called them “riffs” or “grooves,” but you guys are seemingly not turned off by my technical music jargon, so from here on out I’m using the proper term!)

    Before I show you these themes and ostinatos, I want to clarify that I don’t yet know how they will evolve over the course of the first season. Try not to think of the Graystone Theme as the “Daniel Theme” or the “Zoe Theme.” It is simply a musical idea that represents their entire world, isolated from the melody signifying the world of the Tauron gangsters. As I move forward and score the series you’ll see next year, I’m certain that these themes will change and evolve, and that I will compose new ones as well.

    *** THE GRAYSTONE OSTINATO ***

    This simple oscillating pattern is woven throughout the score, serving as the canvas upon which the longer melodies are painted. Usually appearing in the harp, piano and gamelan, at its simplest, the ostinato is a minor third and major third (or diminished fourth, as its technically notated):

    Play this lick on a piano and you’ll get a strong sense of G minor, since all of these pitches appear in that scale. However, I wanted to capture the moral ambiguity of the characters, and so I discovered an exciting way of harmonizing this simple figure, creating an infinitely more interesting harmony:

    The obvious G minor tonality is nowhere to be found, even though the D augmented and Eb major could easily resolve there. This gives the pattern a slippery, seductive quality. You can never quite tell where it’s going emotionally.

    The longer notes in the above four-chord pattern were often played by the harp, piano and gamelan as well, although I frequently put them in the winds and strings to highlight the chords more.


    (JoAnn Turovsky plays harp on “Caprica”)

    This harmonic progression and ostinato frequently underscored Zoe-A’s conversations with Lacey and Daniel. As I was writing, I thought of this as the “Zoe Theme,” although I hesitate to brand it as such now for the reasons I discussed earlier, because this ostinato also accompanies scenes with other characters.

    *** THE GRAYSTONE THEME ***

    This melody is the de facto “Caprica” theme, since it is woven throughout the film:

    Not coincidentally, it fits nicely over the Graystone Ostinato. (All the chords from the Ostinato in the theme appear as well.) This melody was the first thing I wrote when I began scoring the movie. I feel that it captures the complex characters and arcs in a single elegant melody.

    A few weeks ago, I was in Germany for the premiere of my ballet and performed this theme on the piano in an interview with Caprica-City.de.  In this clip you can also hear the Graystone Ostinato (after the first statement of the theme):

    The first place in the film you can really hear the Graystone Theme prominently is in the montage immediately following the train explosion, when the parents grieve.

    *** AMANDA THEME ***

    Here I go, doing exactly what I said I wouldn’t do and naming a theme after a character. Damnit!

    I didn’t use this theme much, because the vast majority of Amanda’s storyline was cut out of the film. (Are those scenes included in the DVD release? I don’t actually know). However, I know that she will be an important character moving forward, so I wanted to attach a melodic theme to her. I like this piece because it really isn’t a theme, just a unique set of ascending scales, with the top note descending in each statement. More often than not, I used it as an ostinato underneath other themes, but I featured it prominently in each of the key scenes involving Amanda.

    The most prominent appearance is at the beginning of the montage where Daniel and Amanda make love while Sam kills the defense minister.

    (Chris Bleth puts down his duduks and bansuris to play mostly orchestral woodwinds on “Caprica”)

    It’s played in an English Horn solo by “Galactica” woodwind maestro Chris Bleth. It also accompanies Durham questioning Amanda at her office.

    *** ZOE CHORDS ***

    Since I mentioned Amanda’s Theme, I remembered that there actually is one other theme distinctly associated with a character, Zoe.  This progression of four chords is first heard when Lacey discovers Zoe-A in the V-Club after the flesh and blood Zoe was killed.  Lacey is scared at first, but gradually comes to embrace Zoe-A.  As the new relationship forms between the girls, this progression is stated in the score:

    (It was technically played a half-step higher, in Db, but the notation was quite horrific, with double flats all over the place, so I moved it down to C to make it easier to read.)

    Zoe’s Chords make two other appearances in the film: once when Daniel first embraces Zoe-A and finally as the U87 with Zoe’s data installed sputters to life before Daniel’s eyes.  Each of these scenes is related narratively.  They are about the people in Zoe’s life coming to terms with her new state.  It made perfect sense that a single musical idea connected these scenes.  However, this is technically not a theme in the traditional melodic sense, because it never appears with the same melody twice.  Each time this chord progression is used, it is in a different meter or with different melodic lines.  Nevertheless, the unique contour of the ascending line in the harmony (in the above example, the G to G# to A, and back down to Ab) makes this chord progression easy to recognize and remember.  It undeniably connects these three important Zoe moments.  So, in that respect, the chords function as a Zoe Theme.

    *** DANIEL OSTINATO ***

    As Daniel begins to suspect that Lacey knows something about his daughter that he does not, the score gradually introduces a simple, repetitive figure that signifies his increasing obsession with Zoe:

    Early in the film, it is stated by a solo harp.  But, as he becomes more ruthless in his pursuit of the secret of Zoe’s avatar, the ostinato is handed over to the low strings, where it has much more energy.

    This thematic idea reaches its peak when Daniel downloads Zoe-A into a memory stick and kicks Lacey out of his house.  That moment was the turning point where he begins a transformation from grieving father to a crazy Dr. Frankenstein figure.  I needed an aggressive, dissonant ostinato that could represent his growing madness.

    *** THE TAURON OSTINATO ***

    This accompanimental figure is connected with Joseph Adama’s storyline:

    It is first heard beneath his tale of arriving on Caprica for the first time.

    However, its most prominent appearance is during the montage when Sam kills the defense minister, underscoring Sam’s ominous trek up the staircase and playing out through the whole sequence.  After our orchestral recording session, Jeff Reiner recalled the first piece I heard was the montage where Sam kills the Minister of Defense while Amanda and Daniel make love, not to mention, Joseph breaking down in tears because of guilt and the loss of his family.  The score drove the scene, while evoking the intimacy of love, the rage of a gangland killing, and the struggle with ethnic identity. Try that at home!”

    The Tauron Ostinato always leads into a statement of…

    *** THE TAURON THEME ***

    This theme signifies Joseph’s connection to the Tauron mob, and also to his ancestral family lineage:

    Unlike the Graystone Theme, which feels very classically Western, the Tauron theme has a distinctly ethnic, modal flavor.

    (Paul Cartwright plays the Tauron Theme)

    It is played either by Paul Cartwright on the acoustic fiddle, or by Chris Bleth on the Chinese membrane flute. I wanted it to capture the mood of Tauron the same way Nino Rota’s “Godfather” theme evokes Italy. My task was relatively easy because Tauron and its musical traditions are entirely fictional, so I could make Tauronese music sound like whatever I wanted. I drew my inspirations from Russian folk music, and asked Paul Cartwright to play in that style as opposed to the Scottish Fiddle feel he so frequently evokes for “Roslin and Adama” on “Battlestar.”

    Most of the major themes from “Caprica” can be heard in the film’s end credit suite, bootlegs of which are floating around the internet in so many places, I might as well just link to one here:

    The first sound you hear is Paul Cartwright’s solo fiddle playing the Tauron Theme.  At 0:25, the chamber orchestra sneaks in playing the Graystone Theme.  At 1:02, after the theme is fully stated, the low strings enter with an ominous version of the Graystone Ostinato.

    From there, a harp begins the Tauron Ostinato at 1:22.  A solo flute introduces a full statement of the Tauron Theme, at 1:30, and the orchestra begins cascading variations of that melody and ostinato, building intensity.

    At 2:44, the strings and bassoons burst into an energetic version of the Daniel Ostinato that gradually fades out at the end of the track.

    *** FAMILIAR THEMES ***

    That covers the majority of the original material from which I constructed the score to “Caprica.”  However, the music also features elements that should be more familiar to “Battlestar” fans.  The most obvious (I hope) to any reader of my blog is the appearance of “Wander My Friends” at the moment where Joseph tells Willy of his true last name and Tauron heritage:

    theme-adama.jpg

    I was given no creative direction from the producers whether or not to reference themes from “Battlestar,” but this moment was too perfect to resist. After all, the first time I used this theme was in Hand of God, when Adama and Lee discuss Joseph’s lighter (see Season One Soundtrack: “A Good Lighter”). Now, we witness the moment when Adama, as a young man, learns his true name. It seemed perfect that the strings swell with a subtle statement of “Wander My Friends” at this moment.

    This scene gave me chills when I finally saw it completed. I must confess that the familiar melody in the score made an already excellent scene even more effective. My hope is that hearing this melody subconsciously makes an audience that has seen “Galactica” remember Lee, Kara, Roslin and all the incredibly emotional experiences that this little boy doesn’t yet know he will see one day. I am very curious to know if BG fans out there noticed this little musical cameo.

    The other direct musical reference to “Galactica” is not at a theme at all, but is a set of instruments. There are two sequences where we witness the U87 (the cylon prototype, not the similarly named Neumann microphone!) in a testing procedure. The visual effects designers obviously referenced the look of the cylons from “Galactica,” so I followed their lead and allowed the music to clearly pay homage to the music in “Battlestar.”

    These sequences are the only scenes where I brought in the full ethnic percussion ensemble I used for practically every cue in “Galactica.”

    (M.B. Gordy plays nagado daiko for the cylon test scene)

    Resident percussionist M.B. Gordy brought in all the taikos, frame drums, dumbeks, chang changs, tsuzumis and other toys that give “Galactica” such a unique, percussive identity.

    However, I intentionally kept these cues relatively small. In fact, the train sequence and the ending scene were scored almost entirely with small hand-percussion, such as shakers, claves and shime daiko.  The big taiko drums were used very sparingly.  For all the action cues in “Caprica,” I avoided the bagpipes, erhu, zhong hu, duduk, bansuri, shamisen, biwa, orchestra, vocals and rock band that have all combined into mega-action-cues for “Galactica.” After all, we’re watching a prototype cylon, so I wanted the score to sound like prototype “Battlestar” music. It’s more raw, edgy and unpolished.

    One of the reasons this pilot score is so intimate is that I want to leave somewhere for us to build to. Should “Caprica” last three or four seasons, it will move chronologically in time closer and closer to the events in the “Battlestar Galactica” miniseries. My long-term goal is that the score to “Caprica” slowly devolve from the crisp, classical chamber orchestra you hear now back to the tribal percussion and ethnic soloists of “Battlestar” over the course of several seasons. If my plan works, then the last episode of “Caprica” may have a soundtrack that sounds like the first episode of “Galactica.”

    Naturally, there are many creative decisions out of my control in this process.  That idea may take several detours before my work on this series is finished. But, I like the concept very much.  With that in mind, I knew that the score to the “Caprica” pilot had to be as different from “Galactica” as possible, so that, from here on out, we will slowly inch our way back towards the beginning.

    *** SOUNDTRACK UPDATE ***

    La La Land Records is releasing my score for “Caprica” on June 16.  Pre-orders are already available at Amazon.com. As soon as the final artwork is approved, I’ll show you guys the CD cover, but so far it’s looking beautiful. I just signed off on the final mixes and mastering, and must confess that the album sounds wonderful and represents virtually every minute of score I wrote.  I think it will make a lovely companion piece to the upcoming “Battlestar Galactica: Season 4″ CD.

    Here’s the official track listing. You saw it here first:

    1. The Graystone Family
    2. Terrorism On The Lev
    3. Grieving
    4. Lacey and Zoe-A
    5. Cybernetic Life Form Node
    6. Zoe’s Avatar
    7. Daniel Captures the Code
    8. A Tauron Sacrifice
    9. Amanda Graystone
    10. Joseph and Daniel
    11. Tamara’s Heartbeat
    12. Delivering the Message
    13. Monotheism At The Athena Academy
    14. Children of Caprica
    15. Irrecoverable Error
    16. The Adama Name
    17. Zoe Awakens
    18. CAPRICA End Credits

    I am very proud of the work that my music team and I accomplished on this pilot.  I hope that BG fans out there enjoy this score, even though it is very different from my other work. Like the rest of you, I eagerly await watching the new series next year and seeing where the writers decide to take us.

    “Bear is a talented man with a strange name,” Jeff Reiner said after scoring was completed. “I can’t imagine the movie without his score.”

    So Say We All!

    -Bear

    PS: Session photos courtesy of Andrew Craig.

    66 Responses to This Blog Entry:

    Thank you so much for posting that entry, Bear. I’ve been eagerly waiting for a Caprica post since Tuesday. I had just finished rewatching “The Last Frakking Special” on the other post when this one popped up.

    While watching Caprica, I had wondered where the character-style themes you used for Galactica were. I noticed and loved the usage of “Wander my Friends” in the Adama scene, but past that I could only identify the primary theme for the pilot, what you refer to as the “Graystone” theme. I knew you would explain further, and sure enough I was stunned and amazed to realize that you used a similar woodwind theme throughout, but the underlying structure changed. I hadn’t even thought of that, so I pulled out the video file I made on Tuesday to listen. The first thing I did once I finished watching it for the first time was to use Fraps to record the end credit suite. Ironically, as I was listening, you recommended in your post that we listen to it to hear many of the themes. I was happily following along note by note at the time. :P Once I knew what to look for not only are the themes there and obvious, but they work together directly in a way that Galactica rarely did. It’s a different, but very beautiful approach. I absolutely love it. The Tauron theme is also very melodious and emotional, and works extremely well to differentiate the two families.

    You had mentioned that a lot of the scenes with Amanda in them had been cut. In the commentary Ron Moore and Jeff Reiner say that when watching the edit, they realized that it was hard for them to identify and sympathize with her when she was

    MILD SPOILERS:

    having an affair with the leader of the other tech company.

    END SPOILERS

    They cut those out, and due to time constraints, other scenes were cut as well. They may or may not bring those themes back in, and you may know already if they did or not. :) My general point is that most of those scenes are not on the dvd release, extended or otherwise.

    Thank you so much for posting about all of your work. Your blog is awesome. :D

    Awesome! I wasn’t expecting to see your Caprica post this soon. :)
    I really loved the Caprica score and enjoyed it very much. The Graystone and Tauron themes are beautiful. I’ve listened to the End Credits probably 100 times.
    Adding “Wander My Friends” in the scene with William and Joseph was perfect. I noticed it immediately! It was definitely an unexpected treat!
    Bear says…
    “My hope is that hearing this melody subconsciously makes an audience that has seen “Galactica” remember Lee, Kara, Roslin and all the incredibly emotional experiences that this little boy doesn’t yet know he will see one day. ”
    You succeeded! Thank you!
    I also really like what you said about the music with the cylon.
    Bear says…
    “After all, we’re watching a prototype cylon, so I wanted the score to sound like prototype “Battlestar” music. It’s more raw, edgy and unpolished.”
    You could not have described that better because this is definitely the feeling I got and I loved it.

    I’m really looking forward to the soundtrack and the future Season. Magnificent work Bear, once again!

    I am a fully grown man who is not ashamed to cry when Willy was told his true name.

    I love the plan you have in place about how the music will evolve. I believe in your abilities.

    Do have one question I hope you can answer knowing I can’t hold you to your answer? Any hopes of using Raya and her magical voice?

    Thanks Bear.

    The show itself was better than I expected. I really hope it gets picked up for a full season in the fall!

    And, as someone who is nearly tone deaf, but follows your blog and score in BSG with a lot of interest, I was really excited when I spotted Wander in the scene where Joseph tells Willy he’s an Adama

    I definitely noticed Wander My Friends in there. It actually made me tear up; I think it was the moment that connected my emotional investment to the Galactica story to this new(ish) story.

    Of course, this show wouldn’t be anywhere near as compelling without you Bear. I loved it, with your music playing no small part in garnering my affection. I was skeptical at first, but it really helped me see that this is a good departure from Galactica, not just an attempt to make more money. I’ll be watching every week!

    I listened to the YouTube sample and I love it already! It absolutely sounds like its own entity, not an extension of BSG. I can’t wait to add this cd to my collection! (still need to add Eureka and TSSC too! My family did not heed those parts of my Christmas list, hehe).

    I look forward to seeing “Caprica.”

    Wow Bear! This score really is a departure from your previous magnificence…and it’s just as magnificent! If I were to give the End Credits a title, it would be “An Even More Distant Sadness.”

    squall25… “I am a fully grown man who is not ashamed to cry when Willy was told his true name.”

    Then I clearly did my job correctly. :)

    “Any hopes of using Raya and her magical voice?”

    I think you can count on the fact that Raya and Brendan’s voices will show up in the series at one point or another, yeah.

    davidamwilensky… “The show itself was better than I expected. I really hope it gets picked up for a full season in the fall!”

    You don’t need to hope. In an unprecedented move, Sci Fi picked it up before even releasing the pilot, for a 20 episode run that will air in 2010, probably January.

    FENRIS447… “I was skeptical at first, but it really helped me see that this is a good departure from Galactica, not just an attempt to make more money.”

    I believe very much that this series is being made for the right reasons, and because there’s a story there to tell.

    Macker… ““An Even More Distant Sadness.””

    Yeah, the score and the movie in general aren’t exactly too warm and fuzzy. But, you must know me well enough by now to know that I looooooove writing sad music. :)

    -Bear

    Uh-oh, Bear has a Plan! He’s a frakkin’ Cylon! Quick, somebody find an airlock!

    Wait, what am I saying? :)

    I still haven’t picked up Caprica yet. I really want to, but I can’t decide if I should wait for the Blu-Ray and avoid a double dip. Godsdamn choices! I’ll probably get it tomorrow, who am I kidding.

    I’m looking forward the soundtrack, Bear. I kind of had a feeling you would take this kind of approach with the score. What I’ve heard sounds great. It feels different, but still connected to the universe of BSG, as it should be.

    I would love to see the Db notation of the Zoe Chords. I think its hilarious to see music littered with accidentals. Fun to play too! I remember someone asking my high school band director why it has to be written that way, and he said “because that’s how its done”. Classic.

    Good stuff, Bear. Very interested to hear what you were going to do for this, and I wasn’t disappointed. I like the idea of creating two separate themes and then dividing them into ostinatos and larger themes. Do you have any plans to underlayer with different other ideas to it? Perhaps vague percussive motifs? Or… just a motif?

    Excited for the soundtrack. Good to hear it’s coming. =)

    Oh finally the blogpost is released ;), I have so many questions and thoughts about the premiere.

    First of all, again good work Bear! I am looking forward to the soundtrack release in June.

    The cast is excellent, especially Paula Malcomson who plays Amanda Graystone. I know her from “Deadwood”. Eric Stoltz is great too of course.

    Joseph looks just like an Adama, but still I almost cried when it was revealed and I heard “Wander my Friends”, that was so beautiful!

    I think that I’ve heard Shirley Manson sing when Zoe last logged into this cyberspace club thingy when she was still alive. Or am I completely wrong?
    Plus when the Cylon was uploaded with Zoe’s character/avatar info, did I hear a hint of the Colonial Anthem? Or not?

    loved this! i was cautiously optimistic with regards to the show itself, but it delivered beautifully, well beyond any expectation i might have had. cannot wait to see the first season and see how both the characters and the musical themes accompanying their stories evolve.

    after watching the movie i kept rewinding the end credits just so that i could listen to the music some more. it’s beautiful, haunting, and very very easy to hum (much to the annoyance and puzzlement of co-workers and family). the inclusion of “wander my friends” made me all teary eyed and sad, yet i find myself admitting that my favorite is “the graystone family” theme. it evokes a feeling that i have always associated with standing on the edge of an abyss.

    thank you for the score, and for the awesome blog entries. will you be doing the same kinds of entries once the series starts airing in 2010 as you did for “battlestar”? because that would be great!

    best, annie

    ps. i got the TTSCC soundtrack yesterday and been listening to it obsessively since. i don’t watch the show, but the score is absolutely fantastic! :)

    Thank you so much for posting this. The music in the Caprica pilot was fantastic, from the surprise of Wander My Friends (which made me very smiley indeed) to the gorgeous themes that played over the credits (which I may have pulled out and listened to about three hundred times on their own). Amazing work.

    This is such a great news. I really hope I’ll can buy Caprica’s soundtrack quickly on import on amazon.fr (like it is done for your other CDs). I’ve listened to the End credits and it’s so beautiful, especially (in my opinion) Paul Cartwright’s solo. When I will get the soundtrack I’ll program my macbook to wake me up with the Tauron Theme. Hahaha :D it will be so great to open my eyes while I’ll be listening to that music.

    I can’t talk about the rest of the show because Caprica is not available in France yet but the firsts pictures make a very good impression on me.

    “Bear is a talented man with a strange name”
    Haha yeah that’s right. It’s a strange name for french people too. I’m pretty sure that I don’t pronounce it correctly.
    By the way, we (french fans) gave you a nickname. Do you wanna know it? :D ( well, I admit, it’s not hard to find out!)

    Back when the first Caprica trailer aired and I saw the scene where Joseph reveals to young William the truth of their last name I said to my self, “I better hear Wander My Friends right there or else!”

    I feel vindicated.

    Beautiful job Bear, I can’t wait for what you do next.

    “Caprica City is a familiar society at its most decadent and opulent peak, ”

    Yeah, that’s one of the things that struck me in the miniseries – and “decadent” is the perfect adjective. The idea that these decadent people were forced to face a new, harsh reality (and, later in the series, the realization that people on some of the other colonies weren’t quite so decadent as the Capricans). That apparently wasn’t so clear to some viewers – maybe “Caprica” will make it clearer.

    “In fact, I must admit that “Caprica” had an undeniable influence on my score for the “Battlestar” finale: Daybreak. … I couldn’t get the lush harmonies out of my head! So, I threw caution to the wind and applied the orchestral sensibilities I used on “Caprica” to Daybreak, creating the best score of my “Battlestar” career. Ironically, my experiences on “Caprica” forced me to expand the harmonic language of “Galactica.” I think the similarities in tone between “Caprica” and Daybreak are quite obvious”

    And, when we’ve seen “Caprica,” in fact, when we re-watch the entire saga, the score will bring the saga full-circle. Funny how serendipity works, eh?

    “Before I show you these themes and ostinatos”

    OOOOooooh – time to get out the SA-38…

    “THE GRAYSTONE OSTINATO … Play this lick on a piano… This gives the pattern a slippery, seductive quality.”

    OK – not sure I’ve got it *exactly* right, but I’ve got a sense of it anyway. Kind of reminiscent of “Battlestar Sonatica.” And the “Graystone Theme” itself sort of brings to mind the main theme from the old series “One Step Beyond.”

    “the appearance of “Wander My Friends” at the moment where Joseph tells Willy of his true last name and Tauron heritage… Now, we witness the moment when Adama, as a young man, learns his true name. It seemed perfect that the strings swell with a subtle statement of “Wander My Friends” at this moment. ”

    To be perfectly frank, I’d have been disappointed if you *didn’t* reprise that theme at some point in “Caprica,” and this scene seems like It’d be the perfect place to do it.

    “I hope that BG fans out there enjoy this score, even though it is very different from my other work. ”

    From what little I’ve heard here, I already do.

    - M. \”/

    That Wander My Friends cue was a complete squee moment for me, and I never squee. :)

    And I vote that, if this series goes on and on for years to come, that if we see young Adama go to the academy, that the shift to that age be given to Bodie Olmos.

    Ok, I know that won’t happen, but just thinking that reminds us that this one isn’t limited to 4 years. There’s a lot of time between then and even the first cylon war. Lots of potential for stories, lots of directions to go in. That’s exciting.

    OK, back to the music. All I can say is that our main man Bear here is capable of more than cool percussion. But we all knew that already. I’m preaching to the choir. :)

    And I noticed Brendan got a credit. Very nice. :)

    I love every millisecond of your work and Caprica is just as fantastic! I wish i could buy them on iTunes without having to buy the disc. Anyone have any idea why any of Bear’s work isn’t available there?

    Did I notice the use of “Wander My Friends”? Oh, Bear. I was practically BEGGING for it. Having seen the trailers, I knew that the “our real name is Adama” scene was coming up, and I had my fingers crossed tightly that we’d hear the Adama Family Theme. You did not disappoint, sir. Weeping may have been involved ;)

    Anyway, fantastic work as always. I have to say I was initially very wary of “Caprica” as a series, and was not looking forward to it. I bought the DVD as a loyal BSG fan, and was incredibly pleasantly surprised. (Plus: boobs.) I’m still uncertain how the series will unfold from here…unless i miss my guess, the producers didn’t leave a whole lot of plot threads dangling in case the network didn’t pick up the series, so the film feels pretty self contained (save the very last scene, of course). I just hope the production team (whose names I was glad to see in the opening credits) has a plan of where to take it. I also hope the show doesn’t get too complacent with “soap opera” style plot threads and keeps the stakes high. I certainly don’t expect ’splosions and rock ‘em sock ‘em robots in this series (nor would that be appropriate) but I would find it hard to invest time in a series where the big cliffhanger is someone sleeping with someone else or somebody getting married. Booooring. I have faith this will not be the case.

    Back on topic, I think your lush, chamber orchestra score was so spot on, and heartbreakingly beautiful. Interestingly, given recent discussions on this blog, the score greatly reminded me of something Williams or Goldsmith may have done in the 80s for an intimate drama! I can honestly say that your music elevated the show for me…if they had gone with another composer it may have been a dealbreaker.

    One question…why no mention of all the songs in the V-Club scenes? I thought I might have heard Brendan McCreary singing at some point, was that not true? Did they get those songs from somewhere else?

    Anyway, fantastic job, can’t wait for more!

    [...] Bear McCreary, composer for Caprica, posted a detailed blog entry about the music of Caprica. In the post he mentions the tracklisting for the Caprica Soundtrack to be released on 6/16: [...]

    Okay, I gave in and bought it today. Great work as usual, Bear. I think your approach is perfect, and perfectly executed. It felt true to the universe, but at the same time it perfectly captured the more decadent, tech-based high society of Caprica, giving it a much different flavor at the same time. I love the new themes. The Tauron and Greystone themes are both easily recognized in the score, and I like the somber quality they both share. The two seem to have a link, even though they are separate melodies, and it really works to unite the two families together.

    The Wander My Friends quote was great! I always think of that as the Adama Family theme. I think you called it that way back in one of your early posts, and it always stuck with me. Its my favorite theme, though the regulars are not far behind.

    The Cylon scenes were really ominous and kinda creepy, especially that last one. I loved the score for these scenes especially. The percussion sounded very much like the Battlestar cylon percussion we’re used to, but it felt much more menacing and driving. It reminded me of John Williams approach to the Jaws theme of using the two-note ostinato to represent the primal, single-minded focus of the shark. Your score had that characteristic. That Cylon could have been a really cool visual effect and a big wink-wink, nudge-nudge nugget for the fans, but the score adds menace and danger in copious amounts, and really sells the feeling of Pandora’s box being opened. Definitely looking forward to it on CD.

    Would a future Battlestar concert feature anything from Caprica? I certainly hope so.

    Your music is great in Caprica. 2 things struck me about the plot of Caprica:

    0 Evidently, one can backup a person on a CD-Mini.*

    1 Father Greystone did not bother to to backup his daughter when he put her in a cylon. This is very unlike Bear McCreary with his piles of backup-drives. As a cyberneticist, Greystone should know that the only way to protect data is lots of offsite backups in multiple locations encrypted for security.

    * Since CD-Minis failed, I should explain that back in the 1980s and 1990s, the record-industry tried to introduce little CDs for singles. They never caught on.

    I definitely noticed Wander My Friends in the score, and it made me almost cry. It’s been great listening to your music evolve over the years. I binged on your soundtracks after Daybreak, and have a feeling Caprica’s soundtrack is only going to continue that nasty habit of mine.

    The score is simply amazing, the Graystone theme is incredibly hummable, and I’m really looking forward for the score, and for Battlestar musical references on the show next year (and “The Plan” which is so far away but my expectations are on overdrive), I just wanna ask, and I know that is one thing to plan and then to actually score the episode, but are you already planning on giving each of the colonies a different feel with your music? OK that’s all, amazing score as always. Good Luck Bear.

    Hey Bear, have you considered twittering?
    What you do here with your blog is frakking amazing, so I completely understand if the whole twitter scene would be a bit too much. I check your blog everyday anyhow. :) Just a thought. Not sure if you’d be into that but I bet you would get a lot of followers.

    I’ve only just started reading your blog but I have to say it’s a great experience to see how this all comes together from your perspective. The music on Caprica was breathtakingly beautiful – I’ve got the Tauron theme stuck in my head now, but in a good way. The music tells the story as much as anything spoken or done by the actors or put up on screen, and the little bit of “Wander My Friends” was a great link back (or forward) to BSG. I think I’ve almost worn out my iPod listening to BSG seasons 1-3, and I can’t wait to hear more.

    Hi Bear,
    It’s the first time I post a comment on your blog (I’m reading it since 2007) but I really had to say how much your score for Caprica touched me. This music is haunting me since I heard it for the first time. It’s like a reminiscence of a heavy past and an omen of a tragedy to come. I think that the magic of this theme consists in the little modulation with the D flat which gives this kind of ethereal and depressed feeling that suits perfectly for Caprica.
    By the way, I’m writing a transcription of the Caprica Theme you played in Hagen (actually in never succeed in using Finale to post a clean and readable part so, that could take some days) and I wanted to know if I could make a link on a next comment so that the people could download it and play this wonderfull piece of music. I think there are a lot of musicians who are reading your blog wanting to play your music. Have you published some sheets of your music(except from Battlestar Sonatica which was hard to find) like “A promise to return” or other orchestral pieces?

    To conclude I have only two words. Thank you Bear for the brilliant musics you composed for BSG and your incredible musical Blog (please don’t stop using your musical jargon^^)

    Sorry for my poor english, as everybody says in France, french people aren’t really gifted for foreign languages.

    Jonny Boy… “I think its hilarious to see music littered with accidentals.”

    Ha! You and me, both. But, my musicians don’t love it so much when they have to sight-read it on the spot. :)

    “I remember someone asking my high school band director why it has to be written that way, and he said “because that’s how its done”. Classic.”

    Well, your band teach is right, although really what we’re talking about is the lesser of two inconveniences. It’s always better to have triads LOOK like triads on the page, even if there are double flats or sharps. Otherwise, they look like weird cluster chords, which looks deceptively difficult.

    GungaDin… “Do you have any plans to underlayer with different other ideas to it? Perhaps vague percussive motifs? Or… just a motif?”

    Absolutely! This is just laying the groundwork. I haven’t ruled anything out. I have no idea where the score will end up as we go along.

    Sandra… “I think that I’ve heard Shirley Manson sing when Zoe last logged into this cyberspace club thingy when she was still alive. Or am I completely wrong?”

    I’m pretty sure Shirley wasn’t involved in any of the songs at the V-Club.

    “Plus when the Cylon was uploaded with Zoe’s character/avatar info, did I hear a hint of the Colonial Anthem? Or not?”

    Not really. :)

    exquisiteagony… “it evokes a feeling that i have always associated with standing on the edge of an abyss.”

    Wow. That’s exactly the feeling I hoped it would convey.

    Angeline… “By the way, we (french fans) gave you a nickname. Do you wanna know it? :D ( well, I admit, it’s not hard to find out!)”

    Tell me!

    plainsong… “And I vote that, if this series goes on and on for years to come, that if we see young Adama go to the academy, that the shift to that age be given to Bodie Olmos.”

    I don’t know. That guy who played Husker in Razor was pretty damn awesome.

    bignosebob… “Interestingly, given recent discussions on this blog, the score greatly reminded me of something Williams or Goldsmith may have done in the 80s for an intimate drama!”

    Wow, that’s weird. You’re not the first person to make that comparison. Obviously, to even be mentioned in the same breath as those two composers is an honor. :)

    “if they had gone with another composer it may have been a dealbreaker”

    Yeah, that would’ve been weird for me too. Glad it didn’t happen that way.

    -Bear

    “One question…why no mention of all the songs in the V-Club scenes? I thought I might have heard Brendan McCreary singing at some point, was that not true? Did they get those songs from somewhere else?”

    Thanks for reminding me about this. With all the themes to talk about, I didn’t even mention the songs. You are correct, they got those from somewhere else. They are all licensed from various bands. I had nothing to do with them. Perhaps as the show goes on, I’ll have some input about the songs. But, my plate was completely full doing the score this time around.

    Jonny Boy… “The Wander My Friends quote was great! I always think of that as the Adama Family theme.”

    Me too.

    “Would a future Battlestar concert feature anything from Caprica? I certainly hope so.”

    Yeah, we’re talking about that. I think we could do the graystone theme, maybe.

    walabio… “Father Greystone did not bother to to backup his daughter when he put her in a cylon. This is very unlike Bear McCreary with his piles of backup-drives.”

    Yes, I’m pretty crazy about backing files up. When I saw that in the movie I freaked out. I backup my freakin’ email, man. How could you not backup your digital child? Oh well. Anyone who backs up files all the time is doing so because they learned that lesson the hard way at least once. I bet Daniel won’t make that mistake twice. :)

    raftrap… “I just wanna ask, and I know that is one thing to plan and then to actually score the episode, but are you already planning on giving each of the colonies a different feel with your music?”

    Difficult to say. The short answer is no, I have no plan to do that. However, I’ve clearly established the sound of Tauron and Caprica to be very different, so why stop there? I can’t imagine we’re going to see too much of the other colonies on this series. After all, it’s CALLED “Caprica.”

    MattH… “Hey Bear, have you considered twittering?”

    Dude, I don’t think I could handle it. I barely have enough time to do this. And to be limited to 140 characters. My posts these days are literally 50 to 80 double-spaced pages. :)

    Neotribal… “I think that the magic of this theme consists in the little modulation with the D flat which gives this kind of ethereal and depressed feeling that suits perfectly for Caprica.”

    Yeah, that’s the magic note for sure. It isn’t in the scale and comes so unexpectedly. I would have NEVER put a chord like that in “Battlestar,” and it was my subtle way of declaring that we’re going in a different direction on this new series.

    “By the way, I’m writing a transcription of the Caprica Theme you played in Hagen (actually in never succeed in using Finale to post a clean and readable part so, that could take some days) and I wanted to know if I could make a link on a next comment so that the people could download it and play this wonderfull piece of music.”

    Sure, go for it.

    “I think there are a lot of musicians who are reading your blog wanting to play your music. Have you published some sheets of your music(except from Battlestar Sonatica which was hard to find) like “A promise to return” or other orchestral pieces?”

    One of these days, I’ll get some other scores published, yeah.

    -Bear

    Sorry, I gotta give you more glowing feedback. A lot of MOVIE composers don’t come up with more beautiful, dynamic, and interesting scores (particularly nowadays). Frak the movie theatres, I want to see more Caprica! In fact, I’m more excited about this show than I am for The Plan.

    I want you to know that I had little interest in this show, and that I basically only watched it because you were doing the score. Good thing, too, because the overall quality of the show surprised me (prequels are almost invariably terrible).

    I instantly caught the Adama theme, as well as the familiar instrumentation for the centurion combat scene. I also caught a shameless steal (tribute?) from a scene in The Godfather. Your slipping in familiar music worked extraordinarily well in giving me a reminder of where the history of the show was headed. It was actually kind of chilling.

    Thank you for providing SOMETHING of quality to watch that is also new material! Recently all I’ve had to fall back on is old movies and TV shows. This is nice and refreshing. Now I have to wait a year for the show to air. ;(

    I should probably clarify that the “steal” I mentioned was not your doing, but the writer.

    Bear says…
    “Dude, I don’t think I could handle it. I barely have enough time to do this. And to be limited to 140 characters. My posts these days are literally 50 to 80 double-spaced pages. :)”

    Haha, yeah I see your point. :) Thanks though for sparing your time for the blog. It is awesome and greatly appreciated!

    Bear said…

    “Well, your band teach is right, although really what we’re talking about is the lesser of two inconveniences. It’s always better to have triads LOOK like triads on the page, even if there are double flats or sharps. Otherwise, they look like weird cluster chords, which looks deceptively difficult.”

    Oh, totally. When I was coaching a brass section one day, one of the kids asked me about “funky accidentals”. I actually explained it by notating the two versions on a white board, showing him the triads versus funky chords, and asked him which one was less confusing. He got it right away, though it certainly didn’t help him during the sight reading. :)

    [...] on 04/27/2009 to add: Has Bear McCreary added an English horn to his orchestra of doom? Yes, indeedy, he has. Ha! Most excellent, as is his blog entry concerning Caprica’s new themes–check it out. [...]

    Bear,

    Just watched Caprica (yes, I ran out and got it the day it was released!). Outstanding job as always my friend. And when Joseph tells William about his family history and Wander My Friends floats thru the air, I got teary eyed. What a wonderful scene…at least as good as David’s lighter scene from Hand of God.

    Peace and Light

    Jeff Kincaid

    I have to say, the part that got me the most excited (it gave me chills) was hearing what sounded like the Prelude To War drums during the Cylon battle test.

    Excellent work.

    Oh! And I forgot to mention Danny Elfman. The very end of the Greystone theme (before it repeats) greatly reminds me of similar cues from either Batman or Edward Scissorhands. If I had any sort of music theory knowledge I would espouse on that but sadly, that’s all I got. :P

    Bear says…”Thanks for reminding me about this. With all the themes to talk about, I didn’t even mention the songs. You are correct, they got those from somewhere else. They are all licensed from various bands. I had nothing to do with them.”

    A shame you had nothing to do with them, hopefully that wasn’t too much of a bone of contention. Also a shame that since there were no song credits on the DVD, I wouldn’t know where to find out who did what songs. I rather liked a few of them.

    Anyway, bring on more Caprica!

    “plainsong… “And I vote that, if this series goes on and on for years to come, that if we see young Adama go to the academy, that the shift to that age be given to Bodie Olmos.”

    I don’t know. That guy who played Husker in Razor was pretty damn awesome.”

    Then again, if this took more than a couple of years to get to… it’d be awfully odd for Bill Adama to look older as an academy cadet than he did as a nugget pilot. Same effect would apply to B. Olmos.

    “MattH… “Hey Bear, have you considered twittering?”

    Dude, I don’t think I could handle it.”

    I definitely heard that, five-by-five.

    (The Arbiter) “What a wonderful scene…at least as good as David’s lighter scene from Hand of God.”

    I’m hoping that lighter makes an appearance in “Caprica” at some point. (I know the exact prop got auctioned off, but, hopefully, they can duplicate it.)

    - M. \”/

    “I don’t know. That guy who played Husker in Razor was pretty damn awesome.”

    I agree, but I seem to remember him as a tad older than Bodie. Either I’m wrong, (I’m waiting for Season 4.5 to be released before watching everything from the start, so it’s been a while) or you’re thinking farther into the future. That’s a bad thing. :)

    Darn that lack of edit again, – That ISN’T a bad thing!

    First post here :D

    Hi Bear, I have to give it to you: you’re the greatest!
    I’ve been a fan of your work around the time I got into BSG, which was soon before Season 2 started. I had watched the mini-series but it failed to grip me the first time. Later, I caught some friend half-way through it and I couldn’t get away until I finished watching it again. Then I devoured Season 1. And eagerly anticipated Season 2.
    The music enthralled me since the first moment in the Armistice station in the mini-series, and you took it into amazing paths. Since then the music of BSG, your music, has been at least 50% of the amazing experience that is watching the show. Even now, that it is over, I feel that BSG meant much more to me than my friends mostly because of how I got connected to the music and to your blog posts which I avidly read after watching the episodes always, and I mean always, enriching the experience of watching the episode.
    I listen a lot to your albums, and I feel the soundtracks are a part of me, the songs constantly playing in the background of my mind, always inspiring me.

    I’ve never been a musician or had an particular interest in playing any instrument, although I’ve always loved good music. The Season 2 album made me, and still does, play the taiko drums everywhere (sometimes annoying some co-workers who don’t share the same musical tastes). But it wasn’t until Kara played the coordinates to Earth on the piano (your coordinates!!!!) that I felt an urge to start playing! That version was just so cool!! It also more or less coincided with the news that my father bought an electric organ. So, I took some days to go visit them, and after fiddling around a bit I went online, downloaded some sheets, visualized some youtube videos and started playing around some of the tunes including one of my favourites: Passacaglia. Now, of course my actual knowledge of music is close to null, so I wouldn’t say I can play anything, but I’ve been goofing around with some of the themes. And now I have this urge to do it every day!!!
    And now the same is happening with Caprica, starting with the Graystone’s theme. I’m not at my parents anymore so I had to download some virtual piano software for the iphone so I could play a bit :D

    So, to sum it up, thanks a lot for everything. Keep coming up with beautiful music that inspires people to do great things (whether musically or not)!

    As for the evolution of the Caprica sound it would be great first if the producers are allowed to develop the story fully without any abrupt cancellations and second if you could bring it closer and closer to the mini-series as time flies by. But still it needs to be different. The mini-series is around 40 years after the First Cylon War, or better after the Armistice, which means the Colonies had time to evolve on their own, in strange and possibly deterioting even further ways, but evolved I’m sure they did.
    Another suggestion: the Colonial Anthem, to me the drums make it sounds militaristic. I’d interpret that as having been created during the First Cylon War, perhaps representing the union of the colonies to fight the common enemy and thus the militaristic and epic tones to it. I don’t think it would be appropriate to use it before the war broke out, also because, from what we saw in the pilot of Caprica, because the colonies don’t seem that tight anyway. But the anthem might have been influenced much more by music from one of the powerful colonies (say Caprica) than the others ;)
    Anyway, just thoughts

    P.S. Any chance we’ll see you in London this year ;)

    …for the record, I think I actually squeed out loud (and got goosebumps!) when Adama’s theme started playing!

    Also, curiously (or maybe intentionally? I dunno), this score almost reminded me more of the score for Terminator: SCC than Battlestar Galactica! I kept thinking “wow, that reminds me of Sarah Connor’s theme” or “hey, that sounds kinda similar to Derek’s theme” or “wow, it’s a little like BSG meets Terminator”… the actual themes aren’t the same, of course, but the overall sound was kind of familiar in an awesome way.

    (The über nerdy part of me finds it very cool that the show that’s in part about the creation of a robot race that will destroy humanity and send the survivors on the run has some musical cues similar to those in the show about stopping robots from being created that will destroy humanity and send the survivors on the run ;) I would actually be really interested to know if this was at all intentional, or whether I’m completely hearing things, or what…)

    Anyway, I definitely can’t wait for the score release!

    I came hither to see how the discussion unfolded since my last visit. ¿What did I see? ¡Bear McCreary responded to my comment! I shall never wash my typing fingertips again.

    “I came hither to see how the discussion unfolded since my last visit. ¿What did I see? ¡Bear McCreary responded to my comment! I shall never wash my typing fingertips again.”

    Take great pride in that…when I met Haile Selassie back when I was in 5th grade, and shook his hand, Mom told me not to wash it for a week.
    And I didn’t.

    Hi,

    Because you tell me you want to know your french nickname, there it is: “l’Ours” or “le grand Ours”. Hope you like it!

    I agree with the messages above mine. First, it’s pleasant for me to read your blog and learn more about your work, about music… Then, it’s really instructive to read your answers and your opinion about our comments.

    Thanks a lot for sharing your passion.

    Bear, quick note: I easily recognized “Wander My Friends” during the touching “Adama” scene, and I said to myself, “Thank you Bear.” I can appreciate you didn’t want to drop Galactica themes all over the episode, but I appreciated that touch. I look forward to similar little touches in the series.

    jangoisbaddest7… “I also caught a shameless steal (tribute?) from a scene in The Godfather. ” … “I should probably clarify that the “steal” I mentioned was not your doing, but the writer.”

    Well, it was both of us. And I’d call it “tribute” but you could really call it either one. :)

    bignosebob… “Oh! And I forgot to mention Danny Elfman. The very end of the Greystone theme (before it repeats) greatly reminds me of similar cues from either Batman or Edward Scissorhands. If I had any sort of music theory knowledge I would espouse on that but sadly, that’s all I got. :P”

    I know what you mean. I think we’re both drawing from the same influences frequently, and that chord change in particular is coming from Debussy, Ravel and Satie, composers I know were influential to Danny as well as myself.

    “A shame you had nothing to do with them, hopefully that wasn’t too much of a bone of contention.”

    It wasn’t a conflict at all. it was simply a matter of time. I had an unbelievably short NINE DAYS to compose the entire score, and doing 8 or 10 songs simply wasn’t an option. Hopefully, as we go back to the V-Club for the series, I’ll get involved again at some point.

    Emily_Reich… “Also, curiously (or maybe intentionally? I dunno), this score almost reminded me more of the score for Terminator: SCC than Battlestar Galactica! I kept thinking “wow, that reminds me of Sarah Connor’s theme” or “hey, that sounds kinda similar to Derek’s theme” or “wow, it’s a little like BSG meets Terminator”… the actual themes aren’t the same, of course, but the overall sound was kind of familiar in an awesome way.”

    The only similarity is my emphasis on lyrical melody. So many of the BG Themes are melodic fragments, that you don’t get a lot of melodies stuck in your head. Sure, there are tunes like “Wander My Friends” and “Passacglia” but most of the score is made of shorter ideas like “Starbuck’s Theme” or “Lee’s Theme.”

    With Sarah Connor and Caprica I started out with a much bigger and broader melody, that I then cut up into smaller fragments as I develop them. The early days of “Battlestar” needed a different thematic approach.

    Angeline… “Because you tell me you want to know your french nickname, there it is: “l’Ours” or “le grand Ours”. Hope you like it!”

    mais oui!

    ———–

    Also, check out this review of Caprica from the San Jose Mercury News. It’s the first mainstream review of a series to mention me by name, that I’m aware of. Apparently… I’m now officially “visionary.”

    :)

    -Bear

    The Cylon Prophet… “But it wasn’t until Kara played the coordinates to Earth on the piano (your coordinates!!!!) that I felt an urge to start playing!”

    Keep on playing!

    -Bear

    Bear! Linky no worky! :)

    Macker…

    The San Jose Mercury News, you mean? Here’s the full url:

    http://www.mercurynews.com/tv/ci_12254641?nclick_check=1

    -Bear

    Hi there!

    I think there’s a typo in the above links. Try this one:

    http://www.mercurynews.com/tv/ci_12254641?onclick_check=1

    Stephan

    Stephan! Linky worky now! :)

    Parts of it reminded me greatly of Philip Glass’s Violin Concertos.

    Particularly 1:07:45-57 of the film (I don’t think it is in the end credits).

    I’m thinking of a particular piece by Philip Glass, but I can’t remember the name of it :|

    I really enjoyed your work(as usual)Mr. McCreary,im a fan of your´s since day 1,and im proud to say that i own all of the Battlestar soundtracks,terminator, wrong turn, etc!!…Im anxious to get my hands on your upcoming work(Dark Void,Caprica etc)…Anyways, in regards to your Caprica score i just read the track listing, but i don´t see any of the tracks that played on the ¨V-Club¨,amm, i guess they belong to other artists i suppose, theye weren´t shown on the end credits of the film either,hmmm any chance i can get a hint on them?!…Best regards 2 u!

    After BSG I had extremely high expectations for the music in Caprica, and yet I was still completely blown away. Well done, sir. The Tauron ostinato during the assassination of the defense minister instantly became one of my favorite moments of any film or television show to date. The main theme has the most appropriate combination of innocence and sadness for a series about the beginning of the end. If there ever is to be a song for the hopeless fate of humanity, I imagine this would be it.

    I did recognize the “Wander My Friends” theme during the Adama scene, but I think it helps that I’ve been listening to BSG almost non-stop at work for the past couple of months (still anxiously waiting for 4).

    Thank you very, very much.

    Yokozuka… “Anyways, in regards to your Caprica score i just read the track listing, but i don´t see any of the tracks that played on the ¨V-Club¨,amm, i guess they belong to other artists i suppose, theye weren´t shown on the end credits of the film either,hmmm any chance i can get a hint on them?!”

    I’ll find out what the V-Club songs were and post them on the blog here.

    -Bear

    Yokozuka…

    I found out the artists and songs for the V-Club songs. Here they are:

    “Der Krankenwagen” – Kevin Haskins (the drummer from Bauhaus & Love and Rockets)
    “Police State” – Kevin Haskins
    “Neuro Drill” – Kevin Haskins
    “V-Club” – Todd Fancey (from the New Pornographers)
    “Freaky” – Cub
    “Alsatian” – White Rose Movement
    “Hummer” – Doug DeAngelis

    Hope that helps!
    -Bear

    I also see that the album artwork is now officially online…

    Dear Bear,
    Thank you for your fantastic work on BSG and Caprica – you are truly amazing (I didn’t watch the Sarah Connor Chronicles, but I’m sure you did an incredible job there too).

    You should be awarded Emmy after Emmy after Emmy for your TV work and whatever other avenues you have worked in.

    I enjoyed Caprica very much. I am very strongly hoping it ‘flies’ and is able to tell it’s story.

    Congrats on your wedding too.

    Bear:

    I just received my copy of this album and I have to say it’s amazing. I love the whole quietness of the album with the occasional heavy breaks such as in Cybernetic Life Form Node.

    Also – thank you very much for posting the V-Club song list… however, I’m having some difficulty locating some of the songs (that I presume were written specifically for Caprica). If you know of how I may obtain these select songs I would be very appreciative.

    For all others interested in the V-Club songs:

    “Freaky” by Cub is on the album Box of Hair (1996).
    “Alsatian” by White Rose Movement is on the album Kick (2006).

    As for the rest, I have not been able to locate:

    “Der Krankenwagen” – Kevin Haskins (the drummer from Bauhaus & Love and Rockets)
    “Police State” – Kevin Haskins
    “Neuro Drill” – Kevin Haskins
    “V-Club” – Todd Fancey (from the New Pornographers)
    “Hummer” – Doug DeAngelis

    Tootie… “You should be awarded Emmy after Emmy after Emmy for your TV work and whatever other avenues you have worked in.”

    Are you on the Emmy voting academy? :)

    -Bear

    santafr0g… “Also – thank you very much for posting the V-Club song list… however, I’m having some difficulty locating some of the songs (that I presume were written specifically for Caprica). ”

    Only one was written for Caprica. The Todd Fancey track called “V-Club.” I don’t know if he’s got a website or anything, but maybe you could try tracking him down?

    As for the Kevin Haskins ones, I’m fairly certain they were not written for the show. Anyone else finding these anywhere?

    -Bear

    [...] the scenes look at how the music he produces was recorded, written the works ! see what i mean?  http://www.bearmccreary.com/blog/?p=1903#more-1903 I think that’s pretty cool ! check back over the next few weeks for that big post ! At some [...]

    I would love to be able to read this blog in its entirety, but given that I haven’t seen ‘Caprica’ yet, I think I’ll hold off to avoid the spoilers. However, I have been listening to the ‘Caprica’ score a lot since getting it on Xmas day recently, and I just wanted to say that I really love the approach you’ve taken with this. It’s interesting to listen to a film score without seeing the film first – something I wouldn’t normally do but, with your music, Bear, I make exceptions because I treat your music as much as film-score as I do new music from a musician I’m a fan of in their own right. I love how the atmosphere of this score has the feeling of a vaguely erotic thriller/mystery movie coupled with a suspense-plot of the Hitchcock kind. For some reason, I think about the movie and score for ‘Vertigo’, (of which I am a huge fan of both) when I listen to ‘Caprica’. What really stands out to me is the mystery in the music and the feeling of ominous events that have been set in motion without anyone truly realising what they have done, or started. I said to my brother about the track ‘Joseph and Daniel’ that “this sounds like music about someone who is working on something they really shouldn’t be” – i.e. creating a cylon! Again, having not seen the show yet, I have no idea if that is accurate in any way, but I can’t wait to find out! I’d like to make a note of the track ‘Terrorism on the Lev’ as well, just to say that I love the way this track reminds me of other classic ‘heist’ moments in film-score from films like ‘Heat’ and also from the Cyberdine break-in scenes in ‘Terminator 2′. Awesome job, Bear. Sorry about making such a long post, but I have nowhere else to share these thoughts! Hope you’re all having a great start to the new year :)
    So say we all!

    [...] there will be sheet music coming out later this year, but I’ve started with what he already posted on his blog. Not only are there some basic themes (both the ostinatos and lyricals themes) but he also talks [...]

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