• 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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    Caprica: Gravedancing

    Posted by Bear McCreary on February 19th, 2010

    SPOILERS DANCING AHEAD: The world of “Caprica” continues to be revealed one layer at a time in Gravedancing.  This episode allowed me to play with character themes again and follow their ever-changing arcs.  But, I was also able to introduce more pop music into their society, including themes for Baxter Sarno’s TV show, and multiple songs featured prominently on Caprican radio, straddling the line between source and score.

    First of all, I just have to say Patton Oswalt is one of the funniest and most unique comedians working today.  I will confess when I first learned he would have a role on “Caprica,” I wondered if he could effectively blend into the world.  However, at this point, my only regret about them casting Patton is that they didn’t make him a series regular!  Somehow, adding this kind of personality to the grim and brooding texture of the series adds a layer of authenticity to the city, and to the entire world.

    With Patton adding his own dynamic personality to his scenes, I knew I didn’t need to worry about supplying energy with the music, so I focused more on the intimacy and character arcs of Amanda and Daniel.  Poor Daniel really gets put on the spot here, and Amanda comes to his rescue, showing the audience that they are real people too.

    This cue, scored for woodwinds, harp, piano and gamelan underscored her speech on the Sarno show.  The music ignores all the conflict in the media, the lights, the audience, even Sarno himself, and focuses solely on two grief-stricken parents.  A solo clarinet states the Graystone Theme…

    … before the harps, piano, gamelan and flutes introduce a simple, steady Graystone Ostinato:

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    As with many episodes of “Caprica,” the greatest musical challenge wasn’t in the score at all, but in the source pieces.  And there were multiple places in this episode where source music played a pivotal role.

    One of the episode’s most memorable moments is when Philomon dances with the U-87.  First he flips through some radio stations (anyone notice him skipping past the “Colonial Anthem,” by Stu Phillips and Glen A. Larson in there?).  Eventually he settles on a song and begins dancing.

    I wanted this song to have a high-tech feel to it, after all, its about a dancing robot!  So I turned to my friend Jonathan Snipes, whose band Captain Ahab has contributed many source pieces to Caprica, Eureka and Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles.  Snipes is also an expert sound designer and synthesizer programmer, and has crafted custom sounds for me on Terminator, Eureka, Trauma, Human Target, Dark Void and Dark Void Zero.

    (Captain Ahab live.  L-R: Jonathan Snipes – everything but dancing, Jim Merson – dancing)

    I gave the scene to Jonathan and asked him to come up with a song that would both be believable as a pop song and help underline the emotional connection forming between Philomon and Mecha-Zoe.

    “I watched the scene a lot before and while writing,” Snipes told me after we were finished.  “I wanted to create something that felt both new and nostalgic, and wasn’t *quite* a love song, since this relationship has some pretty ridiculous barriers to overcome.  If it was too sweet, it wouldn’t land since this isn’t a real relationship – a song about being in love would feel empty, but conversely if it was too on the nose (say, a song about being unable to say “I love you”) it would feel silly.  So, I wrote a song half about a failed relationship, and half about the end of the world that’s still beautiful and tender.”

    Because of the obvious and nearly-overwhelming science fiction elements in this scene, I asked him if the genre was ever an influence on his music.  “It’s impossible to make electronic music and not be inspired by sci-fi,” he told me.  “My studio looks like a fucking spaceship and I constantly find myself writing and saying retarded things like, ‘Patch the clock cable into the pulse divider, then use that to retrigger the low frequency oscillator that’s modulating the resonance of the bandpass filter.’  Total sci-fi nonsense.  I’m also currently composing the score for a Bulgarian puppet show based on the writings Stanislaw Lem.  Can’t escape it.”

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    The song Jonathan wrote, “Was Love,” is poignant, catchy and  blends seamlessly into the Caprica universe.  It sounds perfectly like the kind of song a smart geek like Philomon would pick out from the radiowaves to dance along with. “Was Love” is available now as a FREE DOWNLOAD and will be on the new Captain Ahab record, “The End of Irony,” due out in April.

    With several Captain Ahab tracks appearing in the V-Club, I asked Jonathan what it was like to hear his unique sound creating such an impact on the series.

    “Honestly, it’s a little weird to be responsible for so much source music,” he explained. “My background is in theater sound design, which is essentially music supervision, so I’m very tuned to editing and choosing music to fit a visual.  My impulse is to be a total control freak, so having the specific usage choices out of my hands is a new experience. I love being involved with the project, though – ‘Battlestar’ has left such a legacy that it’s really exciting to be a part of the next step in the development of its world.”

    The robot dance sequence was not the only song to be featured prominently in Gravedancing.  The episode’s climax pits Amanda against Sam, who had been sent to assassinate her.  He poses as her driver and takes her through a bad neighborhood.  As they talk, Amanda gradually realizes that her life is in danger.

    Writer / producer / director Jonas Pate threw me an unexpected curveball.  He suggested that we “score” the scene with a source song playing on the radio.  “Music can sometimes be very effective working in counterpoint to the dramatic tension of a scene,” Pate told me. “And the most effective way to do this is with a source song.  If the source is indifferent to the dramatics, it can create a sense of unease and dread, and hopefully convince the audience that the murder of a central character is a real possibility: not an easy thing to do in TV when everyone knows the heroes aren’t gonna get knocked off.”

    However, what he had in mind wasn’t just an ordinary pop song… he wanted to do a doo-wop song!

    “We’ve built an aesthetic in ‘Caprica’ wrapped around the 1940’s: fedoras, trenchcoats and lots of deco,” Pate explained.  “A doo-wop song was just in keeping with that overall spirit.  It deepens the culture of Caprica, which is something that every department on the show strives to achieve.”

    This was something I’d definitely never done before: score an impending murder with a doo-wop song.  Never one to back down from a challenge, I set out to figure out how this could work.

    The best solution I could see was one that began as doo-wop source and transitioned gradually into score.  The doo-wop would represent Amanda’s naiveté, the score her realization and fear.  Thus the transition from her one state to the other would be perfectly mirrored by the transition in the soundtrack.

    There’s no one I know capable of writing a better doo-wop song than my brother, Brendan McCreary. “The producers wanted an old timey R&B tune, which is one of my specialties,” Brendan told me.  “I grew up listening to Aretha Franklin, Marvin Gaye, Sam Cooke, and Otis Redding to name a few, so a song in that genre is not only easy for me to concoct, but extremely fun.”

    He wrote a doo-wop song for the radio in the scene, but in the process he also wrote a great song. “‘I am a Man (Who Loves a Woman)’ was written under a serious time crunch,” Brendan explained. “Which is probably why it turned out so well. The entire song was written, recorded, and produced in just about 4 days.”

    “My original vision for the lyrics, were to be a bit more like ‘Run for Your Life’ by the Beatles. A song all about how this jealous guy is going to do something horrible to his lady, over some mild transgression. But the more I went down that road, the more obvious it became, and it didn’t seem to fit the song itself, much less the scene. Which is how it came to be the opposite. In the end, the lyrics became all about a woman, who is abusive to her man, who is too cowardly or small to do anything about it.”

    “I couldn’t be more happy with the song as it was a thrill to write and perform, which is why it is probably going to show up on my forthcoming album, due out this summer. If you live in LA, you should come see BrEndAn’s Band play. You never know…we might play ‘I am a Man’!”

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    In many ways, Brendan’s voice has become truly the cosmic voice of the “Galactica” universe.  He’s a skilled enough vocalist that the ambient vocals from “The Cylon Prisoner,” the searing “All Along the Watchtower,” the Tauron Gangster Rap, the doo-wop song and many others throughout the years do not sound like they are sung by the same person.  But, you loyal blog readers know that they are.

    Brendan composing “I am a Man” was essential not only because he’s a better songwriter than I am, but because it allowed me time to focus on the score of the same sequence.  Once Brendan’s first  sketch was complete, I took his key, tempo and groove and began translating them into the “Caprica” instrumentation.  Guitars, bass, drums and keyboards were replaced with shime daikos, nagado daikos, hand percussion, gamelan, harp and piano.  The resultant track sounds nothing like doo-wop at all:

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    As different as these two pieces are, they had been designed to fit together.  This next example pairs them together, similar to the final mix in the episode.  First, your hear the doo-wop alone, then the score is gradually introduced, until it finally overpowers and takes over completely:

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    Pretty cool, right?  This transition between two totally different styles of music perfectly represents Amanda’s casual conversation gradually giving way to realization, dread and despair.

    “I love it,” Jonas said of the final song. “I think it perfectly captures that mood of indifference that I was hoping for; yet it also stands on its own as a well constructed piece of music.”

    Needless to say, opportunities for musical experiments like this make Caprica a ton of fun to work on.  And I owe Brendan and Snipes big time for coming through with such amazing compositions.  They are both incredibly important components of the BSG / Caprica musical universe.

    This subplot ends as Joseph confronts his brother.  Joseph realized that killing Amanda was a mistake and had been trying to reach Sam on his cell phone all night.  By this point, he’s very upset.  Sam toys with him, first lying that he actually killed her and then refusing to give a clear answer about what really happened.  The scene is well written and masterfully acted, and is among the strongest moments in this series thus far.

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    The first half of the scene is underscored with dark, brooding, ambient chords.  The final release, when Sam admits that he didn’t kill Amanda, is accompanied by a bittersweet variation of the Tauron Ostinato…

    … and Paul Cartwright’s solo fiddle performance of the Tauron Theme:

    From there, the cue seamlessly transitions to Chris Bleth’s alto flute performance of the Clarice Theme…

    … as she and Nestor watch the Graystone’s on Sarno.

    Next week’s episode will introduce new themes and take the story to unexpected places.  I think you guys will really enjoy it.  So say we all…

    -Bear

    52 Responses to This Blog Entry:

    Yet another excellent episode, accompanied by yet another excellent score. I really liked the source piece during the dancing scene. I first heard it while watching the sneak preview for “Gavedancing,” and I was really interested with it. It’s a really surreal sounding song, I think it matched the juxtaposition of Philomon and Zoe dancing perfectly. I can’t wait to see how the story continues to develop, with the music growing along with it!

    Another week, another episode of “Caprica” and yet another wonderful score. I think this show has really founds its soul with the source music. It roots the show firmly and still feels foreign enough to feel otherworldly.

    The biggest surprise for me tonight was the entire scene between Amanda and Sam. The Doo-wop I noticed, the rest I didn’t, at least not directly. I went into that scene KNOWING that Amanda wouldn’t die. After all these years, I just didn’t see Ron Moore, David Eick, or Jane Espenson going that route, though I certainly wouldn’t dare underestimate them. But in this case, I was certain she would survive this. The scene itself became so intense that I completely lost track of the score! And then it hit me after the scene was over that the music had transition from source to score, and the whole thing skyrocketed. This may have been one of the best scenes of the entire franchise for me, as far as the melding of picture and score is concerned. I was manipulated into believing that Amanda might die, and the score was unnerving. It got under my skin a little, and I didn’t even notice it until the scene was over and I could rewatch it during the commercial. Congratulations, Bear, you manipulative frakker. :)

    Your out doing youself Bear, I mean my goodness…this episode was really great and the music only made it better. Though I do have to hand it do Captain Ahab – very awesome music. I dont think I could have even done it better, maybe I would have sucked at trying to create such a musical electronic piece as Captain Ahab did. Again, awesome score Bear; keep it up.

    Oh! I totally loved the score, not only for this episode, but for the previous ones as well. There’s something reminiscent of “Battlestar” (at its saddest) in it, yet it’s so different and new. The transition in the car scene between Sam and Amanda was breathtaking, I was sitting there waiting for something to happen, anything, really, even though I knew that she couldn’t really die this early in the series.

    I absolutely love the fact that you’re adding song snippets to your blog entries. All the themes are memorable, but it’s so great being able to actually listen to the tracks while I read about them.

    And I might have told you this before, but I cannot take the Greystone Family Theme out of my head. Keep humming it all the time.

    Thank you for sharing, fantastic work, as usual!

    Amazing stuff.
    Especially the dancing scene – the music made it so touching, so gentle on one hand yet powerful on the other. Bravo!

    I loved the piano rendition of the Graystone Theme in the final scene. It reminded me of one of my favorite moments from the Caprica CD – the piano in the track Amanda Graystone which I’m listening to as a type.
    More piano pieces please Maestro!

    Finally all caught up on Caprica, and now on your wonderful blog entries. The scene where Philomon and Cylon!Zoe are dancing was absolutely breathtaking, and I couldn’t help but laugh a little when Philomon was flipping through channels on the radio and came across “Colonial Anthem”. I also loved Brendan’s doo-wop song and how seamlessly the source blended into the score to produce an incredible amount of tension. I was literally on the edge of my seat when it cut to commercial! Brilliant usage of music as always, and I definitely look forward to more.

    I’m so hooked on this show its disgusting. I blame the writers, actors, and you and your “friends”. I wanted to hate this show. I wanted to be done with the franchise that mesmerized me since 2005. You all have made that impossible.

    You’d think that a Centurion dancing to techno would turn me off. Alas I’m more intrigued now than ever. I want a seven foot tall androgynous robot friend capable of leveling a city as my freaky love idol. I want one!

    Really I adore exploring Caprica and its revealing culture. Here’s hoping that the STO decide to bomb a high profile concert at the Caprica City Opera House. Any excuse to have you guys on screen playing a song that is both awesome and eerily poignant amidst the tension of an impending attack.

    As always your work is killer. Can’t wait for the inevitable soundtracks.

    The two source scenes were probably my favorites in the episode. I didn’t even notice the doo-wop transition while watching, but listening back now, that is so cool.

    I really loved this episode. Loved. It was just so good. And the music was…. it was just great. Great use of Colonial Anthem. Great use of source music. Just great. This episode worked so incredibly I loved it.

    And now I wants those songs.

    I must say I think every episode of Caprica is better than the last. I’m really getting in to this series.

    I did notice the original BS theme ofcourse and had a bit of a chuckle. I also recognised Brendans singing in the Sam-Amanda scene and it made me realise that following this blog has it’s disadvantages in that my mind wanders ever so slightly from the scene to thinking about Brendan’s vocals and pondering if this will be performed live by the band. Oh well… the scene was so well done that my mind was quickly brought back to the scene. But still…

    The scene between Sam and Joe was indeed the strongest in the series so far.. Great episode over all!

    /Kristoffer

    I’ve been watching that other thing that’s going on in the Vancouver area now… so I taped “Gravedancing” to watch later in the night.

    Good move, getting it on tape.

    I’m hoping Baxter Sarno becomes a recurring character too. Haven’t seen much of Oswalt as a comedian – but he’s a hell of an actor. So is the woman playing “Tsattie” Adama.

    And Sasha Roiz as Sam Adama… DAYum! Of course, you can have all the acting chops there are – but if the music in your scenes sucks, nobody will realize it. Good for him that he has *your* music (and BrEndAn’s) backing him up. I don’t know how well-established he is north of the border, but if his work in “Caprica” doesn’t make him a household name here in the “lower 48″ … I don’t know – I may have to move to Vancouver. I’m really tempted to do that if I ever get the chance anyway.

    And yes, I certainly did notice the “Colonial Anthem.” When I heard it, I figured Philomon was scanning by a government channel or something.

    - M. (\”/)

    I am totally in love. Jonathan’s “Was Love” is fantastic and there is no doubt I will buy the Captain Ahab album in April. I wish it was available now; I played the little snippet over and over- what a cool sound!

    What can I say about Brendan, I am a total fan. I hope to gods “I am a Man” shows up on his new album as well as “Voices of the Dead”. Oh pretty please?

    I cannot begin to fathom how one would write a score or song in four days, and I am in perpetual awe of this kind of talent.

    Thank you gentlemen

    Hey Bear! This was a great episode…they’re still putting the chess board together and very slowly moving each of the pieces and I think they might have a bit too many balls up in the air, but I have faith in the writing team so hopefully they’ll notice that.

    “Was Love” was absolutely brilliant and I can’t stop listening to it. It’s hynoptic, it’s soulful, and while I laughed at first cause that scene just looked so weird, by the end of it, through that music, you really felt the emotions and it was pretty damn cute. Johnathan did a great job and since that’s precisely the only type of techno I like, I’ll check out his album next month.

    That, and I gotta give kudos to the use of Colonial Anthem. I’m having the worse cold at the moment so when I watching it laying on the couch and hearing that, it made me laugh and it pretty much made my day, so thanks for that! =)

    Hey! Caprica’s got ‘59 Ford Galaxies!

    (\”0)

    Gasp! Talk about being under the gun. The source-to-score just blew me away, and represents something which is greater than the sum of its parts.
    And I was only off by a decade as to the retro aspects of the show.

    My new favorite episode so far, and Brendan’s “I Am a Man (Who Loves a Woman)” was incredible, I especially enjoyed reading about the strategy in how it was used, because without even realizing it on my first watch, it worked beyond perfectly.

    @Meowlin: Yeah, and last week I think it was they showed that Capricans also drive old Jaguars. :)

    I loved the variety of music we got to hear in this episode! The doo-wop stuff was great, and the snippet of “Colonial Anthem” in there was a nice touch. :) I like the culture of Caprica that’s being built, mixing old school style with high tech, and the music with this week’s episode really fit in well with that.

    I’ve watched the “Was Love” scene twenty times now, Bear, and I think the music is the main reason for that (though watching Alessandra dance doesn’t hurt, either). Kudos to you and Jonathan!

    Correct if I’m wrong, but wasn’t the walkout music on Backtalk when Daniel comes on stage the same tune heard during the party at the end of “Colonial Day”? Or do my ears deceive me?

    Captain Ahab has made “Was Love” a free download over at http://captainahab.bandcamp.com/ since everyone has seemed so stoked about the song! thank you for your nice words!

    Great news! The Captain Ahab track “Was Love” is now available as a free download! http://captainahab.bandcamp.com

    I think I just saw Roark Critchlow (“Slick” the piano player in BSG) in a beer commercial.

    - (\”?)

    Allow me to add two more kudo words about “Was Love”: Aural Chamalla!

    YES! This is awesome!

    Too cool!! Thank you for the free download link!

    This was, for me, the best episode score since the pilot. It would be incredibly jarring to use pre-existing pop music to use as source in this show, so the fact that you and the producers (and Brendan, and Capt. Ahab, etc.) are willing to go these lengths is utterly fantastic. It ensures that no matter what happens to the show in the end (please, please don’t get canceled) that the score will be talked about for years to come.

    I loved the scene with Amanda and Sam. The transition between the very nice doo wop and the cue was very clever. I was like “there is no way that Amanda dies ! But why do I feel so nervous ?”

    OK, dork time:

    Are we to assume that the Colonial Anthem existed before the Colonies unified and was then appropriated as the anthem?

    (Kinda like how Key wrote the poem for “Star-Spangled Banner” in in the 18-teens and it wasn’t adopted as the Anthem until the 1930s?)

    I’m assuming the answer is, ‘yes,’ and that the Colonial Anthem wasn’t just commissioned by the new government.

    So, before the Colonial Anthem became the Colonial Anthem, what was it?

    Everyone has pretty much said the same thing here but I’ve got to chime in on how great the source music is for this show. Everyone is doing such a wonderful job of building up this world quickly but not too quickly. The scene in this episode with Amanda and Sam is just amazing, I was getting chills when the drum grooves started to take over the source radio music by Brendan, I was actually saying out loud “Don’t do it Sam don’t do it!”

    I couldn’t believe I was doing that, we know our heroes are going to live but I still found myself saying that. Sam is also becoming one of my favorite characters on this show, I didn’t think I would like him in the Pilot but he has a very different family life than I thought he would and I think it’s wonderful to show all aspects of Caprician life, it’s made Sam very human and I really love that.

    By the way I had to listen to the “Colonial Anthem” on the Season 2 BSG score after Caprica, I loved hearing that flipped through the radio real quick!

    ety3 – I’d submit this idea:

    It was created as a variation on Nomion’s famous piece, as a statement of how great all of the colonies could be if they joined together for the greater good.

    For all we know, there may have been a collection of SOME of the colonies joined in a UN-like or NATO-like interstellar treaty, but with some colonies being somewhat more antagonistic for various reasons. Like the world today.

    The “Colonial Anthem” may have been written for such an organization, and I think there is such a piece for the UN.

    ety3 -

    Like ours, it was a Tauron drinking song! Hahaha.

    What the frak – I’m starting to understand some Tauron.

    Watching the re-run of “Gravedancing” today and in the scene where Joseph calls Sam asking him if he’s got the job done while Sam’s parked in the ‘59 Galaxie and makes reference to all the *other* people he’d have to kill if he killed Amanda G. right now, he calls his brother… well, the CC spelled it “so-fis-tace” But I recognized that it was *sophistas* – same root as “sophistry,” “sophisticated,” etc. Much as we might sarcastically call somebody “genius” when they’re suggesting something that’s anything but.

    I’m thinking, they should get somebody to do the CC who’s familiar with Greek…

    - M. (\”/)

    Captain Ahab is playing in the San Francisco Bay Area March 17 & 18. Anyone interested in meeting at the concert? It would be fun to see other fans.

    Hope to see you there!
    -Sue

    Ooops, I wish we had a way to edit our posts. I believe the dates for Captain Ahab are March 18th and 19th. Thanks!

    Sue

    Whenever I head to this blog I feel like a kid in a candy store. This was one to be watched twice, but I’m starting to think that the guy that Dylan and then Hendrix covered in their remakes of That Frakking Song is the colonial version of Elvis. The doo-wop was in his pre-fleet days, when he’s fit and trim. :)

    I guess right now it’s a moot point, as long as these source songs are released by Brenden and Captain Ahab, but eventually there could be enough for a Colonial Anthology: The Music of Caprica CD. :)

    I forgot – a huge huge huuuuuge So Say We All to Captain Ahab for releasing Was Love for free, in ALAC!

    Dear Bear,

    I know what a talented composer you are. Couldn’t you use more varied ways of mounting tension than just drum beats. How about some violently played strings? I’m finding the score a bit limited. Lacy shouldn’t have the Graystone theme at all. We need more totally new melodies.

    But there are violently played strings along with the percussion…

    As for Lacy having the Greystone theme, it makes sense because it’s reminding the viewers that her path right now is what Zoe wants her to do. It’s telling people that this girl has something to do with the Greystone stuff, and they aren’t aware they’re being reminded of it, but they are.

    When Lacy does her own thing, then she gets own theme, to my mind anyway.

    Kristoffer… “it made me realise that following this blog has it’s disadvantages in that my mind wanders ever so slightly from the scene to thinking about Brendan’s vocals and pondering if this will be performed live by the band. Oh well… the scene was so well done that my mind was quickly brought back to the scene. But still…”

    I can relate. I can hardly enjoy pure movie music anymore without also thinking about the technical aspects of creating the music. When I heard bad score, I can’t shut my brain off. And when I hear good score, my brain goes into overdrive, just listening and appreciating, all of which momentarily pulls me out of a movie. But, when you’re that tuned in to music it doesn’t ruin anything, it just adds new levels you can appreciate something on.

    Meowlin… “And Sasha Roiz as Sam Adama… DAYum!”

    Agreed. The guy has “MOVIE STAR” written all over him. He’s really incredible. One of the strongest parts of the entire series.

    SueN… “I cannot begin to fathom how one would write a score or song in four days, and I am in perpetual awe of this kind of talent.”

    Agreed. Both Brendan and Jonathan are among the best songwriters I’ve ever met. And, ironically, Brendan is my brother and I’ve known Jonathan since we were both 13 years old.

    JamesF… “Correct if I’m wrong, but wasn’t the walkout music on Backtalk when Daniel comes on stage the same tune heard during the party at the end of “Colonial Day”? Or do my ears deceive me?”

    Kudos back to you, buddy. It IS the same music. I wanted to see if anyone picked up on it. Quick story…

    When scoring “Colonial Day,” Ron Moore said he wanted something that sounded like “The Tonight Show” Theme for Baltar’s walk out. So, all that music was written with classic late-night-television in mind. So, now we realize that it WAS classic late-night-television music for all those characters, because it was originally Baxter Sarno’s theme music. I imagined that Baltar grew up watching Sarno as a kid and always envied him. That’s why he would have picked that music for his grand entrance. Kind of a funny way to go back and re-think music I wrote literally years ago, but it totally worked. I’m glad someone out there picked up on it!

    -Bear

    Meowlin… “I think I just saw Roark Critchlow (“Slick” the piano player in BSG) in a beer commercial.”

    Wow! You know, I keep seeing the actor who played Nathan Stark in Eureka all over in commercials too.

    ety3… “Are we to assume that the Colonial Anthem existed before the Colonies unified and was then appropriated as the anthem?”

    You’re right, that IS a “dork” question, but I’m a music dork so I’ll bite. Its hard to say what it might have been, because (unless The Star Spangled Banner) the melody really is very suited to an anthem. You guys would probably have better ideas than me about this. I like One buck’s idea, incorporating Nomion.

    Sue… “I believe the dates for Captain Ahab are March 18th and 19th. Thanks!”

    You guys should definitely check it the Ahab Bay Area shows. Plus, earlier that same week Raya and I will be playing an acoustic set together on March 14th! Details pending, but mark your calendars! See you then we hope. :)

    plainsong… “eventually there could be enough for a Colonial Anthology: The Music of Caprica CD”

    I absolutely hope that ends up being the case.

    Muldfeld… “Couldn’t you use more varied ways of mounting tension than just drum beats. How about some violently played strings?”

    For you, anything. :) And if you’re really itching for tons of new melodies each week, check out Human Target. That show is basically a new adventure every week and has very few recurring characters, so the score is different each time.

    -Bear

    I noticed the dancing scene from “Colonial Day” music too! I think I was more surprised by that than the “Colonial Anthem” snippet. Both gave me a little thrill which reminded me how much I love these shows! Keep it up Bear!

    plainsong, I guess, in terms of strings, I was thinking of the kinds used in “Prelude to War”. My main problem is that I keep hearing the same Graystone melody over and over again and I’m tired of it, however nice. What made the brilliant “Something Dark Is Coming” so powerful is that it was never used again, except in “The Plan”. Even if Lacy got her own theme, surely, we shouldn’t hear only the Graystone theme in every scene involving the Graystones. Bear is capable of amazing things and I wanna hear that variety.

    Bear, thanks for letting me know about Human Target, but it’s not quite my style (though I did love “The Sarah Connor Chronicles”; LOVED that 3-parter with Jesse and the blonde teen) and, besides, I think Caprica would get jealous. I’d rather she lose weight or get plastic surgery than cheat on her.

    I’m not at all demanding. :)

    @Mudfield, if you don’t like Human Target, just wait for the eventual soundtrack. I think you’ll grok it. :)

    Back to this episode –

    I looooove Was Love. And it works in other Galacticaverse settings. I’ve fanned Captain Ahab on FB so that I don’t miss the new album release. If it sounds good, it is good. :)

    I listened to that “source transition to score” thing. That’s pretty cool.

    You know something bear?

    I’d love to see a cameo of Stu Philips, introduced as Nomion.

    It would be a nice nod to the creator of the Colonial Anthem :)

    Thanks for providing the link to Captain Ahab’s song, it was wonderful! As is your music, I could (and do) listen to your soundtracks all day long (for the past couple of years now) and I don’t ever get enough of it. Looking/Listening forward to more great music.

    PS: Yes, the moment when we hear the original BSG music play through the radio gave me a geek moment :)

    hahah, I asked the same thing myself about the Colonial Anthem being played on the radio :)) I figured it could have been the anthem of Caprica before becoming the Colonial anthem, or something like that anyway.
    I’m also gonna join the ranks of those stating their love for ‘Was Love’.

    OneBuckFilms… “I’d love to see a cameo of Stu Philips, introduced as Nomion.”

    That is a freakin’ AWESOME idea!

    -Bear

    The were three songs that were played in the dance scene between Philomon and Zoe ,the first song , then patriotic song and the was love. What is the name and artist of the first song? By the way huge fan!

    adrianaugust26… “The were three songs that were played in the dance scene between Philomon and Zoe ,the first song , then patriotic song and the was love. What is the name and artist of the first song? By the way huge fan!”

    You’re an astute listener! You picked up on a great song after hearing it for only 2 seconds. :) That song is called “What Lies Ahead” and its from the debut album of Battlestar Galactica Orchestra member and all around bad ass guitar player Ira Ingber.

    Ira’s official site:
    http://www.iraingber.com/
    Ira’s album:
    http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/iraingber

    Ira’s played on countless scores over the years. I first noticed his sound featured prominently in Danny Elfman’s “Midnight Run” score. For me, he’s played on “Battlestar Galactica,” “Eureka,” “Trauma,” and many, many more. His album is definitely worth checking out.

    -Bear

    Thank you I will go off an listen to it

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