Given Paul Greengrass’s docudrama Bloody Sunday featured
no underscore at all, I was surprised to learn that he’d elected to work with
John Powell on his new film of the events in the various control rooms and on
board United Flight 93 on September 11th 2001. Powell had produced a
strong score for Greengrass’s installment of the Bourne series, The
Bourne Supremacy, effectively dramatizing the character issues of that film
without relying on familiar ideas. But it seemed that the director’s
documentary mise-en-scene and aversion to sentimentality would lead to him in United
93 to err on the side of no music at all to minimize accusations of
over-egging an already incredibly dramatic pudding.
Having seen the film – one of the most beautifully realized
attempts to interpret recent events since The Insider – the director’s
strategy for music, and the music that resulted, seems like an inseparable part
of the project’s success. It’s a different film to the music-less Bloody
Sunday, a film where various witness viewpoints of a seminal national
tragedy were edited together, but the film’s immediacy and the connection
between events was supported by the physical proximity of all characters to
each other during that event. United 93 is a far less spatially
integrated film, an abstract collection of air traffic control rooms and the
interiors from the titular flight edited together with scrupulous use of news
footage to create something like a real-time narrative of that morning. The
physical immediacy of the Bloody Sunday tragedy does not apply here (save in
the incredible moment when the second tower of the World Trade Center is hit), and Powell steps in to provide a sense of unified sense of tension across the
film’s disparate locations.
Thick textures of percussion loops and amelodic writing for
brass and strings characterize the cloud of confusion that descends over those
who tried to make sense of the warning signs of the impending attack. At times
the score appears to cross over the diegetic barrier in the film and confound
the confused characters – as in the hiss and rumble of the loop in ‘Pulling
the Tapes’ that obscures an air traffic controller’s attempt to clearly discern
words that might hint at more than one hijacking. Familiar and unusual colours
drift through the cloud of tension, including a processed duduk in ‘Making the
Bomb’, and a child’s voice elsewhere. Powell ever supports the sense of
something that cannot be stopped now that it is in motion, as in the unresolved
open brass chords of ‘Take Off’ that only truly come full circle with ‘The
End’.
The spotting is careful, almost invisible to the casual
viewer. (Many are surprised when I tell them there are nearly 45 minutes of
music in the film.) Powell and Greengrass rarely let the music assert resolved
emotions before the full tragedy has run its course, something lesser film-makers
might not have been able to resist. The sealing of the hatch on United 93
before take-off is an unscored, almost perfunctory moment. On occasion, the
rule is breached – ‘The Take-Off’ is scored with ominous significance, but
these moments are all the more effective for the discipline that guides the
work as a whole. Above all, there’s an indifference to the action of the film
in this music – a general refusal to reference (and potentially trivialise)
on-screen events with musical gestures. Even the type of scoring that subtly
phrases character action, such as Powell’s ‘Funeral Pyre’ cue from The
Bourne Supremacy, is eschewed in favour of a series of cues that drift out
of time with the image. The connection between image and music is occasionally
asserted to devastating effect - the defining brass chord of ‘2nd
Plane Crash’ and the resounding final chord of ‘The End’ – but for the most
part these moments are so effective because the score has been liberated from
accompanying the literal unfolding of the action to develop an atmosphere of
tension. Musically, catastrophe strikes unexpectedly from a seemingly-stable
rhythmic foundation.
Four standout cues deserve special mention. It seems silly
to commend a track for having a really compelling percussion loop, but ‘Phone
Calls’ rumbles away compellingly for four minutes on exactly that humble base,
bookended by two extended child vocal performances. It’s the film’s longest
musical setpiece, as the end game draws near. The first section of ‘Prayers’
opens the film, but I seem to recall the rest of it accompanies to great effect
the juxtaposition of hijacker and passenger prayers before the latter attempt
to seize control of the plane. Best of all is ‘The End’, which to some cynics
will seem yet another uninspired reprise of Media Ventures / Remote Control
action scoring devices, but to the more open-minded is a fresh fusion of sound
and image, and as effective an emotional climax as could be imagined for a film
like this. That the resounding conclusion is a single chord that the whole
score has been leading to is a sign of Powell’s economy of construction – he
makes a resolved chord matter like it’s the first time its ever been used in a
film score. (Personally I can’t recall a better suspense setpiece cue since James
Newton Howard scored ‘Zuwainie’s Arrival at the UN’ in Sydney Pollack’s The
Interpreter.) ‘Dedication’ is an appropriately elegiac coda – releasing the
feelings built up in the high speed ‘The End’, and sure to call forth tears
from all but a few.
The perfect score to one of the finest films produced in the
last few years will not be for everyone though. I personally found it an
intensely dramatic experience before I’d even seen the film, but to some, even
the experience of the film will not lift music that is as restrained as it is
because of the visuals it accompanies. A case of a good film composition not
being a good standalone composition perhaps? I don’t know – for my part I don’t
listen to it often, but I’m never unmoved when I do.
Michael McLennan
Rating: 5
On Album: 4
Adam Andersson adds:-
2006 has indeed been quite a year for John Powell. With the
swinging fun of Ice Age – The Meltdown and the grand action drama of X-Men:
The Last Stand he has proven his diversity and skill as a composer. With
the score for Paul Greengrass’ film United 93, he further extends his
territory and proves that he can skillfully handle the drama of history’s most
spectacular act of terrorism.
United 93 is a film about the fourth airplane of the
9/11 attack: the one that never reached its (unknown) target, and instead
crash-landed in a field with no casualties other than those aboard the plane.
From a number of phone calls made from the plane and voice recordings from the
plane’s cockpit we can form a vague opinion of what happened aboard the United
93 flight. It is a highly dramatic story of courage, despair and violence – and
could have been scored in many ways. Powell has written a subdued, slow and
textural small-scale score that ultimately is very moving – indeed much more
moving than I think a more traditionally-orchestrated, theme-led drama score
would have been for this story. In its low percussion rumblings and slowly
moving string and brass chord progressions I hear a highly emotional and
realistic picture of the panic, insecurity and despair that must have been
present on United 93.
The album opens with some low percussion hits, after which a
short motif is intoned by John Powell’s son Oliver Powell’s solo vocals. There
is something about this vocal solo, which reappears a couple of times in the
score, that I am deeply moved by. It feels a bit like a picture of innocence –
maybe a picture of a child-like innocence that is no more in the world after
September 11, 2001. Maybe I am just reading too much into it – but I am highly
impressed with music that can get you thinking like that. And it is a very
moving textural choice – this fragile solo vocal gives a gripping, dramatic
feel to the score.
Moreover, the music is mainly based on a lot of percussion
effects (electronic as well as acoustic), above which long lines of string and
brass chords progress. Rather than any actual outspoken themes, the solemn
feeling of the brass and the more emotional quality of the strings carry the
score and unify it into a coherent listening experience. The brass create a
solemn dramatic atmosphere when they rise above the percussion – for example at
the end of ‘Pull the Tapes’ and ‘The Pentagon’. These moments are not that many
but are nonetheless notable. Otherwise, the percussion is indeed this score’s
gift as well as its curse. The percussion effects are truly what drives this
score forward, what stops a score as textural as this from becoming boring. But
at the same time, some of the synthetic percussion elements that are used
frequently (as in ‘The Pilots’) can become quite annoying to listen to at
length and detracts somewhat from the overall listening value of the score as a
whole. Sometimes it can also get a little repetitive, like in the beginning
minutes of ‘Phone Calls’, where the same percussive figure is repeated for over
a minute.
But since there are many highlights on the way, there is
always something that catches your attention again and brings you back into the
music. As it reaches its eighth and longest track (‘Phone Calls’ at nearly
eleven minutes) these highlights seem to come more often – and when the score
arrives at its blissful ninth track, ‘The End’, we have reached the definitive
highlight of this score. This track is a dramatic, percussion-driven cue with
powerful string and brass writing that almost reaches operatic proportions,
just climbing and swelling towards the end of the cue. It is then directly
followed by the contemplative ‘Dedication’, where Oliver Powell’s solo vocals
return, followed by a beautiful string part that rounds off the album in a
quite sad and moving elegy over the casualties of United 93.
United 93 demands a lot of concentration to be a
rewarding listen. It is quite dark and essentially unthematic – it progresses
along long, slow lines in the orchestra with driving percussion underneath, and
listening to it with too little attention may result in not noticing the many
textural qualities of this approach. The risk is that a less concentrated listen
only really notices the magnificent ‘The End’ and misses out on most of what
has happened before. It is a score as if composed for headphone listening with
no disturbances. When given the proper attention it displays many good sides,
but also some less interesting material. Overall it comes across as a very well
written work, especially when compared with other more textural material that
is produced now and then. Often that kind of music can feel uninspired and
uninteresting to listen to, but that is not the case here. Powell does not do
anything particularly new in this score, but he successfully creates an
effective atmosphere with these restrained means.
United 93 is not a flawless or overtly emotional
work, but with time and concentration it is a rewarding and interesting listen.
John Powell has created a highly dramatic and emotionally powerful score with
means that I never would have expected could create such an atmosphere. If only
for this fact, it should be noted as one of the more stylistically interesting
pieces of the year so far.
Adam Andersson
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