BG4: “Sometimes a Great Notion”

Posted by Bear McCreary on January 17th, 2009

“Sometimes I live in the country, sometimes I live in the town.  Sometimes I get a great notion, to jump in the river and drown.” 
From Ken Kesey’s novel “Sometimes a Great Notion”

EARTH-SHATTERING SPOILERS AHEAD:  Last April, the mid-season cliffhanger Revelations ended with my rousing “Diaspora Oratorio,” a musical orgasm for choir, orchestra, percussion and ethnic soloists that accompanied the fleet’s arrival at the end of their long journey.   Picking up immediately where that episode left off, Sometimes a Great Notion is the tonal opposite: the darkest, most grim and foreboding episode of Battlestar Galactica ever produced. Our heroes have found their promised land, Earth, a desolate nuclear wasteland.  But, that’s just the beginning. 

The entire episode deals with their reactions and deteriorating emotional states.  Long stretches of screen time are dedicated to wordless montages of our beloved characters coming to grips with the crushing reality of their situation, in ways that range from bad to worse.

*** The Unintended Finale? ***

I asked co-writers Bradley Thomspon and David Weddle about their experiences working on this unusual episode.  David Weddle said that they “wanted to realistically depict the despair that our characters would feel after discovering Earth was a burnt out cinder.  We did not want to make everything okay by the end of the episode.  Our characters had been chasing the dream of Earth for three and a half years.  It became an allegory for the dreams each of us chase: of achieving success in our chosen career, of finding our soul mate, starting a family, buying our dream house, etc. When those dreams are shattered, as they are for all of us at one time or another, we must find a way to pick ourselves up and go on.  But movies and TV shows frequently portray this in a false melodramatic way.  Someone makes an uplifting speech, or gives someone a hug and the despair melts away.  In life it is much, much harder to rebound from a crushing blow.  And many people never manage to rebound at all.”

Bradley Thompson added ’Galactica’ was heading into the final act of its four year story and Ron felt we should have the wind totally knocked out of us.   We also felt that the colonists had been relying too much on prophecy — it should fail and the gods shouldn’t hand us paradise on a platter. The Colonists and the Cylons needed a serious boot up the arse to start rethinking what they believed about themselves and each other in order to create their own future, together or separate.  We also felt that the truth about Earth would be too much for some people to take.” 

Naturally, my score for this episode had to match the tone of the show and resulted in the bleakest music I’ve ever written.  And I’ve composed some dark music for Battlestar Galactica! But I realized that even the most ominous composition I’d written up to this point would be too happy and upbeat for Sometimes a Great Notion.

This was a heavy episode not just for me, but for everyone involved.  It was the last script produced before the writer’s strike shut down production.  Everyone involved in shooting the episode worked in fear that this could be the last episode of Battlestar Galactica ever made.  Can you imagine that?  The end of this episode being the end of the series forever? 

The prep for this episode was extraordinarily stressful.  Bradley Thomspon recalled “until the weekend before the strike, we didn’t know if SciFi was actually going to shoot the episode.  We’d written something colossally over budget, and had rewritten it to bring it within a producible figure, but didn’t deliver the pages until Ron cleared them about two days before the strike.  Our last changes were delivered hours before the walkout went into effect.” 

David Weddle told me “this was one the most personal scripts that we had written, and so it was particularly difficult to just walk away from it.  When we left to return back to LA there was a concern among many in the cast and crew that ‘Notion’ would turn out to be the last episode because no one knew how long the strike would last and if the studio would finally decide to pull the plug and tear down the sets.”

However, the prospect of Sometimes a Great Notion becoming the unintentional series finale “affected the crew and the actors tremendously,” Thompson said.  “And I believe that the emotional turmoil played perfectly in sync with the emotions our characters would be feeling after ‘Revelations.’”

David Weddle added “Eddie Olmos has a brilliant ability to use things like that to catalyze his performance and those of the other cast members.  So he was talking himself into the belief that it would be the last episode and convinced many of the other actors that this was the end.  It brought a visceral power to all of their performances.  And Michael Nankin, being a brilliant director, knew how to exploit that and build on that.” 

I asked director Michael Nankin, whose many BSG credits include Scar, Flight of the Phoenix, and Maelstrom, about the working conditions leading up the WGA strike during the prep for Sometimes a Great Notion.  He described that “during the two weeks of prep, Ron Moore had not released the final script, so we didn’t even know if we were going to shoot the thing. The night before the strike, Ron gathered the entire cast and crew on the set of the CIC to give an impassioned, emotional speech. His voice quavering, he declared his love and pride for the show, for everyone involved, his frustration that the strike would not allow him to be with us — and, finally, his absolute trust in me and my artistry in overseeing what could possibly be the last episode ever. It was one of the most stunning things anyone ever said about me. It was an amazing moment for everyone. Soft-spoken Ron Moore turned into Patton. He was so choked up at the end of the speech that he could only turn and walk out when it was over. He went straight to the airport. 

‘Everyone took what he said very seriously and the unanimous reaction to the possibility of this being the last episode was to turn in the best work possible. I have never seen a more dedicated, hard-working troop in my life. The cast rose to the occasion and gave everything they had in their hearts and spirits. All their feeling about the show, the entire beautiful ride, came through in the moments on-screen. Everyone was at the top of their game. It was a privilege to have been a witness to it.”

By the time I began scoring Sometimes a Great Notion last June, that threat had passed.  Production had long since resumed and I was recovering from the brutally difficult and exhausting experience of scoring Revelations.  I finished that mid-season cliffhanger last April, and spent the majority of May up in Vancouver on the set, working on an episode you will see later, and finally got back to composing Sometimes a Great Notion in June, actually just a few weeks after the premiere of Revelations.

*** A Dark Orchestra ***

With Revelations I created a bigger sound by expanding the musical ensemble, including brass and choir that are not normally used in the score.  To create the monochromatic, dark textures needed for Sometimes a Great Notion I took the opposite approach.  I thinned out the ensemble, often featuring nothing more than the string orchestra for long stretches screen time. 

(photo courtesy of Dan Goldwasser)

Sometimes a Great Notion represents my first introduction of atonal writing into the Battlestar Galactica score.  Of course, not all my writing has been overtly tonal over the years.  Many cues, particularly suspense and horror moments, have featured clusters and tonally-ambiguous colors.  However, this episode is the first time that an atonal pitch cluster has been given thematic meaning.  The use of atonality was necessary in this episode because anything melodic, no matter how sad or bittersweet, was too comforting, too familiar.  This episode is beyond just “sad.”  This episode is an assault on the psyche.  I set out to create in the audience the feelings of isolation and anguish that our characters are experiencing.  So, all the usual Middle-Eastern or Western harmonic progressions that have been featured on this soundtrack for four years were momentarily thrown out the window.  In their place are bleak, dark clusters of frozen sound.

More than the harmonic language of the score changed.  The string orchestra itself is highly unusual.  Until this session, I’d typically used a traditional string orchestra, positioned in the classical formation: first violins to the conductor’s left, seconds and violas in the center, celli and basses on the conductor’s right.  But that ensemble wouldn’t get the dark sound I wanted, so we got rid of the violas, and replaced them with two additional sections of celli.

(photo courtesy of Dan Goldwasser)

The new string ensemble featured first violins on the extreme right, second violins on the extreme left and three sections of celli in the center, with the basses also centered in the back row.  This arrangement brought orchestrational risks, but ultimately provided incredible power in the low end of the orchestra and allowed me to create very murky chord clusters in the celli, that would be impossible to create with a single section of celli and violas. 

*** Among the Ruins ***

Creating a sense of symmetry with Revelations, tonight’s episode begins exactly as the last one ended.  The sound of waves gently lapping against the rocks accompanies images of a cold, barren landscape. The following three-minute sequence is nearly devoid of dialog, reminiscent of the opening montages of Kobol’s Last Gleaming Part II, Home Part II or Unfinished Business.  However, the rolling string ostinatos of those scores are nowhere to be heard.  Here the strings are bleak and desolate.  Long clusters and simple atonal melodies are stretched to the breaking point, layered over the images like an oppressive fog.

What I wrote here is nothing new, of course.  Morton Feldman famously composed a string quartet that is performed so slow it takes six hours to complete.  I certainly can’t say that Feldman is an inspiration of mine, but nevertheless a comparison can probably be drawn.  Still, my cue lasts only four minutes.  This approach in television is extremely rare.  Composers are typically under pressure to “make it exciting” or “speed up this dragging dialog” and are rarely presented with the opportunity to create very slow, complex and evolving thematic ideas, especially in an atonal harmonic language.

The most important of these chord clusters is the following pitch set, which I will call the Earth Chord:

It first sneaks in as Tigh steps into frame, staring into the gray horizon, the chord almost indistinguishable from a rolling thunder clap.

This dark cluster of C, D, G# and B contains no inherent triad to define it in any particular key signature.  Voicing these notes in the extreme low register of the string orchestra violates every rule of chord spacing in Orchestration 101.  Thankfully, my mentor (and former Orchestration 101 teacher!) Jim Hopkins worked closely with lead orchestrator Brandon Roberts and myself to ensure that the sound would be appropriately grim and forbodeing without sounding like an orchestra playing wrong notes.  I consulted with Jim frequently during the composition of this episode to ask his advice about this weird ensemble and his years of experience brought a lot to this score.

(L-R: Scoring assistant Jonathan Ortega, Jim Hopkins, & orchestrator Brandon Roberts at the orchestral recording session. Photo courtesy of Dan Goldwasser)

After the three sections of celli and the basses introduce the Earth Chord, the first and second violins introduce the next important musical identity for this episode, played in the extreme high register of the instruments, which I’ll call Earth Melody A:

These simple melodic notes, played at the top of the range are set against the murky, thick voiced chord at the bottom register of the celli and basses.  With no violas to fill in the middle ground, the result is an orchestral chasm, an extremely unusual combination of the extreme musical registers of the orchestra.

The violins play the melody in extremely long tones, taking a full thirty seconds to get through a single statement.  And the unique placement of the violins (on opposite sides of the podium) allowed me to create a very bizarre effect.  The first and second violins each play this melody, but off set by about 6 seconds, creating an acoustic “ping-pong delay” effect.  The delay between the violins is easily seen in the score:

Watch the show with a good sound system and you can hear it, the first violins begin the phrase on the left, followed by the seconds on the right.  As the first violins on the left change to a new note, they clash in a nasty minor second with the sustaining note in the second violins panned to the right.

(photo courtesy of Dan Goldwasser)

Earth Melody A repeats in a second, languid phrase before giving way to the third atonal theme, Earth Melody B:

This theme is much more melodically interesting and is played at a normal pace.  As such, it is the first part of this cue that actually releases some of the tension by providing us with a sense of musical familiarity.  Earth Melody B underscores the conversation between Adama, Roslin, Helo and D’Anna, where we establish that there’s no life anywhere on this planet… although I think the score has told you that by now already. 

Long whisps of Earth Melody A interweave as we watch Kara and Leoben tracing the signal from the emergency locator beacon.  (This scene, incidentally, features my first ever up-front credit!)

As Baltar confirms our suspicions that this place is completely irradiated, the strings return to the combination of the Earth Chord in the low strings and Earth Melody A in the extreme high violins.  However, the color is augmented by the presence of a distant electric violin solo by Paul Cartwright, doubling the melody.

As we center in on Dualla digging through the sand, the strings finally settle on a unison note, the first simple harmony in the entire episode thus far.  Normally, hearing a single pitch in the score doesn’t really grab your attention, but after the atonal and arhythmic nebula of the scene thus far, it provides a surprising amount of resolution.  Our ears are yearning for something to latch on to at this point, and this sequence with Dualla was the perfect moment.

Finally, the atonal clusters give way to a melody, firmly rooted in B major.  As her despair overcomes her, glimpses of the Battlestar score we know come through the fog.  First frame drums, then taikos and tablas, and finally yailli tanbur, duduk and electric fiddle enter the mix.

Director Michael Nankin told me “Dualla takes the nuked Earth harder than anyone while on the planet. There is a moment in a raptor, on the way back, where she privately makes the decision about what she’s going to do: She’s going to give those around her every ounce of strength and optimism she has left, and then she’s going to pull the trigger.”

This moment is our introduction to the Dualla Theme, which I will discuss later.  The mode of the theme is altered for this cue (the 2 of the major scale has been lowered for a more dissonant sound).  The melody repeats over and over, finally culminating on the cut to Helo and Dualla in the raptor.  The climax of the cue lands firmly on B minor, but as Helo comforts her, the strings slowly drift away from that tonality.  As the cue ends, the strings have returned to the C, D, G# and B that they began on: The Earth Chord.

*** The Body ***

Kara’s Destiny theme returns in a haunting erhu solo by Martin St. Pierre, underscoring the entire scene where Kara and Leoben discover her body in the wreckage. 

This theme was originally composed for Occupation for her captivity on New Caprica, and has come to represent their bizarre relationship and the promise that she has a destiny.

In Sometimes a Great Notion, this story arc and musical theme come to their conclusion.  In this crushing scene with Leoben, Kara learns that the hybrid’s prophecy was true.  She is the harbinger of death, and she has led them all to their end.

The score begins with the erhu solo, stating her theme in its original D minor key.  As Kara reaches for her dogtags, the violins sneak in on osciallating open fifths and sevenths in their upper registers (listen again for that unique acoustic panning effect, due to their placement in the room).  The sound is suspenseful, but not overtly scary.

Leoben cowers and steps back in shock as he realizes what they’ve discovered.  At this moment, underscoring his confusion, the basses and three sections of celli enter with aggressive tremolo chords, rising and falling like waves.  Martin’s erhu returns as the score modulates to a new key, set against a funereal frame drum pattern.  This will be the last time this theme is ever heard in its entirety.  And it will not be the only theme that comes full circle in this manner in this episode.

This scene never fails to give me chills.  I’ve always viewed Leoben as an almost all-knowing prophet who chooses to speak in riddles, teasing Kara and the viewing audience alike with glimpses of the truth.  This moment reveals that he is, in fact, lost and confused as his entire belief system crashes in on him. 

*** Anders and the Guitar ***

In the next act, Anders wanders through the ruins and finds a broken guitar neck, which brings back memories of “All Along the Watchtower.”  The score sneaks in with ambient strains of harmonium, tabla and electric sitar, recalling my “Watchtower” arrangement.  This is the same sonic texture that underscored the Chief’s walk along the ruins, leading up to his memories of being in a marketplace on Earth.

However, the musical idea is taken a step farther here, as Anders remembers specific lyrics and recites them to himself.  At this moment, the signature acoustic guitar riff that opens my arrangement of “Watchtower” enters, and you will also hear the distant vocal refrain of a new Brendan “Bt4” McCreary vocal performance.

(photo courtesy of Dan Goldwasser)

Even though you’ll only catch a couple lines in the show, we actually recorded a complete performance of “All Along the Watchtower” for this episode, complete with all three verses, set in this trippy, ambient style.  Perhaps it’ll end up on a soundtrack album one day? :)

*** The Funeral Pyre ***

In its second act, Sometimes a Great Notion goes from dark to darker.  One of the most upsetting images from this episode is Laura Roslin’s personal breakdown, and the loss of her faith.  She burns the pages of the book of Pythia, the scripture that has been her source of inspiration for virtually the entire series (beginning with another Thompson / Weddle script The Hand of God).

Just as Kara’s Destiny theme completed it’s arc, here Laura’s Religious Theme returns, bringing with it memories of the hope and mystery of her prophetic destiny:

But this time, it is not orchestrated with a sense of hope, but in a funeral dirge, set in the orchestral strings.  As Laura breaks down into tears, Chris Bleth’s solo bansuri picks up the melody as it leaps to a new key.  The last time Chris played this tune on the bansuri was at the end of “Refugees Return” from Season 3’s Exodus Part II when Laura learns that Hera didn’t escape New Caprica.  Here, like that moment, we see Roslin’s strength give way to despair.

But the funereal setting of this cue is just a warm up for the next scene.  We cut to Kara building a funeral pyre for her own decayed corpse.  I’ve scored several funeral scenes for this series, usually with lyrical and moving solo duduk.  But, as with the rest of Sometimes a Great Notion, I wanted to make the music as bleak and oppressive as possible.  The duduk would have simply been too moving to capture Kara’s emotional state.

The strings state a dissonant, countrapuntal chorale, based on conflicting statements of the Starbuck Theme:

This simple theme goes all the way back to early season one, You Can’t Go Home Again.  It’s made several subtle appearances in Season 3 and 4, but her character has really outgrown it.  Over the course of Season 2 and 3 I wrote the Kara and Anders Love Theme, Kara’s Destiny Theme and the Kara and Lee Love Theme, all of which represented a more dynamic persona than the Starbuck Theme.   Traditionally, this theme symbolized her rebellious spirit and that flirtatious smile that we rarely see anymore now that her character has darkened.

Kara’s Destiny Theme would’ve been the obvious choice here, but I wanted to use the Starbuck Theme to help underscore the idea that she is burying herself.  At this moment, she must come to grips with the undeniable fact that she is no longer the adventure-seeking hot shot pilot of before.  This dissonant, funeral setting of the Starbuck Theme removes the joy, vivacity, passion, lust and energy from the music and leaves nothing but a cold, emotionless melodic idea.  To amplify this idea, I asked the strings to play without vibrato (vibrato adds warmth and emotion to the sound) and without expressive dynamics in the phrases.  I wanted the orchestra itself to sound cold and lifeless, like a musical shadow.

*** Dualla’s Death ***

The next scene in Act Two takes us to the end of Lee and Dualla’s date, and of course, her life. 

I asked the writer’s about writing a death scene for long-established characters.  David Weddle confessed It was heartbreaking to write about Dualla’s suicide.  This was a character that we had lived with for four years.  We had shared her ups and downs, her dreams and disappointments, and now we had to share her loss of hope and her decision to take an awful step.” 

Bradley Thomspon added “It’s always demanding to get the death to resonate, to mean something.  Personally, I know I’m on the right track if it does get to me emotionally.  In “Sometimes…” Mr. Nankin staged the death with such shocking simplicity – I knew it was coming and it still knocked me over.  And when he lingered on the image in the pool of blood…  Sad sad sad.”


Director Michael Nankin said he wanted her tragic suicide “to come as a complete shock. I did some research and what I heard over and over was the surprise family members and friends expressed over loved-one’s suicides. Few people saw it coming. So I wanted the audience to feel the same way. We kept the scene that leads up to the gunshot as content and sweet as possible. The clues are all there–they’re just very subtle. I wanted Dualla to be the only bright spot in the show–the person you can relax with and take a break from all the gloom. Then of course she blows her brains out.”

The music plays a major role in misleading the audience in the first two acts of this episode.  Amplifying the connection between Apollo and Dualla, and underscoring the joy in her eyes, only makes the suicide scene even more crushing.

After she says goodnight to Lee, she steps before the mirror, humming a little tune, which served as the basis for the Dualla theme:

Actress Kandyse McClure improvised this melody on set during production.  She described that “there was no previous discussion about it, it was just kind of stuck in my head – at first I wasn’t even  really aware that I was humming.  It was just comforting to me in that moment – something like the hymns my grandmother would sing around the house when I was a little girl.”

Michael Nankin was so moved by it, he contacted me during his director’s cut and asked if there were a way to incorporate it into the score directly.  He later told me “the humming is something that Kandyse did in one of the takes and I loved it immediately. So we repeated it in every shot thereafter. It was so haunting. It reminded me of the opening titles of ROSEMARY’S BABY, where the score is Mia Farrow’s hummed lullaby. It was haunting and perfect for the moment. I believe I called you from the set to talk about it. I insist you put it on the next CD.”


I wove this tune into the fabric of the score to Sometimes a Great Notion. Like “All Along the Watchtower” and “Gaeta’s Lament,” this theme is yet another example of the boundary between score and reality on Battlestar Galactica being blurred.  Listen for it being played (usually by Chris Bleth on the bansuri) in every scene with Dualla on screen in this episode.

As Gaeta leaves the room, Dualla takes off her ring.  The score enters with gentle, pastoral statements of Bmaj and Dmaj7.  She then blows her brains out in what might be the most graphic moment of violence in this entire series (amplified I think because it involves one of the most gentle and beloved characters).  As Gaeta cries out for a medic and the blood begins to seep out across the floor, a solo duduk in its lowest register moans out an echo of the Dualla Theme, this time disfigured and dissonant.

*** Dualla’s Ghost ***

Act Three represents the apex of darkness for Battlestar Galactica and the score played a major role in amplifying the misery and desperation.  As Adama weeps over Dualla’s body in the morgue, my score enters in one of the most interesting cues I’ve ever written.  At this moment, you are hearing actress Kandyse McClure herself actually humming the Dualla Theme, set against a searingly dark string cluster, punctuated by sul ponticello tremolo swells and quarter-tone trills.

Dualla was humming her tune right before she killed herself, and I wanted to create the feeling that, somehow, her voice and that melody were imprinted on the universe like a bloodstain.  When you look into the sun and close your eyes, you can still the shape, seared momentarily on to your retinas.  In the same way, I wanted her voice and her theme to be echoing away, our last glimpse of this beautiful character.  Nankin felt that using her voice in this sequence “keeps her alive in the scene and allows you to experience Apollo’s sense of denial with him.”

I actually first pitched the idea to Kandyse at the second “Music of Battlestar Galactica” concert last April.  Kandyse was a sweetheart and agreed to come in and host the show at the last minute when it turned out James Callis (who hosted the first night) had to be whisked away to Vancouver to shoot a pivotal scene.  We were backstage during Brendan McCreary’s energetic opening act and started talking about this episode.  When I asked what Kandyse first reaction was she told me “I thought it was awesome!  I immediately wanted to do it. I was having such a blast with you guys backstage – the whole evening was kind of surreal for me. I kept thinking to myself, “who’da thunk it”?  And I was really flattered…”

Several months passed and our deadline for the episode’s score finally creeped up in June.  Unfortunately, at that point, Kandyse was no longer in LA.  Frack, she wasn’t even on the continent anymore!  She was in Australia for a convention and wouldn’t return until after the mix deadline.  But, co-producer Paul Leonard knew that this was an important scene for the episode and helped us coordinate a recording studio in Australia. 

I went to AneFx, the company that does the outstanding sound work for Battlestar, and met up with BG dialog editor Vince Balunas.  Kandyse was already at a recording studio in Australia.  We could monitor her via ISDN line, listening to her over the internet.  This kind of long-distance recording is a very common practice with ADR recording (additional dialog that gets recorded and added after filming), but this working environment was a first for me.  Kandyse later told me that it was “definitely not your average ADR session…

‘Once in a while I get to do really cool stuff like this and I think: ‘Who’s life is this’?! I felt so glamorous and worldly ;-)   The session became quite emotional for me toward the end. I even cried!  The poor woman at reception wasn’t sure what to do with me… I think she made me tea. I made the sound engineer very uncomfortable… ;-) And no, not because of working with you, Bear! You are an absolute pleasure to work with. You were specific; clear about the quality of sound you were looking for.  We played around with it a bit until we found the rhythm and tone. I was learning a lot as well! It was really helpful – I appreciated your feedback.  You have such an ear for all the subtle nuances of sound. I wanted it to be just way you envisioned it.”

(Don’t worry, Kandyse.  It’s not the first time someone’s been reduced to tears at one of my sessions.)  ;)  But all joking aside, it truly was an honor to be involved in Kandyse’s final session for Battlestar Galactica.  The experience was quite emotional for me as well, one of the most memorable sessions of my entire experience on this series.

The resultant cue is heart-breaking and creepy.  I’ll never get to experience the scene without knowing that the score is Kandyse’s voice, so I’m curious to know what your experiences were like.  Did you recognize her?  Ideally, the music would be uncomfortably familiar without being easily recognized.  The opportunity to work with Kandyse, to interweave the score with the narrative and to score a scene with a performance like the one Eddie gave combined to make this one of the most complex and layered scenes I’ve ever done.  And it’s only 40 seconds long!

As Adama leans in and whispers “I let everybody down,” the strings swell and resolve to a dark cluster of C, D, G# and B: The Earth Chord.

The pervasive darkness in this third act reaches a level of despair that I’ve not seen in television before.  When asked about directing an episode like this, Michael Nankin said his “overall feeling is that of gratitude for the chance to help create drama that doesn’t pull punches. Can you think of another show – ever – in which the single hope and dream and goal of the entire series (and audience) is crushed and a major character blows her brains out? Aside from HAPPY DAYS?”  

*** Adama’s Promise ***

In the final act, Adama comes to his senses and rallies the fleet to a new cause, the search for a new home.  Traditionally, Adama’s speeches across the wireless are scored with big, orchestral gestures.  I recall scoring the “Call to Arms” from the miniseries, or of course, the “Diaspora Oratorio” from Revelations. But, this scene required a gentler touch.

After the oppressive darkness of this episode, I didn’t want Adama’s speech to feel like a phony, happy ending.  After all, nothing is resolved except for the fact that Adama has decided not to give in to despair.  A gentle gamelan and hand percussion groove sneaks in  as he makes his case, reminiscent of Season 2’s “One Year Later” more than any grand orchestral cue.  Chris Bleth’s solo duduk states a plaintive version of the Religious Ceremony Theme:

This melody, usually reserved for funeral services, gives Adama’s shades of a preacher’s sermon, rather than coloring it as a rousing, military oration.  This subdued feel is all the episode could handle, since anything more grand or rousing would feel like a stark and unbelievable shift from the despair we’ve witnessed.

This sequence is especially important because it provides a realistic relief from the punishing darkness leading up to it.  Michael Nankin explained the importance of the sequence first by confessing “I LOVE dark drama. I love opera and tragedies, the sadder the better. This episode was a gift in more ways than one. This episode is a tragedy in the classic sense–it’s cathartic. You go through the worst possible experience imaginable with the characters and yet there is hope. In the same way I wanted to give Dualla the only happiness in the show (which she gives to Lee as the gift of life,) I gave Laura Roslin the final image of hope.

‘Laura is the one most destroyed by the reality of Earth. It invalidates all her beliefs and decisions and makes her feel that she’s killed thousands for the wrong idea. She falls down the well of despair and is unreachable. Yet, in her final moment in the show, she is holding and contemplating a flower she picked on the planet. A tiny shred of life and promise that she won’t let go of. This was not in the script, but something I planned from the very beginning. Everything else I did was intended to make things as depressing as possible, including shooting the planet as if it were in a Bergman film. We even had the extras give up. It all made me very happy.”

*** The Final Cylon ***

From there, we cut to an intimate scene with Tigh and D’Anna, where we learn that D’Anna will stay behind on Earth.  It is, perhaps, her last scene in the series.

We transition to the lapping waves and gray clouds from the episode’s opening moments.  With those images returns a familiar sound that accompanied them in the beginning, the Earth Chord:

I wanted this final cue to be a thematic retrograde of the first cue, so it introduces the themes in reverse order. As Tigh steps into the waves, Earth Melody B returns, stated first in the celli and then followed by a countrapuntal echo in the violins.  He wades further into the water and the high violins play their high statements of Earth Melody A, again in long, emotionless, frozen pitches, devoid of emotion or lyrical phrasing.  Listen for the return of the dissonant, acoustic ping-pong delay effect on the left and right sides. 

He experiences echoes of his distant past, similar to Tyrol and Anders.  However, this time I made no reference to “Watchtower,” which would have been the obvious musical choice here.  Indeed, the Earth Chord, and Earth Melody A continue uninterrupted through the initial flashbacks.  I chose this approach because I was saving up musical energy for the big reveal.  There was no point in putting musical stingers on the flashbacks, because they were self-evident.  No, I used this opportunity to begin a searing, steaedy crescendo leading up to the big sting.

Tigh, apparently a banker or businessman, runs through a bombed out bank and we hear a familiar voice call out his name from off camera.  He reaches down and sees Ellen buried in the rubble.  The cold and frozen orchestral textures of the score give way to a huge percussion groove, accented by frame drums and taikos.  The low strings perform a driving bassline in multiple octaves that almost sounds a bit rock and roll, inspired shamelessly by the energetic string phrases in my favorite Jerry Goldsmith scores.

And climbing up through the aggressive musical texture, a familiar theme appears, first in the celli, tanbur and duduk and then much high in the two sections of violin, the Tigh Theme:

This theme, originally composed for Tigh’s military take-over the civilian government in Season 2 (and entitled “Martial Law” on the Season 2 soundtrack) went through some remarkable shifts in Season 4,  Most memorably, it accompanied Tigh’s visions of Ellen in Escape Velocity.  For that episode, I altered the mode slightly, lowering the second scale tone to give it a more exotic, Middle Eastern flavor.  Naturally, that version of the theme is the one that returns here and echoes away as Tigh proclaims “Ellen, you’re the fifth.”

Ellen Tigh is the Final Cylon?!  Another surprise from the writer’s isn’t merely the identity of the Final Cylon, but also the timing.  I think many fans (myself included) were expecting this reveal in the last episode.  I asked the writers how they decided to make Ellen the Final Cylon.  David Weddle explained “we decided to make Ellen one of the Final Five at the same time that we chose the other Final Five at the end of Season Three.  The decision was primarily made by Ron Moore, though all of the writers weighed in.”

I had to press, and ask them if they knew Ellen was a Cylon from the very beginning.  Her introduction in Season One’s Tigh Me Up Tigh Me Down suggested that she was, but then that storyline seemed to disappear until Sometimes a Great Notion.  Bradley Thompson confessed “We can take two roads from here – lie and say it was all planned from the get-go, or tell the truth, which is the story grew organically from what we’d set up – a practice some have called ‘ret-conning.’  We looked at the characters and their stories to date, we examined the potential for surprising but ‘right’ storytelling.  We looked at which characters would be tortured the most by that turn of fate.  And the room put the names on the board.  Ron said, ‘Go sleep on it.’  Next day, they were the Final Five.”

*** Conclusion ***

While the music in Sometimes a Great Notion was dark and bleak beyond description, the creative process was an absolute joy.  The orchestral session was a chance to play in the Bernard Herrmann musical soundscape that I’ve adored since my youth.  “I’m sorry, you mean Bernard Herrmann rip-off, right?” Michael Nankin added.  “The French have a word for it: homage. Anyway, it was delicious to see all the strings and to hear that you can be as dark and depressing as I am. It was fun to hear you pull all the themes together to create one of the great funeral dirges of episodic television. My partner in bleakness.  But you’re looking for my opinion of your work–which is the same as it’s always been: I am astonished, moved and deeply affected by your work. You’re a composer who understands the interior life of the characters and tells a story about it. That’s rare, my friend.”

 

So Say We All,

-Bear

 

PS: Somewhere in the score to this episode I’ve hidden a clue about the end of the series.  Good hunting.  :)

81 Responses to This Blog Entry:

Bear, what an amazing score tonight. It was truly something magical. :) Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts on the process of making this episode. My mind is trying to figure out the hidden clue you’ve left for us.

In a reference to your Season 4 OST post; I’d very much like to see “Dualla’s Ghost” making an extended appearance on the soundtrack.

Kandyses’ voice is most definitely recognisable in that cue, albeit with an incredibly eerie quality. There’s this slightly uplifting tone to it – you really do feel Dualla’s happiness & optimism for what appears to be the last time for the series.

Woah, amazing episode, amazing score. Especially the piece where Leoben and Starbuck are walking in the tall grass and finding the Viper. Man… it gave me the creeps. Looks like you’ll have to create that 2-cd soundtrack after all if you keep writing excellent music at this rate. ;) Congratulations!

You are truly a genius and the work you did here was amazing. The music is always a highlight of the show for me and every note of this episode was perfect. I love reading about your process and thank you so much for sharing it with all of us. When it’s all over, I will miss your music as much as the show itself.

Yeah, I can only agree to Jeebs83. What an amazing score. And thank you, Bear, for your insights and your detailed analysis. How do you get the time to do them anyway? Composing music for so many shows and making your blog entries at the same time must be exhausting…

With so many themes and so many distinctive cues for so many memorable moments in the show it is rather impossible to make a single album for season 4, I’d guess. And there are more episodes to come. Oh my god…

As you quote something french, I must say “Magnifique” !

Well, I just watched the episode and it was an amazing episode and a perfect score to transmit all the feelings…

Thanks Mr McCreary and keep up the good work with Caprica and other projects you have!

Cant’ wait to have you score in my ear again!

OK first of all, one of the greatest TV scores (or scores for that matter) in a long long time, loved it even more than “Revelations”, it was so subtle and personal in every possible way, it almost made me cry, the sweet innocent music even fooled me into believing that nothing was wrong with Dualla (who I’m gonna miss a lot on this show, and made her theme sound really creepy and devastating at the end when her voice returned in front of her dead body), it made the Ellen reveal made sense in so many ways accompanied by Tigh’s theme, I’m angry that I never guessed it and only joked about it by the way. And also I’m really happy that in Starbuck’s body funeral her old theme made a “triumphant” return, I even thought the theme was gonna transform in the middle of the way to the destiny theme, but it was just Starbuck all the way, so even that was unpredictable to me (It’s also sad to know this is the last time the Destiny theme is gonna be heard completely, but it sounded amazing).

Now I’m gonna make my guess to the secret finale clue, since when Kara takes the dogtags out of dead Kara’s body there’s a little statement of what I believe is the “Temple of Five” theme, maybe they return to the temple of Five in the finale, maybe Starbuck is “the one that cannot be named”, maybe there’s a flashback to the temple of five in the finale, maybe the temple of five was an old resurrection ship or resurrection temple…anyone here wants to venture a guess? or maybe that’s not even the musical clue,I guess we’ll find out in 9 weeks.

OK look forward to hearing more, can’t wait to hear your score for “Caprica”, and can’t wait to listen to the 10 CD compilation of the season 4 Soundtrack cause picking those cues doesn’t sound like an easy job. Good Luck Bear.

Rian: “Looks like you’ll have to create that 2-cd soundtrack after all if you keep writing excellent music at this rate.”

Or…

For the scoring of the series, “Babylon 5,” apparently there were two CDs released of the soundtrack in general, then several “episodic” score releases, with only the music from one or two episodes. I’m not sure if these were produced for all five years’ worth of episodes, nor how many copies of each program were pressed – I never saw them on the shelves of retail record stores – I happened to find some of them for sale at a dollar store a few years ago, and kept buying individual titles until I’d acquired the one with the particular cue I was interested in (the 5th season main title).

Anyway – perhaps this would be the approach that should be taken with the BSG music – five (well, six, counting the miniseries) general compilations, then go back and release additional CDs for the scores of some individual eps. I know such a release for this particular ep would likely be snarfed up by most (if not all) people posting here.

- M. \”/

As always, the score was great. I felt the atonal shift instinctively in that I felt more emotionally bewildered by the events in this episode than any other (of course, the writing played a part in that).

Kara finding her own body and the Tigh-on-Earth sequences were my particular favorite moments, musically. I was trying to place Dualla’s humming (thinking for a moment it might be “Watchtower,” on the assumption she was getting so much screen time because she would be the Fifth), but to no avail. I did notice the tune again in the morgue, but it didn’t occur to me that it was the actress.

Kudos, again, to you and everyone else involved.

“Did you recognize her? Ideally, the music would be uncomfortably familiar without being easily recognized.”

No, I didn’t recognize her. I have to say you nailed it. There was a sense of her ghost hovering in that scene, and now that I know it was her own haunting little song, in Kandyse’s own voice…that’s just breathtaking.

I spent most of this episode in tears or on the verge of breaking into tears again. It did evoke the dark, wrenching feel of an opera or a Greek tragedy for me, and I love hearing that Nankin specifically aimed for that. Greek tragedies also used music for the moments of greatest emotional intensity — and your score, as always, was a splendid complement to the tenor of every scene, and my appreciation only increases as I watch it a second time. On first viewing I was impacted by it more than I was consciously aware of it, even as I was deeply affected by it (if that makes sense). Thank you so much for your wonderful work on this show, and for sharing your insights (and those of the writers and directors) on each episode. Flat out amazing work from everyone.

Well, I for one did not recognize Kandyse’s voice, even though the cue did jump out at me right away, probably because I love vocals in score, and so vocals always jump out at me. I think in this particular episode they would not jump so much as pole vault, but anyway… I immediately went back and listened to it again and now it seems so obvious! Like “Watchtower,” a really amazing new breed of source music. It’s especially cool that Kandyse contributed the melody as well. And what is it with this season and pulling all these singers out of the woodwork? Please extend our thanks and admiration to her. A truly moving exit from the show, and we’re going to miss her terribly!! (I was SO shocked.)

Once again, thanks for all the detail work you put into these blog entries. They make me watch the series with entirely new eyes (ears?). This episode was a wrench to watch, for sure. Until next time!

Thanks for the extra-detailed entry. I know you’re a busy guy, and I really appreciate all of the information in this one going into more depth about how your score interacted with the writing, direction, and acting to shape the show as a whole. This episode hit all its marks perfectly, with plot developments which could’ve very easily pulled me out of the drama and left me irritated at being emotionally manipulated if they weren’t done right (Joss Whedon’s “Serenity,” I’m looking at you) happening instead in a way that kept me going along with the episode all the way to the end.

I watched it with a friend who hadn’t even seen the show except for the last three episodes on DVD yesterday evening because it seemed more interesting that watching my roommates play video games, and everything hit her exactly right, too, which is even more impressive to me. You have to get things right to get a reaction from someone like me, who’s been following the show for years and seen the whole thing from the beginning, but when my friend who only saw Dee say two lines before that episode, one of which was “DRADIS contact,” is shouting and swearing at the screen right there with me and as shocked as I am that she took her own life, you know you did a top-notch job.

fantastic music for this episode, and fantastic blog entry. every time i read what you’ve written about the score, i feel compelled to re-watch the episode just to pay attention to the little things my very untrained ear didn’t pick up the first time around. you are beyond awesome for doing this. ;)

the earth melody touched me particularly. i don’t think i’ve ever heard anything that felt like death the way this particular piece of music did. i mean that in the best possible way, btw. and dee’s theme is breathtaking in its simplicity. i’ve been humming it since this morning.

thank you, by the way, for your comments (and raya’s) in your earlier blog entry. the possibility that “roslin and adama”, with lyrics, might be released at some point, makes me giddy in a silly sort of fangirlish way. i love that track beyond words. :)

all the best, annie

Wow. See, this is why I love reading your blog. Almost all of what you wrote I felt in this episode, but could never quite quantify in words or distinct emotions until now. It’s funny, because I was watching the episode the first time with my roommate (who’s a contemporary classical composer with a love of the atonal), and his reactions were priceless. It is times like these I truly wish I knew more about music theory… Regarding your question during Dualla’s Ghost, you are absolutely right. It worked similarly to the instrumental arrangements of Gaeta’s Lament; its essence was present throughout, but I wasn’t able to pinpoint it directly until I watched the episode again this morning. Brilliant, Bear. Brilliant.

Can’t wait for more episodes!

Oh, and wasn’t this the first time you were included on the opening credits? Bravo!

Yet another amazing score for an amazing episode!

To answer your question about whether I recognized Kandyse’s humming at the beginning of Act III: that was my favorite musical aspect of this episode. It didn’t dawn on me that that’s what was going on until the cue was over, but it was so haunting in the truest sense of the word. The best way I can describe it is it felt like I was hearing the little Ana in the photo in Dee’s locker humming that tune–so full of memory and the desire to go back to that time when she didn’t know what the future held. Thanks again for such beautiful music, and I’m really hoping for a 2-CD soundtrack!

First off, that was one of the best episodes, and best scores, I’ve seen on BSG period. For the second time in Season 4, I was completely blown away, and I was completely certain that it was well worth the wait.

That said, every last queue in this ep should be on some kind of soundtrack. Genious. I LOVED the dissonance, particularly in the beginning. I also loved the gentle, haunting humming when Adama is over Dee’s body. And of course, the best iterations of Kara’s destiny theme and kara’s origional theme TO DATE.

I am in awe, sir.

As for the clue….I keep noticing that you inclue the Temple of Five theme whenever we see something related to Starbuck’s destiny. I have no idea why, as she’s not the final cylon….

An awesome episode, with some awesome music to match.

What you did with Dualla needs to go on the next soundtrack. And the version of Watchtower too, although if we have to wait for an extras CD for that one, I won’t mind. At first, I couldn’t figure out what Anders had in his hand until the camera got up close. Maybe it’s time to get a better TV?

I didn’t see the final Cylon coming. I was way off on who it actually was (my votes were for Gaeta or Roslin, along with Baltar and Kara) and didn’t expect it this soon. I didn’t think the wait would be up until the final episode, but revealing it now was a bit jarring, especially with everything else that goes on. Still, I’m not entirely convinced about where the “final” five fit in, mostly because of Tory. But I could be wrong about her as well.

Even though it’s not the final episode, it sure as frak seems like it and it’s goping to be really hard to top this one. And that goes double for the music. As already mentioned regarding Babylon 5, this is an episode that could probably get by with its own soundtrack CD. There’s so much there (and I think you may have gone more in depth here discussing the episode than any previous entries), it’s going to be hard to pin down what should make the final cut.

All said, a very surprising and somewhat depressing episode, but probably the best so far. Combined with watching the webisodes not long before Great Notion went on the air and I don’t know if I can wait for the final nine. I’m glad it doesn’t end with the discovery of Earth (and that the WGA strike didn’t kill the show) and am looking forward to seeing what happens next.

It’s a shame that yet another show of Sci-Fi has to end, paving the way for unneeded sequels and craptacular made for TV movies, among other things – then again, maybe four seasons is enough to do what needs to be done. At least there’s Caprica to look forward to, hoping it’s of the same caliber that BSG has been, plus a movie to follow the series. Of course, there’s the soundtracks; I still need to expand on what I do have and make sure to pick up the new stuff when it’s released.

On a side note (maybe), was the first line Anders said while he had the guitar neck in his hand in another language? I couldn’t tell and haven’t had a chance to watch the episode again. I knew what the song was (how could I not?), but I couldn’t make out what he said. Again, maybe it’s time for a better TV or maybe I should pick up another iTunes card so I can get the season on my computer.

[...] McCreary posts a detailed (and spoiler-ridden) bit on his music for the premiere of the end run of Battlestar Galactica.  I haven’t even read [...]

I’m going to echo the request for Dualla’s Ghost to be included in the Season 4 OST. I’d also like to throw “The Body” into the hat as well. It was one of the many chilling moments in last nights episode and the music underscored the enitre “Oh my frakking Gods!” moment.

As always, Bear, your score is amazing. I look forward to hearing what you have in store for us in the remaining episodes, and of course Caprica.

I absolutely hadn’t noticed that it was McClure’s voice over the morgue scene until I went back and rewatched. And now that I have, it’s so unflinchingly obvious that I can’t believe I didn’t notice it the first time around! Amazing.

(It’s so funny, this is the only show that I’ve put forth a deliberate effort to rewatch episodes just for the purpose of analyzing the scoring cues. It’s so much fun!)

The great thing is, my initial impression of the episode consisted largely of “Wow, that was bleak. I didn’t even get to experience any of my usual moments of awe at the beautiful scoring! Come to think of it, what all WAS happening with the music other than atmospheric, atonal background?” Which…pretty much means you accomplished exactly what you’d set out to. Perfect.

I am requesting that Dualla’s Theme be included on the CD, both the instrumental and the vocal versions.

First of all, as with the episode that came before this one, the music was amazing. I cannot wait to have the season 4 CD in my hands. This season has some of your best music yet. It is just incredible. Second, I did not realize or notice that Dee was humming her own death song there with Adama. Now that I know it, I am surprised I missed it. It only adds more emotion to that scene. I hope it makes the CD… actually, it had better make the CD. :)

Thank you for sharing this detailed information, it is AMAZING how mcuh goes into the score for a tv show, and you mention the sequence for Dualla’s scene: “…one of the most complex and layered scenes I’ve ever done. And it’s only 40 seconds long!” WOW. All that work, for 40 seconds, amazing.

And when you mentioned what what into crafting the score for Kara’s funeral pyre scene: “To amplify this idea, I asked the strings to play without vibrato (vibrato adds warmth and emotion to the sound) and without expressive dynamics in the phrases. I wanted the orchestra itself to sound cold and lifeless, like a musical shadow.” This was perfect and I appreciate what you were trying to do, you achieved it. And to think this is only one episode, so much is here!

Thank you so much for sharing all that goes into the music for the show, the emotions of everyone involved seem to be at a fever pitch, and as a fan of the show I can tell you your work is greatly appreciated, but your sharing all this extra info on your blog is very, very generous indeed.

Bear–Now, having read all this detailed and fantastic description of both process and collective vision, I have to go back and watch SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION again. I was stunned by the despair in this episode, and Dualla’s suicide made me cry out, and then, made me cry. When we watch the corrosion of all these relationships that have been tested in difficult times, and remain sustaining, and see that now, this time, they are all cut asunder. I too thought Lee and Dualla were going to give us one moment of hope there, to reconnect their love for one another, and then…..
The writing, direction and story are seamless in this episode, but only the music provides both tissue and sinew and linking emotion throughout.
Thank you for this long, thoughtful description, the “how” all this was achieved, the “why…” Well that’s an attribute of your genius.

Wow. What an incredible episode and score. I’ve watched the episode 3 times already and feel the need to watch again. Bear, as always your score was flawless. You captured so much emotion with the dark score, it was perfect!
And thank you for this detailed blog entry. I really enjoyed reading it. Now I just need to find this hidden clue!

Thank you for the wonderful blog entry. I have tremendous admiration for the way you’re able to communicate about all aspects of the process – script, performance, composition, orchestration, etc. You’ll be a great teacher/mentor one day, if you don’t teach already.

The opening scenes actually had me thinking of Morton Feldman when I was watching them, so it was a nice surprise when you mentioned him here.

Incredible. Thank you yet again for not only the music, but for sharing your thoughts about the journey.

Very moving music Bear, simply the best by far on any episode.

Hearing new music from you is always one of the things I most look forward to before a new episode, but I was stunned by the powerful and very new kind of work we got to hear right away in the beginning of 4.5. The events in this entire episode not only shook the characters’ realities, but were kind of unsettling to me in the way they threw out just about all my ideas of what kind of a show this was turning into and where it was headed, and the score reflects that perfectly because the style of it is mostly so unfamiliar. I now worry that the series may never regain much of a shred of optimism and be appropriate for elements like the bagpipes to return in the music, but it’s hard to be too upset about this kind of change when you and the other creators just absolutely and perfectly make it work the way it needs to.

The music in the scene when Starbuck and Leoben discover her body certainly makes a worthy swan song for it, but I’m very sad to read that this is definitely the last time the “Kara’s destiny” theme will ever be needed, as I’ve always liked the erhu parts in the soundtrack and been especially intrigued by Starbuck’s storyline associated with it. I didn’t necessarily get the impression when I saw this scene that this officially closes the book on that, but I guess that’s good to know for sure.

I didn’t realize that the vocals were Kandyse, either. The first time I watched it, I also didn’t even hear Brendan singing “All Along the Watchtower” when Anders is remembering the song and was pretty excited when I did catch that. That creepy piano rendition of the Final Four theme is awesome.

This episode simply stunned me, I was left with my mouth open and dry. Not only was the writing amazing, but the score embedded itself under my skin, making me crawl at certain moments. The show felt so cold and devoid of everything that had happened before, that I questioned if I was watching the same Battlestar I had onced known. Not in a bad way mind you, but in a way where I thought the show was dark, and it just seemed to turn out the lights. Nankin is right about you.

p.s. I think I know where you left your clue.

“Somewhere in the score to this episode I’ve hidden a clue about the end of the series. Good hunting.”

Or, How to keep BSG Fans in Suspense….

AAAAUUUUGGGGHHHH!!!!

Fantastic work all round.

It seems there was something to make my jaw drop after each commercial break.

Bear, you have matched the episode and gone to a place darker and more dangerous than I’d ever go to with any other show.

Bravo !!!

[...] be doing some really detailed write-ups for these last 10 episodes, and he wasn’t kidding. His post for this episode is incredibly detailed. In it we get some interesting details, such as the following: “Even though you’ll only [...]

This is probably my favorite episode of the series, both for the writing and the score. The scene with the viper was some of the best use of music on screen I have ever seen. The music and the visuals (IN HIDEF!!!) just paired so well. Downright chilling.

I’ve been a huge fan of Battlestar Galactica’s music since the first season. It’s simply amazing work.

I felt compelled to post for the first time as I’ve been obsessing about the hidden clue all day.

Dualla’s humming is reminiscent of “Amazing Grace.”

The more I think about it, the more it could work at the end of the series in the same way “All Along the Watchtower” worked so well.

Check the lyrics:

Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound / That saved a wretch like me.
I once was lost but now am found / Was blind, but now I see.
T’was Grace that taught my heart to fear / And Grace, my fears relieved.
How precious did that Grace appear / The hour I first believed.

Through many dangers, toils and snares / I have already come;
‘Tis Grace that brought me safe thus far / and Grace will lead me home.

The Lord has promised good to me / His word my hope secures.
He will my shield and portion be / As long as life endures.

Yea, when this flesh and heart shall fail / And mortal life shall cease,
I shall possess within the veil / A life of joy and peace.

When we’ve been here ten thousand years / Bright shining as the sun.
We’ve no less days to sing God’s praise / Than when we’ve first begun.

I also hate you Bear, because I watched Dualla shoot herself at least a dozen times today trying to figure out what her hymn reminded me of. Since her humming was apparently improvised, I may have scarred my brain on the wrong piece of music.

Hey, Bear? You’re gonna need two CDs on that season four soundtrack. Just saying. Mother frak dude. This is magnificently glorious. I can’t imagine how most of this music *wouldn’t* make it on the album. Lords of Kobol, man….

Loved the music Bear! Tons of this needs to be on the new Season 4 CD!

As for your secret clue…. I have a theory.

There’s a scene with Anders, I believe, where it sounds like the Final Four theme is being played by a “somewhat-out-of-tune” piano??? Did I hear that instrumentation right? I saw a pic online, on the You will know the truth BSG site, that had a pick of Kara and some guy at a piano. So that’s my theory. Something to do with that?? Probably wrong, but there you go!

Hi Bear. My fiancee and I attended both shows last year at the Roxy and this episode and it’s music made my hair stand on end just like it did at the concerts. My jaw stayed dropped from the point Dee raised the gun to her head to the commercial break. In the score I recognized Brendan but not Kandyse and I hope they both make it onto a track on the season four soundtrack. I saw your up-front credit and was glad you made it up where you belong — was that acknowledgemnent of your contributions or something contractual? I hope that’s not an inappropriate question but it’s something I’m curious about.

I’ve noticed something about Battlestar Galactica fans online and in person — for the most part they’re very nice people with great respect for the show and it’s creators (sheet music thieves not withstanding). The best example I can come up with is the secrecy regarding the last member of the final five. I was browsing for BSG toys earlier this month I saw that Entertainment Earth gave away the fifth Cylon as part of a merchandise teaser which was online for at least five days early this month (1/2-1/6) but from my searching I can’t find any posts about it. No blogs, no forum posts, nothing. I think that says something very positive about Galactica fans because as I understand it, the only way information doesn’t make it’s way all over online is if people consciously decide not to post it.

Entertainment Earth’s page for the new Cylon Minimates http://www.entertainmentearth.com/proderror.asp?badprod=1&number=DC26098A currently displays “The item number ‘DC26098A’ is no longer available. This item was removed from our website on Tuesday, January 06, 2009.” but Google cached he page from January 2nd: http://74.125.47.132/search?q=cache:FLGwWBXS7w4J:www.entertainmentearth.com/prodinfo.asp%3Fnumber%3DDC26098A+www.entertainmentearth.com/prodinfo.asp%3Fnumber%3DDC26098A&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us which gives Ellen Tigh away:

Battlestar Galactica Minimates Series 5 Case Description:

From the hit TV show!
Small in stature, but never in detail!
Bring on the Cylons!

This wave 5 case of 12 pieces contain the following 2-packs (subject to change)
4x New Cap Tigh and Ellen
4x Tory and Anders
3x Natalie and Doral
1x Natalie and Simon

Get ready for the return of Battlestar Galactica with this fifth assortment of Minimates — a release which brings Minimate versions of all the show’s remaining known Cylons! Each two-inch figure includes 14 points of articulation and accessories from the hit show!

Crazy huh? Bear, I look forward to hearing what you do with the rest of the episodes this season, your Battlestar season four soundtrack, Caprica, and any concerts you have planned. Thank you for contributing so much to everyone via this blog. It’s appreciated.

Rob Joyce

Pearl: “wasn’t this the first time you were included on the opening credits?”

This was, I believe, the first time they’ve skipped the usual opening theme/opening credits/Gayatri Mantra sequence entirely.

Good choice. Very effective. Not for every subsequent episode, necessarily, but definitely for this one.

- M. \”/

Everyone else has said everything. I am still watching in listening mode, but it is intrinsic. Anyway, stopped halfway through to write this.

From the light and hope of Revelations to the dark of this latest. The chorus in the former, the hymn, remains something I wish I could just play when I need it.

This time around, I liked Galen’s bells, a few instances reminiscent of what I heard as windchimes as he discovered the Temple, and in this episode blending to the taxi horns and almost to Dee’s bicycle bell.

Mostly, I am so very happy with Starbuck’s original theme for the immolation scene. (Sorry, what else do I call it? :) )

Your themes are simple, and they can be altered to fit circumstances. But Starbuck’s original theme is, well, complete and essential and pure, and brings me as much hope as anything could in this episode.

[...] McReary described this episode as “an assault on the psyche” in a recent blog entry, and I would have to agree with him. There is no hope this time around, just our heroes falling and [...]

Bear, oh my God. I’m still in shock. Your blog was the first place I turned after Ellen’s reveal, and what a great surprise to find your expanded thoughts and interviews!

This was an incredible hour, chilling and heartbreaking . . . a masterpiece by all involved. I can’t wait to watch it again armed with all of your fascinating insights.

PS – Congratulations on your up-front credit — it’s richly deserved!

Here’s a funny story from last week’s premiere…

Thursday night, Todd Sharp from the studio, emailed me and asked if my brother and I would perform an acoustic version of my arrangement of “All Along the Watchtower” at the cast and crew screening of the premiere episode on Friday. I didn’t realize he was basically joking, and replied “Sure!”

AATW Live

So, we pulled it together and performed 24 hours later, just the two of us in front producers, writers, cast, crew and fans alike, just before the curtains opened and “Sometimes a Great Notion” screened. I’m fairly certain it was the first time any of them had seen me play accordion. :)

AATW Live

The tune actually worked surprisingly well as an acoustic performance. We had performed it in San Diego last summer with a stripped down band, but this was the first time with just a duo. The accordion took over all the weird Indian drones and Brendan covered the vocals and signature guitar riff. It was a lot of fun and a great way to kick off the season.

Anyway, thought you’d enjoy the pics. I don’t think anyone recorded it, but we’ll probably do it again one of these days. As for the incredible response here, I’m glad everyone was as floored by this episode as I was. Thanks for the kind words and intelligent questions. Its very rewarding writing for such an astute audience.

On a side note, I’ve been in various studios all week (and will continue to do so for another few days) finishing up a project that I can’t tell you guys about yet. But, when this thing hits next Fall… I’m telling you, BG fans are going to go frakkin’ crazy over the music I’ve been writing for this. It’s the most epic, intense and bad-ass score I’ve ever produced. (I’ll be announcing it in the spring.)

So Say…
-Bear

UPDATE: Thanks raftrap, yup it’s posted online at Galactica Sitrep and YouTube. Pretty fun.

This entry was fantastic! I might (okay, will…) sound like a total dork for this, but I loved all the musical jargon you included this time around, and love even more so the fact that I was able to understand and geek out about it, being a member of an orchestra for roughly 8 years. :)

Anyway, the score for this episode is by far the best to-date, and I can’t wait to hear more as the series comes to its close.

Great work, as always!

p.s. 2-disc album? Please, please, please?

“On a side note, I’ve been in various studios all week (and will continue to do so for another few days) finishing up a project that I can’t tell you guys about yet. But, when this thing hits next Fall… I’m telling you, BG fans are going to go frakkin’ crazy over the music I’ve been writing for this. It’s the most epic, intense and bad-ass score I’ve ever produced. (I’ll be announcing it in the spring.)”

Awww common…! We are dying to hear the secret ;) It’s so long until spring!
I guess it’s Battlestar Galactica – The movie, maybe hitting the theaters in fall?

Anyway, last episode and score was so amazing that I almost broke into tears.
I don’t know how you do it Bear, but every time your score gets better and better… and it’s already superb! I cannot wait for the release of the 4th season Soundtrack CD AND the epic, intense and the top secret most bad-ass score of whatever :)

“I don’t think anyone recorded it”.

Someone did, it’s been on GalacticaSitrep for 2 days http://galacticasitrep.blogspot.com/2009/01/quite-send-off.html (and sounded amazing, it’s all there, all that was needed was an acordeon and a guitar, who would have imagined?).

[...] this episode, kudos must go out to Kandyse McClure and Bear McCreary for being so awesome amidst a sea of awesome. Dualla’s eyes in the Raptor on the way back to [...]

“I don’t think anyone recorded it”.

“Someone did, it’s been on GalacticaSitrep for 2 days”

“The tune actually worked surprisingly well as an acoustic performance.”

Frakkin’ A, muc. You just may restore the popular respect (in the US, anyway) the accordion has deserved – but not had – for the last several decades.

And raftrap – thank you, THANK YOU for that link.

- M. \”/

I know the clue, nanny nanny nanny.

Bear wrote:
“While the music in Sometimes a Great Notion was dark and bleak beyond description,…”

I love a lot of your music, Bear, but compared to a lot of the music I’ve listened to it’s not that dark. I’ve listened to Black Metal, Morbid Angel, Marilyn Manson, etc.:
http://normdoering.blogspot.com/2008/12/devils-music.html
http://normdoering.blogspot.com/2008/12/my-christmas-gift.html

I think the more appropriate word for this show’s music would be “melancholy” and not “dark” or overly “bleak.”

Your “oppressive darkness” felt kind of gentle and sweet to me. I think just a little bit of Black Metal influence might have helped the scene where Adm. Adama was walking toward Tigh’s quarters with a gun in hand while fights are breaking out in the hall.

[...] actually, speaking of Battlestar Galactica’s composer, it’s instructive to read his blog post concerning scoring the latest episode. In fact, having just done so, I’ve come to something of a conclusion about the episode: as a [...]

“And raftrap – thank you, THANK YOU for that link”

Don’t worry about it Meowlin, you would have done the same thing.

PS. I always read your posts, I’m kinda jealous that you got the “Terminator…” soundtrack so fast, I got mine like 2 weeks ago. Good luck Meowlin.

Hmmm…just when I didnt think this year could get any better Bear teases us with a new “mystery” project he is working on.
This is going to be THE year for Bear McCreary!
Can’t wait Bear!
BTW, awesome performance of “All Along the Watchtower” at the screening! I’m glad that was captured on video!

dark-hearted rose… “sound like a total dork for this, but I loved all the musical jargon you included this time around, and love even more so the fact that I was able to understand and geek out about it”

Well, you might sound like a total dork, but that’s ok. I’m a bit of a music nerd myself. There’s more musical jargon coming in the next few entries, but I’m trying to keep it entertaining and accessible for non-musicians as well!

MattH… “This is going to be THE year for Bear McCreary!”

There are definitely days it feels like that. :)

-Bear

This was the best episode of the series so far.

I have to say that I did recognize Kandise’s humming in the scene where Adama is hovering over her corpse. It really pulled me in more than I already was and it got me choked up. Great stuff.

IS4C:”I know the clue, nanny nanny nanny.”

As tempted as I am (and I’m sure others are) to say, “Well, tell us, already!” – I know the value of putting a subtle clue early in a story with the intent of having people finish the story and realize, “Oh – that was a clue! Cool!” Telling now would blunt the realization later.

A parallel example -this story appears to be one thing at first, but turns out to be something else entirely. But there’s a clue on the very first page.

http://webster70.com/second_chance.html

- M. \”/

Bear can you tell us anything you have in store for the Kara and Lee theme this season? Please?

[...] dias, até que chegue “A Disquiet That Follows My Soul”. Até lá, podem sempre deliciar-se com o excelente e detalhado artigo de Bear McCreary sobre este episódio, que nos mostra um outro lado do processo de criação desta [...]

Bear, I enjoyed your music, the writing and the acting. Reading this post, I realize how parallel BSG and our world are. The Abu Ghraib revelations sickened me and I felt helpless to do anything about it until last year’s campaign. Now Adama and Obama both call on us to dust ourselves off after disaster and get back to our work!

MJL356, I had the same thought about the piano part possibly being the clue, and I didn’t even know yet about that pic. Piano is such a rarely used instrument in the music for BSG, and this made me think of how all we know about Starbuck’s father is that he played that piano piece she had a recording of in her apartment.

(I guess I shouldn’t have been surprised to find out Anders wrote a song we know as Bob Dylan’s when Mr. Thrace was channeling Philip Glass. Haha.)

13 tribes, 13 cylons? does that sound like a stretch? raftrap, that definitely sounded like a statement of temple of five, for just that one phrase as she yanks the dogtags off her own body. What else can Kara be, but a cylon?

MJL356 – I suspect it’s really strings playing pizzacato out of tune on purpose. It sounds similar to a bar piano (perhaps the one in that pic you were talking about – Is Bear channelling some Cowell? Maybe Ennio Morricone…) but there is no piano in the watchtower theme…yet. As far as I remember, one of the only times piano is scored is when it’s Philip Glass, and still then, its musically attached to Kara. The other time is in Sonatica, when piano is musically attached to Cylons. Does this mean anything?? Probably not.

Bear – I love how you deconstructed the strings in this episode. Normally the string family has so much warmth, but without the violas to connect them, and with the bottom heavy bass and celli … the strings sounded really cold and separate. It REALLY plays out well in this episode. You mention orchestrational risks with this set up though. Like what specifically, besides intonation? (Although seriously, asking strings to play without vibrato? I don’t think string players actually know how to do that…)

And then you FINALLY resolve the (9-8?) suspension in the end into open octaves as Tigh says aloud Ellens the fifth. Very nice keeping up on screen tension with all the atonal tension. There’s rarely a moment of musical resolution. Even at the end, it’s not a big happy major chord, and still left to be ambiguous.

I can’t thank you enough for taking the time to explain what you did and why you scored it that way. Who else does that?! Its the best learning opportunity I could ask for, short of -maybe- transcribing each score.

ps – Way to rock that accordion. It’s a surprisingly good instrument for those indian drones. I’m sure that wasn’t easy.

“The possibility that “roslin and adama”, with lyrics, might be released at some point, makes me giddy in a silly sort of fangirlish way. i love that track beyond words.”

Oh, wow. I only just joined up to this blog (for some reason it never occurred to me that you might have one), but I’ve been following your work with great enthusiasm since the first season of BSG. “Roslin And Adama” is one of the few themes I’ve ever heard that has the power to bring tears to my eyes almost every time I hear it. Somehow, even with over 200+ plays on my iPod, I haven’t become desensitized to it, and in fact, had already begun writing my own lyrics for it.

As a singer/songwriter myself, it would be a dream come true to perform this piece.

If you happen to be auditioning singers at any point, I would be more than willing to fly out from Japan to whatever location is called for! My site (which could stand an update) is http://www.s-a-b-r-i-n-a.net , in the odd chance that you might consider it.

“…finishing up a project that I can’t tell you guys about yet. But, when this thing hits next Fall… I’m telling you, BG fans are going to go frakkin’ crazy over the music I’ve been writing for this. It’s the most epic, intense and bad-ass score I’ve ever produced.”

You can’t tell us that! You’re so cruel! Now I want to know more then ever. I won’t be able to sleep now with the excitement. :D Is it a movie? No wait I don’t want to no! Whatever it is… YAY :D

The “All Along The Watch Tower” duo was amazing. Go Bear :D

Bear, please make this a two-CD release. We still have 9 episodes left and we’ve already heard enough music to fill one. I beg to thee.

As always your score leave me literally breathless at the end of each show. In particular I loved the tieing in the music with Laura clutching the plant from Earth *A glimmer of hope emerges* Like lostonbroadway said, I will miss your music as much as the show itself when its all over :-(

tashley…

I could be wrong, but I’m almost positive that piano is playing the “final four” theme when Anders finds the guitar…

ANY CLARIFICATION BEAR??????

And I don’t mean that the piano is playing the whole part, but just the melody…

Gang…

Some interesting theories here. To clarify, the tune being played while Anders picks up the guitar is arguably the Final Four Theme, although really its just a new arrangement of “Watchtower” that’s supposed to signify that Anders is remembering the song while he picks up the guitar. There’s not much else to it.

As for the Temple of Five theme, that’s another interesting theory. The Tof5 theme actually was in the episode but it’s not where you guys think it is. :)

Keep on lookin’…

-Bear

Bear…”The Tof5 theme actually was in the episode but it’s not where you guys think it is. :)”

I could be completely off on this, but do I hear a variation of the Tof5 theme when Tyrol is starting to have his flash back?

[...] – BSG composer posts intensive discussion of score for last episode.  Plus: Somewhere in the score to this episode I’ve hidden a clue about the end of the series. Good huntin… [...]

MattH…

“I could be completely off on this, but do I hear a variation of the Tof5 theme when Tyrol is starting to have his flash back?”

Interesting. There’s something happening in the sound design too that catches his ear (which causes him to start wandering the beach in the first place). This seems to be a reference to “The Eye of Jupiter” when he’s drawn to the Temple of Five.

In that episode, the chimes and bells Tyrol heard were actually provided by my score. In this episode, the “bells” were distant sound effects put in by Daniel Colman. I think they were supposed to be car horns, street noise, etc. But, even though one was music and the other was score, there’s a definite similarity in the tones and how they were used. Hmmm…

-Bear

Bear: “In this episode, the “bells” were distant sound effects put in by Daniel Colman. I think they were supposed to be car horns, street noise, etc. But, even though one was music and the other was score, there’s a definite similarity in the tones and how they were used. Hmmm…”

I thought those were probably sound effects and not actually part of your score, but it sounded as if they were purposely intertwined with the score to reference when Tyrol was drawn to the Temple of Five as you mentioned.
I even listened to the Temple of Five track from the season 3 soundtrack and they sound very similar! The street noises kind of matched the bells and chimes. :) Thanks for the response!

[...] the heartbreaking season premiere of Battlestar Galactica, I headed right over to his blog to read his thoughts on the process of writing the music for the episode. And WOW, you guys, it’s a must-read, if you’re a fan of the show.  It’s so full [...]

It takes me a while to digest the music, but I know I’d love you to include the music at the very end of the episode, when Tigh says, “Ellen, you’re the fifth.”

Also, I think it would be a good idea to steer away from a lot of the repetition of specific themes for certain characters. There are only so many times I like hearing Roslin’s theme; why not change it up!? It feels like a lack of imagination, even though I know it’s traditional to do so in opera. I’d prefer you to write more new music a la Mark Snow of The X-Files. I say this because I want more of your wonderful work to reflect new melodies.

Thanks very much, Mr. McCreary.

Dear Mr. McCreary,

I was just going through my itunes, looking through tracks I’d ripped from CDs I’ve legally bought, and I stumbled upon “Violence and Variations” from the Season 3 soundtrack. If I recall correctly, the original version of this piece was featured twice on the Season 1 soundtrack or was featured once on both the soundtracks for Season 1 and 2. This is another example of rehashing the same melody and just reworking it. It might be fine for TV, but for those of us who listen to the CDs, it gets extremely repetitive.

Again, I love your work, but I strongly urge you to change the melodies because this operatic formula has really limited the variety of music on the CDs, if not the show.

By the way, I absolutely adored the opening music around the start of “Guess What’s Coming to Dinner” around the time Helo is preparing to jump the raptor back to meet Galactica along with the base ship. Beautiful stuff. It reminded me of the my favorite piece of yours, “Something Dark Is Coming”, but was very different melodically.

Keep up the great work, but just create new melodies. No reason for each character to have a theme too often.

Muldfeld…

“Violence and Variations” actually uses the Kara and Lee love theme, which was never introduced until “Unfinished Business,” as well as Kara’s theme very briefly in the middle. Because it’s also played with orchestral strings, I think you’re confusing it with “Passacaglia” and “The Shape of Things To Come” from “Kobol’s Last Gleaming.” These are alike in instrumentation and style but are pretty distinctly different themes. In my opinion, this style of music has always been used sparingly enough in the show that it’s very effective when we do hear it. Those opening scenes of “KLB pt. 1″ with almost no dialogue make one of the best teasers an episode of BSG has ever started with, and the really passive and soothing music accompanying all these intense and shocking things happening at once is part of what makes it feel so unconventional.

Using repeated themes associated with characters/relationships/things doesn’t necessarily limit the variety of the kind of music a composer can use in scores. A lot of people completely miss when they hear the Lee/Kara theme played the way it is in “Under the Wing” that it’s the same melody of “Violence and Variations” because it sounds so different and appropriately evokes a different mood. I probably would have never noticed without having it pointed out to me that the beautiful, sad melody played on erhu in “Someone To Trust” is none other than Baltar’s theme which we’ve heard frequently since season 1. I always like hearing familiar themes in really new ways because of how it can reflect and emphasize how characters or relationships have evolved. I’m sure it’s a challenge to make musical themes work flexibly like that and actually takes quite a lot of imagination.

Hey Bear!

I doubt anyone will read this except for posterity at this point, but I figured.. well, it’s for posterity.

I was watching “Sometimes…” with my roommates today, as they are catching up on the show and I’m using it for my second viewing. Basically, your hint about the ending of the show hit me like a ton of bricks! And without seeing the ending, I would have never gotten it.

In short: When Anders picks up the guitar neck, instead of hearing a guitar playing the Earth/Hope theme, you hear it on Slick’s piano! Its sound is very distinct and stands out to someone who has heard it, but without knowing what it is you’d have no clue.

So bravo! It was an awesome, jump out of my seat moment when I realized what I was hearing, and that I found the clue. Awesome, awesome job.

[...] so effortlessly evoke the atmosphere of BSG.  His post on the final season’s episode “Sometimes a Great Notion” is so brimming with content and insight, not only into the creation of the music, but of the [...]

Something to Say?

You must be logged in to post a comment.