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 Posted:   Dec 11, 2017 - 9:50 AM   
 By:   Krakower Group   (Member)

WATERTOWER MUSIC TO RELEASE DOWNSIZING – ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK

Featuring Original Score by Composer Rolfe Kent
And The Original Song “A Little Change In The Weather” Performed By The Swingles

(December 8, 2017- Burbank, CA) – WaterTower Music will release the Downsizing - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack at digital retail on December 22, 2017 and on CDJanuary 12. The album features original score by Rolfe Kent (Up In The Air, Sideways) and the original song “A Little Change In The Weather,” co-written by Kent and performed by The Swingles. Paramount Pictures’ Downsizing will be in theaters on December 22, 2017.

“Rolfe Kent and I agreed that no matter what the music was meant to express, we wanted it as charming, melodic and full-throated as possible,” said writer/director Alexander Payne. “Rolfe and I have worked together for over 25 years, and this was, I feel, the finest score he has yet produced, and, if you’ll forgive the immodesty, as fine a score I’ve heard in any film in recent memory.”

“Alexander asked for the score to be beautiful classical music,” Kent described. The composer wanted to avoid film score clichés and took a different route. “I figured a Kubrickian approach was best, where the music sounds like it existed outside of the film, and was discovered to match the scene perfectly.” Known for using unexpected textures, sounds and his own signature musical personality, this opened the floodgates for Rolfe. “As ever, Alexander was open to hearing unexpected sounds, so when I threw him the curve of an opera aria sung in Norwegian, or some bagpipes, he loved it.”

LISTEN: “A Little Change In The Weather” by The Swingles
LISTEN: “The World Is Amazed” by Rolfe Kent

Downsizing is directed by Academy Award© winner Alexander Payne (The Descendants, Sideways) and stars Academy Award© winner Matt Damon (The Martian, Good Will Hunting), Academy Award© winner Christoph Waltz (Inglorious Basterds, Django Unchained), Hong Chau (Inherent Vice, Big Little Lies), Academy Award© nominee Kristen Wiig (The Martian, Bridesmaids), Udo Kier (Melancholia), Jason Sudeikis (Colossal), Academy Award© nominee Laura Dern (Wild, Rambling Rose), Neil Patrick Harris (Gone Girl), and Rolf Lassgård (A Man Named Ove).

“One of the first scenes I was shown was a monologue from Ngoc Lan Tran (Hong Chau), which is this terrific performance and contains so much energy and pathos and sweetness,” Kent explained. “One morning at5AMI found myself dreaming of this fragile cello tune that came out in small, delicate sobs almost, and I had to wake myself up and record myself humming it, because I knew it was perfect for her character. As the score developed we sometimes changed the instrumentation, but that moment is still as I dreamed it, delicately played on cello.”

In addition to his score, Downsizing gave Kent the opportunity to co-write an original song, “A Little Change In The Weather.” Using the Norwegian opera aria, he had the idea that this would become the song to start the end credits, rounding out the story. “I knew exactly who could help me with the writing of it, and also elevate it into something extraordinary, and that was Jo and Ed of The Swingles!” Kent described. “I had some rough place-holder words, but they then completed the final lyrics and composed some 30 vocal parts. When Alexander and I heard what they had created we were amazed and thrilled.”

"What a privilege to be working again with Rolfe and Alexander - long time friends of the label" commented WaterTower Music head, Jason Linn. "Their timeless blended voice continues to move, amaze and defy musical convention. We are thrilled to partner with this creative force!”

The Downsizing - Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is now available for pre-order, and will be available at digital retail on December 22, 2017and on CDJanuary 12.

###

For more information contact KrakowerGroup[at]gmail.com, or @KrakowerGroup on Twitter

ABOUT ROLFE KENT
Unexpected texture, sounds and a signature musical personality are the hallmarks of British film composer Rolfe Kent, who has scored more than 50 films, including Academy Award® nominated UP IN THE AIR (for which he won a Golden Satellite award), SIDEWAYS (for which he was nominated for a Golden Globe and Critics Choice Award in 2007), LABOR DAY, BAD WORDS (Jason Bateman’s directorial debut), DOM HEMINGWAY, ABOUT SCHMIDT, ELECTION, MEAN GIRLS, LEGALLY BLONDE AND LEGALLY BLONDE II, WEDDING CRASHERS, THE MATADOR, REIGN OVER ME, THE HUNTING PARTY, and THANK YOU FOR SMOKING. Kent also composed the Emmy®-nominated main title theme for the Showtime hit, DEXTER. In 2012, he received the Richard Kirk award for career achievement.

Born in England into a non-musical family, Kent intuitively felt at age 12 that he wanted to be a film composer, although his early musical training was brief and not so formal. Citing Jarre’s LAWRENCE OF ARABIA and Morricone’s THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY, as inspirations, Kent took the advice of an early music teacher to avoid rigid course work that would dampen his enthusiasm. He followed an entirely different path and, taking counterpoint to what is often cited as culture mired in cynicism, profited from his early course work in theology to relate it to music. After enrolling in psychology studies at University of Leeds in Yorkshire, Kent’s musical career was casually begun at a dance club when the director of a play offered him a chance to “do” the music. His jump-start was his composition for a stage musical Gross at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, a springboard for authors, composers and performers.

In the confines of his musically busy studio, one can immediately see why his musical personality is as distinct and his own. Constantly on the go, adventurous and curious, Kent has developed a style that is not only distinct, but indicative of his aversion to the-anticipated-score in tone, texture and rhythm. The walls are lined with many familiar and many more unfamiliar instruments, gingerly handled and gleefully demonstrated for their sonic qualities. Among his collection are the Indonesian percussion instrument the angklung, the shawm (first used in military maneuvers as a psychological weapon), the melodica, used for the light, soothing effect in Kent’s jazz-infused score for his Golden Globe-nominated SIDEWAYS, and an instrument he discovered and cannot name that sounds like the world’s beaches at their most romantic high tide... combined.

Kent has the distinction of attracting and sustaining relationships with directors as popular and diverse as Alexander Payne, Mark Waters, Jason Reitman, Burr Steers, and Richard Shepard. His upcoming film releases include DOWNSIZING (directed by Alexander Payne), CRASH PAD, THE PHILOSOPHY OF PHIL (directed by Greg Kinnear), Disney’s MAGIC CAMP, and the French film LE PETIT SPIROU.

 
 Posted:   Jan 10, 2018 - 11:44 AM   
 By:   Jon Broxton   (Member)

My review of DOWNSIZING, for anyone who's interested:

https://moviemusicuk.us/2018/01/10/downsizing-rolfe-kent/

Jon

 
 
 Posted:   Jan 10, 2018 - 11:57 AM   
 By:   couvee   (Member)

I thought this thread was about downsizing one's collection.

 
 Posted:   Feb 9, 2018 - 6:22 PM   
 By:   SchiffyM   (Member)

I just watched this film and I'm with Mr. Broxton (though he enjoyed the movie more, it seems). It's a movie with a lot on its mind, and it keeps picking something new. Ultimately, I found it pretty unsatisfying.

But Rolfe Kent's score is terrific, and keeps the movie afloat in several sequences. The CD is a very nice listen (even if my car's screen doesn't know how to handle the name "Ng?c" that shows up in several cues). Shame that the movie is unlikely to raise Kent’s profile much.

EDIT: I see that the FSM board can’t handle that name either!

 
 
 Posted:   Oct 4, 2018 - 3:07 AM   
 By:   Hurdy Gurdy   (Member)

WOW!
If you don't believe me, just listen to track 12 (Exodus, Farewells, Lost Luggage and Reunions).
It even comes with some Ennio-style Edda!
The score as a whole is quite varied, quirky and gorgeous. Typical Rolfe Kent then.

 
 
 Posted:   Oct 4, 2018 - 3:26 AM   
 By:   Thor   (Member)

The score is OK, the film is a disaster!

 
 
 Posted:   Oct 4, 2018 - 4:03 AM   
 By:   Hurdy Gurdy   (Member)

I'd say it's MUCH better than okay, but hey, not everyone can be right, right wink
I haven't seen the film yet. The mixed reviews and long run-time put me off a trip to the cinema, but I'll no doubt catch it on Netflix or some such.

 
 
 Posted:   Oct 4, 2018 - 4:24 AM   
 By:   Thor   (Member)

Well, I've never been much of a fan of Kent's 'quirky' stuff, so that may explain some of it.

 
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