The Walking Dead: Pretty Much Dead Already

I’m a bit late posting this week’s blog entry because I needed some time to absorb the episode’s impact, and to get fan reactions before I offered my own commentary. Because the music I wrote for Pretty Much Dead Already is some of my most powerful yet for “The Walking Dead,” I didn’t want to trivialize it by cutting it up into excerpts, so there are no audio or video clips this week.

Before going any further, I must point out that the remaining blog entry will deal almost exclusively with the final scene. The words “SPOILER ALERT” do not begin to describe how important it is that you watch the episode before reading any further. So, if you haven’t watched the episode, please go to your DVRs, TVs, iPods, Computers, DVDs or whatever you have and watch it first. Ok? Good. Here, we go…
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… seriously. SPOILER ALERT. SPOILER ALERT!!!
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… Ok, everyone who hasn’t seen the episode is gone. It’s just us cool kids now. :)
On with the blog. Pretty Much Dead Already contains only four pieces of music. The first two cues are purely horror pieces meant to underline how terrifying the barn has become.

For the past few episodes, I’ve taken every opportunity to associate ominous music with images of the barn. Now that you’ve seen the ending of this episode, you can fully understand why. The barn becomes the spark that lights a fire of conflict building up for several episodes. The opening minutes of score provide a dark undertone to the sequence where everyone discovers what Herschel is keeping there.

The third cue is a short emotional piece that accompanies Maggie and Glen reconciling their relationship. A solo fiddle introduces a fragment of their melody shortly before an acoustic guitar offers an echo of the music first heard when they kissed back in Cherokee Rose, making this simple chord progression a love theme for them.

However, the most memorable piece of music is, of course, at the end. Shane flips out and releases the zombies in the barn, challenging Herschel’s entire world view and forcing the other characters to choose his path. First, the score is ambient: an amped up version of the dark string clusters first heard as he shaved his head in Save the Last One (one of two “Shane Themes”). The ambient synth and guitar clusters are still there, but this time they are punctuated by increasingly violent phrases from the string orchestra.
The music makes a subtle entrance. I made sure not to press too hard on the drama. After all, we’ve just watched nearly 40 minutes of drama with virtually no music at all, so I had to sneak in carefully for fear of ruining the scene with unnecessary melodrama.

At last, the zombies in the barn charge out. At this moment, a steady chugging ostinato begins in the percussion, introduced by a solitary electric banjo. Astute listeners will recognize it as the musical “wave” effect first heard in the highway sequence of What Lies Ahead. The wave is returning, but this time, no one is hiding under cars. They are directly in its path and must face it head on.

The “wave” builds energy, propelled by a heavy drum kit and electric bass, pounding away relentlessly. More layers of electric banjos magnify the dissonant texture as the orchestral strings saw away at discordant phrases.

At last the final zombie falls and our heroes are left standing before a pile of bodies outside the barn. A lonely melody played sul ponticello in the celli offers a quiet commentary on the bloodshed, punctuated by gentle arpeggios from acoustic guitars. The mood is solemn and resolved, as if the show were about to end.
Of course, it doesn’t end. A sound in the barn draws their attention and they brace for one more zombie to emerge…
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… you guys know I’m serious about that SPOILER WARNING right? …
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… last chance…
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… ok, here goes. A zombified Sophia emerges from the barn an steps toward them!

The remainder of the episode contains no dialog other than her hysterical mother weeping and screaming in the background. The entire story is told in images and music. And the music is unlike anything I’ve ever written for the show.
As the recognition of Sophia sweeps across our main characters, an oscillating pattern begins in the strings. More traditional orchestration overtakes the piece as it builds. Subtle brass and woodwinds sneak in above a child-like harp and celeste pattern. The entire cue is made of variations of the central “Sophia Theme:”

With this sequence, my whole approach to the orchestra was different. Or not different, I should say. With every cue in ”The Walking Dead” I write for traditional orchestral in very unusual ways, composing clusters and dissonant, angular phrases. I frequently use sul ponticello, tremolo, glisses, bends and other orchestration effects to create a sense of fear and alienation. Here, I dropped all the tricks and fully embraced the warmth of a live orchestra. I was writing purely for beauty, emotion and tragedy.

This was not an easy decision for the producers and I to make. We’ve taken great pains to ensure that the score to “The Walking Dead” does not sound like a traditional film score. But, this sequence was special. We had taken the time to develop this story arc and had the emotional capital with our audience to do something extraordinary.

Ultimately, the music I wrote for Pretty Much Dead Already matches the imagery in that it is emotional and operatic. When you look at how skillfully director Michelle MacLaren staged the actors, it really does look like something from a Shakespearean tragedy. A curtain could have fallen instead of cutting to black at the end! So, I took my cue from that direction and wrote music equally soaring.

Of course, the story is actually as bleak as anything we’ve seen from this show. Perhaps more so. This scene is an emotional punch to the gut for me, because it not only makes us lose hope of finding Sophia, but makes us realize that all their efforts to save her were for nothing. Perhaps there’s no hope at all. That message is so powerful and instantaneous when you watch this sequence I knew I couldn’t improve upon it with dark music. By playing the score as purely emotional and operatic, almost contrary to the images, it ultimately made that message of hopelessness even more pervasive.

That’s the last episode of “The Walking Dead” for a few months, but there’s a lot more going on here at my blog, so keep checking in. I’ll be blogging about the absolutely delightful “Eureka” Christmas Special which airs next Tuesday on SyFy. And soon, I’ll be posting some video clips from our recent Freddie Mercury Tribue Conert: “The Show Must Go On.” As always, thanks for reading!
-Bear
12 Responses to “The Walking Dead: Pretty Much Dead Already”
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Nice job Bear, I think I’m so used to your music I didn’t realize it was there. Had to watch the scene again on the AMC site. Will look forward to when the album comes out!
The ending had me breathless and in tears and your music amplified that times 100. It took me a second to realize that it was Sophia, I knew the music was telling me something but I didn’t want to hear it. I thought she was okay and that Hershel tried to feed her to the walkers, but once she started growling, my heart sank and I couldn’t say anything.
The music brought back the feeling I felt on the first episode of the new season, the strings and cellos, but much, much more sad.
You are a genius Bear and I look forward to the rest of the season.
@ Doug O; I am trying to remember what the music was like but I can’t. I think it’s a good sign as the music blends in so well it’s part of the moment and you forget it’s there.
Bear, did you do something different in the opening titles this week? It felt faster, as though the music had been sped up. The title sequence was the same length, but the tempo was intense.
I can’t believe it’s going to be months until we get a new ep! Arg!
BBC America is replaying BSG, and it’s nice that I’ve gotten to the point of knowing the storyline so well that I can concentrate on other things, like the music. It’s like getting to enjoy the whole series again, in a new way!
Yeah, the music during the last scene…
You guys knocked it outta the park…
Oh No, Sophia’s not in the last picture posted! She’s Still Out There!!!
That last scene was outstanding. When I heard the hissing from the barn after the walkers had been shot, I thought it was Herschel’s wife coming out. When I saw that it was Sophia, I realized how merciless this show can be (in a sort of good way). Because all through second season, I was just waiting for that happy reunion to happen, so the show could move on. Well, safe to say, that didn’t happen…
Can’t wait for the next episodes. As always, awesome music, Bear! Hope all is well on the other side of the pond.
Just WOW!!! I was thinking that the season was slower compared to the first one… but that scene blew my mind… the pictures, the music… all climaxing in the story’s turn of events…
THIS is what drama should be like and what I’ve been missing from several different shows this season. This week’s Dexter had a kind of similar turn of events, I think, but it was more told than shown and thus “experienced” less intensely compared to poor Sophia’s fate.
I noticed the fewer music during the episode and was wondering what that was all about… but then what a finale!! Indeed very operatic and strangely heart warming. I really had tears in my eyes, but they kinda refused to come out. The music kinda squeezed out the tragedy of the scene while the pictures were just a shocking punch in the face. Crazy combination. I just watched it again. Fantastic!!!
AMAZING ART!!!
Thanks for the kind words, everybody! It really was a very special episode to work on.
matt2thepatt… “Bear, did you do something different in the opening titles this week? It felt faster, as though the music had been sped up.”
Nothing that I know of. Sometimes, episodes of TV can be sped up slightly to allow for a few extra seconds (or even minutes) of footage. This happened on more than one occasion for BSG for example. But, as far as I know, this technique was not used in TWD.
Arild… “Because all through second season, I was just waiting for that happy reunion to happen, so the show could move on. ”
I know! So cool, right? Sometimes there aren’t always happy endings. The second half of the season has some even bigger shocks in store, believe me. :)
-Bear
In certain ways, the music at the end harkens back to the pilot, with your work “The Mercy of the Living”–it is hauntingly beautiful music over something that under most people would be written as an action piece, but because of the music turns into a tragedy…
Bear, your score in the final scene was perfect. I have rewatched that scene at least 10 times…man.
I can’t wait for February!