‘Watchmen’ Composers Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross Talk Crafting Playful, Raunchy Sound For “Punk Rock” HBO Drama
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When composers Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross first met with Damon Lindelof about his HBO superhero drama Watchmen, they had a hard time putting their finger on the tone of the show, and the kind of music that would be right for it.
Based on a DC comics series created by Alan Moore and Dave
Gibbons—which was previously adapted into a film by Zack Snyder—the
gritty drama is set in an alternate reality, exploring episodes of
racial violence erupting in Tulsa, Oklahoma, as the police face off with
a white supremacist group known as the Seventh Kavalry.
In comparison to the 2009 film, Lindelof’s take on Watchmen would
be much more serious in tone, thoughtfully examining systemic racism
within America, in a way that couldn’t be more timely. At the same time,
the series was playful and incredibly fun, both to watch and to compose
music for.
HBO
“Obviously, he took a huge swing with the project,” Ross says of
Lindelof. “I think what he managed to keep in tact [from the original
’80s comics] was this kind of anarchic viewpoint—incredible storytelling
[that’s] in essence kind of punk rock.”
For the most part, Reznor and Ross’s score for the series was darkly
hypnotic, in the vein of the music they’ve created over the years for
their Grammy-winning band Nine Inch Nails. But encompassing so many
worlds, and traversing so many time periods, Watchmen would
require the pair to work through many musical modes, including jazz,
gospel, vintage orchestral and silent movie piano accompaniment, for the
very first time.
“I’ve got to admit, it’s never been presented to us: ‘Could you write
a big band track that sounds like it would be a needle drop?’” says
Reznor, who has been working most recently with Ross on Pixar’s Soul, and David Fincher’s upcoming Mank.
“I think that’s what keeps drawing us back to trying things like this,
where [it’s like], ‘Let’s see what predicament we can get ourselves in,
and then get ourselves out of it, show that we can do it, and be better
because of it.’” DEADLINE: How did you get involved with Watchmen? What was it that drew you to the project? TRENT REZNOR: We had been speaking with our film
agent quite a while ago about, “Hey, we’ll make a list of some projects
and people that we find interesting, and maybe just throw feelers out to
see if there’s any interest in working with us.” Just to kind of work
backwards, instead of waiting for the phone to ring. When we got wind
that HBO green-lit Watchmen, we made a point to say, “Please, call them up. There’s no shame here.” I think the excitement was, we love Watchmen.
It’s certainly meant a lot to us as a graphic novel, but even more so,
we’re big fans of Damon’s. Particularly, what he did with Leftovers was groundbreaking for the medium of television.
HBO
The more Atticus and I have worked in scoring projects, what we’ve
come to consider the currency, or the reason to do them, is not the
money or exposure. It’s that we’re into a forced collaborative situation
with different camps of people that we find interesting. Sometimes,
it’s fantastic; sometimes, it isn’t, and we try to think about, the best
we can, what would that person be like? Is it worth getting into an
intense relationship with this camp for what could be a year of time or
more? And Damon was one of those people. DEADLINE: What did you discuss with Damon in your first conversations about the series? ATTICUS ROSS: We didn’t actually spend a lot of time talking to him about what the sound was going to be, prior to seeing the pilot.
[Going into it], Trent was incredibly enthusiastic. I was a little more nervous, just because the Watchmen
[comic] dropped in a totally different kind of popular culture to
today. I think Damon subsequently [shared] his own sort of fears about
it. I think it’s an awful lot to take on. As we know, he knows how to
knock it out of the park, but it was really the pilot…
The pilot came in two chunks. He did a version that was 60% great,
and then he did a version, which was the final one. I’ve never seen
anyone take the same picture and transform it in the way he did between
version one and version two, and seeing version two was really what gave
us all the information we needed about what this show is going to be. REZNOR: We had spoken on the phone about, “Yeah,
let’s do this. It sounds great.” Then, there was an in-person meeting
where we were trying to gather, what is this show about? You know,
what’s your take? There were a thousand things on the wall, stuff that
didn’t make any sense, and 20 minutes of passionate explanation, and I
was thinking…You know when someone’s talking [and] you realize, I don’t
even know what he’s saying right now? I’m aware that I’m not
comprehending what’s happening, and when it was finished, I knew less
about what was going to happen than before I started. HBO
But what we could tell was an immense amount of thought and care had
gone into whatever it was that they were trying to explain to us. Also,
what was clear was, there wasn’t going to be any real directive, as to
“It should sound like this.”
What we’ve kind of figured out is, there’s some projects we’ve gotten
into where it’s almost color by numbers. “Hey, I’m thinking this. I
kind of want you guys to do this.” Maybe they even made a temp score,
like “This is what we need to do,” and those end up being the least
interesting because the road map’s laid out.
Then, there’s other situations—Fincher comes to mind, and in this
case, Damon—where it feels more collaborative. You’ve been brought in
for the right reasons—not to do the thing they have in mind, but what do
you think? So, what we try to do is listen to the clues about, is the
music a character in this? Is it driving the narrative? Is it invisible?
Is it lifting quietly in the background, manipulating feelings? Or is
it a Star Wars theme? Is there an opening title that sets the
tone of what the series is going to be, or does it play a more subtle,
perhaps nefarious role?
And we didn’t get any of that [initially]. It wasn’t out of not knowing. I think it was out of, “We’ll figure it out.” DEADLINE: How did you figure out the tone of the show, and the kind of music that would suit it? REZNOR: We’d read the script for the first episode,
which is all that really existed at that time, and it was tough to tell,
is the tone of this dead serious? Is it self-aware? Is there any humor?
Is it pitch black? When we saw the first cut, which wasn’t perfected
yet, it really defined what it was. There’s a playfulness to this, which
we hadn’t expected. With this cattle battle in Episode 1, it’s intense,
but it’s also ridiculous, as it should be, and the role of music can be
driving, almost like a music video. So, it kind of revealed itself.
Like I said, the best projects reveal themselves to you, if there’s not
someone making sure it colors within the lines. HBO
So, it started off on the right foot, and what began as a bit of,
“God, I have no idea what is going to work here,” quickly turned to,
“Yeah, okay. Now, there’s a hell of a lot of work ahead of us, but we
get it, and we understand how we can really be effective here.” I think
we can both safely say, it was one of the greatest collaborative, fun,
respectful, challenging projects we’ve ever worked on. ROSS: It definitely was. I think when you’re in the
position where you don’t know what day of the week it is, or what time
it is, but you know you’re doing something that you believe in, and
you’re involved to the depths of your being, that’s what a great
collaboration is. I think this was one of the great collaborations.
It was one of those collaborations where, of course, we’d have
intense discussions about certain things, and he may think one way, and
we may think the other, but we were always traveling in the same
direction. I also feel like, in terms of the general score stuff that
we’ve done, it did feel like being let off the leash, in terms of the
type of instrumentation, the type of music, and it wasn’t ever at odds
with his vision. I think that the vision grew as the series grew. We hit
our stride in the first episode, and carried on from there.
DEADLINE: What did your early musical experiments on Watchmen look like? REZNOR: Every time we take on a new project, the
first chunk of time is us sitting around, overthinking it. But
constructively, what we’ll do is kind of take options, and remove
options from the table, to find the limited set of tools or instruments
to help define what this thing is.
Is it acoustic? Is it orchestral? Is electronic? Is it synthetic?
Does it feel dated? Does it feel current? Does it feel futuristic? Does
it feel cold? Does it feel warm? And kind of whittle it down to some
things that can help define the process of composition. HBO
On this one, we realized the role of music being sometimes a bit more
beat-driven, aggressive, raunchy, there’s room for a distorted bass,
and some loud drums. That kind of opened up that somewhat familiar
toolkit to the Nine Inch Nails side of things. It became maybe a little
less purely experimental, and more, “Let’s draw upon the skill set we
have over here that we rarely get to do in composition score work.” But
that was kind of the leading, defining thing, when we realized something
like that cattle battle, or the Sister Night presence, can have a kind
of kick-ass groove under, that feels raunchy, and feels a little sleazy.
It makes it playful in its own way; it has its own attitude.
We didn’t know off the bat if music was going to play that role in
this series, [but] seeing that that’s what he really responded to was
energizing for us, because we haven’t had a chance to really do that in
this context. So, that was a real kind of light bulb turning on. ROSS: Oftentimes, we’ll start writing to the script
before we see picture, and that may well form the basis of the score. In
this case, we did write about 12 pieces to the script without seeing
picture, and this is one of those cases where only one or two of them
became part of the DNA of the show. It was getting the picture that
really [was informative]. REZNOR: I think we were living in the margins a bit.
We were playing music as a kind of, “Let’s creep a little in here,” and
what he [said] was, “No, I want it to take over. Let’s turn off the
sound effects and have this track drive this whole sequence.” That
became a kind of repeating motif, but during the mixing of the first
episode, put us in conflict with the sound designer team. [Laughs].
Like, “Sorry, boys. I’m going to turn us up, and turn you down—or we’re
going to call dad in, and he’s going to tell you.” There was a learning
curve there, which we quickly all adapted to. ROSS: Also, we were on tour at the very beginning.
So like the Sister Night theme, at that point, we’d seen the pilot. We
wrote the Sister Night theme in a hotel room in Chicago. DEADLINE: Could you describe the core set of instruments heard in your score? HBOROSS: Like Trent mentioned, some of it is what we
might be doing if we were doing a Nine Inch Nails record, so there’s
beats, and guitars, and synths, and real bass. The orchestral stuff is
really in [Watchmen’s show-within-a-show] American Hero Story,
and Damon’s idea for that was that we’d troll Marvel movies—I mean, not
in a mean way…We’d never done that type of, ‘Okay, every punch has a
horn stab, and every kick has this and that,’ and that, in itself, was
fun. I mean, the overriding emotion, when I think back on Watchmen,
was fun. It was a lot of f**king fun doing it. But as the series got
on, there’s some incredibly intense, emotional subplots going on. We’re
taking on the story of race in America. I mean, it’s not fun and games.
It’s serious s**t, and as the series progressed, you’ve got one side,
which is the distorted guitars, and the beats, and the this, and the
other, and you’ve got another side of it, which I think is pretty deep,
emotionally, and travels that journey. DEADLINE: It must have been challenging to tackle a project that required such stylistic diversity in its music. REZNOR: I’ve got to say, we started off in somewhat
familiar territory for us, and it allowed us to grow confident in
ourselves and our abilities. Because we always start a project with
crippling insecurity. Then, we got to know Damon and realized he was one
of us—meaning, he has crippling insecurity, too—and we kind of thought
the same way. Then, we get through our first couple sessions of butting
heads about an idea and realized, he’s right. He was always right.
Often, he was thinking about this through a different lens than we were,
and that was the right way.
With that footing, as we started to feel each other out a bit, in
terms of our trust and abilities, the palette started to open up, as to
some truly challenging things being laid at our feet. It was kind of
absurd situations…I can say, now that it all worked out, “That was fun.”
But at the time, it wasn’t fun. It was terrifying, because man, we
don’t want to let Damon down. We want to show him we can do anything.
DEADLINE: What are you most proud of with Watchmen? Why do you think the series has resonated to the degree that it has? ROSS: Art used to be something that challenged you.
It was put out there with an attitude of not how many likes will this
get, but, “Here it is. This is it. Do you like it or not?” And of
course, everybody wanted you to like it. But there’s also a kind of aura
of, “I don’t care if you like it. This is coming from my heart.”
Popular culture feels like it’s become a bit more homogenized, so when you get a Watchmen,
when you get people who are reaching for something that feels authentic
and challenging, and outside of what we’ve come to expect, I feel like
it’s something that we’ve got to honor. I think we’re very lucky to get
the opportunity to work with these people who are willing to take that
risk.
I think no one can deny that the storytelling in Watchmen is
probably—certainly, in my experience—the most in-depth, layered,
intellectual kind of spider web of American history and today.
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