Are you enjoying The Paradise on BBC One or Masterpiece PBS? Have you noticed how beautiful its soundtrack is? My guest today is the composer of the wonderful music accompanying Denise and Moray's story. His name is Maurizio
Malagnini. He is an Italian composer based in London whose work spans drama, animation,
documentaries. His music has been broadcast internationally on the main
European networks BBC1, BBC2, ITV, MTV, SKY, RAI. He has produced his scores for
the Hollywood Studio Symphony Orchestra, the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra,
L'Ensemble dell'Opera di Roma and his own ensemble, Cinema Paradiso.
Maurizio has composed scores for popular BBC
Series such as "The Body Farm" and The Paradise (Series 1 and 2).
Could this lovely costume series be the same without his brilliant score?
I’m sure you have noticed how good the soundtrack for Denise and Moray’slove story is! Are you ready to meet its composer? Welcome Maurizio Malagnini
at Fly High and enjoy our little chat below. By the way, don't forget that The
Paradise series 2 goes on BBC1 every Sunday night and, if you live in the US, season 1 is going to end soon on PBS Masterpiece.
Maurizio Malagnini rehearsing with the BBC Concert Orchestra |
What’s
the life of an Italian living in London like? Hard? Very hard? Not hard at all?
I mean, are there things you miss terribly or can you easily cope with the
differences ?
I have been living in London for 7 years and I love it. The city is
modern, vibrant, energetic and full of art, culture and music: yet still being
rich of traditions and a secular identity that is typical of European cities. Since
I arrived I have come to the impression that in London it doesn’t matter so
much where you come from but what you can do: this is exactly what a young
artist is looking for! There are things I miss though, especially the sunny
weather in Spring and the food. After all it’s a very short flight from London
to Milan and I fly back to Italy 5/6 times per year. I admit the first year I
came back to Italy 18 times!
Emun Elliott as Mr Moray |
You
know I got to you looking for more information about one of my favourite period
series, The Paradise. You composed the soundtrack for series 1 and 2. I really loved your music while watching the first
series, before even knowing it was by an Italian composer (allow me some
national pride). What is this experience like?
I have loved every single moment of composing for The Paradise, it is
such a privilege to work on such a fantastic project. It all started with a
telephone call from Simon Lewis, the producer of the show. He told me they were working on an adaptation
from Zola’s Au bonheur des dames and sent
me the scripts for the first two episodes. Two weeks later I had already 10
minutes of music to play him, with all the main themes that are now part of the
show! Since then I have done 96 hours of orchestral recordings, most of them
with the BBC Concert Orchestra and we have recorded approximately 10 hours of
music for the show.
Have you got a favourite character, moment, episode in The Paradise?
I really love the entire show to bits.
What I love about this project is that I feel moved every single time I
sit down to write. I feel the emotions of the characters and I put them down
into music: I become part of their hopes and dreams and I contribute in
painting the colors of their world. Sometime I dream with them, hope with them,
love with them and when this happens the music becomes more authentic and it
arrives straight to the heart of the audience.
How
different is composing the soundtrack for a movie or TV series from just
composing music? I guess you must work at your music after watching the images
you are asked to comment. How difficult is that?
Basically when you are working for film the computer helps you to
synchronize the music with the movie. So the composer can watch the film and
watch the scene and listen to the dialogue while creating the music. When I
write for film every single line and word in the dialogue is taken into account
in composing the music. Sometimes though, I like to just think about the story
and compose without watching the film: often these ideas are stronger and give
more character to the film. I think if you are composing a good score the music
should have a life of its own and it should still breathe without the film.
None of my main themes come to me in front of a computer in my studio - I’d
rather have a melodic idea on a train or walking in a park or while I am
cooking!
Joanna Vanderham and Emun Elliott in a scene from series 1 |
I
think you did a brilliant job, amazing. I Love all the themes you composed for
this fabulous series but my favourite is the theme commenting on Denise/Moray
scenes. Has it got a special history?
When I saw Moray drawing Denise’s portrait at the beginning of the second
episode I thought that needed a new theme, I realized that would have to be
their love theme. For the first time it was obvious that Moray was falling in
love with Denise. It made me think immediately to the last time I fell in love:
do you remember the last time you fell in love?
For me it was an afternoon in Spring under a cherry tree. When I
composed the theme for Denise and Moray I was thinking about that moment, that
calm and tranquility. Once the theme was there I just had to let it grow,
following the story: it was natural for this idea to find fulfillment in the
last scene, “The Final Kiss”.
What
was the theme you most liked recording for The Paradise?
Definitely the piece “The Final Kiss” (the last track of the soundtrackalbum) composed for the last sequence of Season One was really special to
compose and to record. The entire studio was thrilled after the first reading by
the BBC Concert Orchestra. I felt really moved when I watched the entire scene
without the music: it is a big responsibility because you know that 6 million
fans (only in the UK) are looking forward to that scene, that final kiss. It
all came as a big crescendo, until the final kiss between Moray and Denise:
looking back on it, I had only 6 hours to compose that scene. I think that’s an example of something
magical happening between music and film.
What
can music add to a movie/series?
It depends on the show and the importance and space the producer gives to
the composer. Simon Lewis thinks that in ‘The Paradise’
the music is like an additional character, always ready to support the story
from the background or to play an important role when needed. I think the
themes of the Paradise are like old friends, and I realized this when I started
recording season 2: I have really enjoyed writing variations of the
themes. The music has evolved together
with the characters.
What
about the soundtrack for the new series? Is it new?
Definitely not completely new - most themes form part of the identity of
the series. But I can say that the music is different, the score has grown up
together with the characters and their stories, particularly Denise. When we met her at the opening of Season One
she was a little girl coming from the country side: now she is different, less
of a girl more of a woman. The music will reflect this and other changes.
Another difference is the use of the accordion, a new instrument to the score
of Paradise 2 that makes its debut from the first piece at the opening of the
show.
The BBC Concert Orchestra conducted by Jeff Atmajian recording The Paradise soundtrack - photo © François Sechet |
When
did you decide you wanted to be a musician and especially a composer?
I decided to become a composer after watching “Cinema Paradiso” when I
was ten. I was fascinated by the story of this young man leaving the small
village to go to the big city to create films. That’s exactly what I did 15
years later! Morricone’s music for the
film was simply amazing: the last scene, the long kiss sequence is breathtaking
- I have seen it so many times and everytime it feels like the first time. It was a privilege to grow up in Italy
in the 1980s listening to Morricone’s music in so many TV Shows: Marco
Polo, La Piovra, Secret of Sahara, The Betrothed (I promessi Sposi). I didn’t
realize at the time but we were getting the same quality in Italian TV that
Americans were getting in feature films such as The Untouchables, The Mission,
Casualties of War, all composed by Morricone.
Have
you got a composer or film composer you particularly admire?
Surely Ennio Morricone has an amazing skill to create a piece of music
that embodies the entire soul of a film in a few notes: great examples are
“Once upon a time in America” and “The Mission”. Sometimes he can repeat a
piece of music several times in a film, without many variations, and it always
works: this is because his music is so connected to the film that you might
even wonder if the film was created for the music or the music for the film? I
think Ennio is a great composer.
What
do you like watching at the cinema or on TV?
I love period dramas! I love Fellini, Kubrick, I am a fan of Joe Wright
and Dario Marianelli. I like the three colors by Kieslowski, the film “Blue” is
one of my favorites. Amadeus is another film that made me think I wanted to be
a composer. But I also love animation and the lightness in watching a cartoon:
after all I started my career with the maestro Bruno Bozzetto, the greatest
cartoonist Italy has ever produced.
Can
you watch a film without being distracted by your professional ear? I mean, can
you just enjoy a movie without being there analysing the relation
images/soundtrack all the time?
Yes, I can! Especially if the music is good I don’t think too much about
it and I enjoy the film. I get distracted only if the music is really bad!
I admit sometimes I go to the cinema to listen to the score: I would
never miss a note written by John Williams!
What’s
next for Maurizio Malagnini, the man and the composer?
I have received a couple of offers and I will restart reading scripts and
pitching for new projects.
Many
thanks for taking the time to answer my questions, Maurizio. Best wishes (in
bocca al lupo?) for all your future projects. Fingers crossed for The Paradise soundtrack CD and for ... a season 3!
Praise for The Paradise soundtrack
Rob Smedley, Cultbox, "The Paradise soundtrack album is So good, that it is probably the finest album of TV music you'll be able to buy this year."
Richard Buxton, Tracksounds “The quality of MALAGNINI’S music is to such a degree, and so consistently so, that it is impossible not to find oneself swept up in the moment, effortlessly transported back in time.”
Kaya Savas, "The Paradise is a brilliant masterpiece of musical storytelling".
Ho acquisto la colonna sonora di The Paradise non appena uscita in commercio.
ReplyDeleteL'adoro, come adoro la serie.
Complimenti a Malagnini, che ha saputo trasformare in note, la storia d'amore di Moray e Denise.
Mi fa molto orgoglio che sia italiano :)
Grazie per questa bellissima intervista al maestro Malagnini, le sue musiche fanno sognare e in The Paradise ci sta facendo emozionare ad ogni scena. Sono il valore aggiunto a questa serie. Con la sua sensibilità il maestro ha colto ogni stato d'animo dei personaggi e lo ha trasformato in note. Ormai mi basta ascoltare il brano per rievocare una certa scena. Complimenti!
ReplyDeletevery nice interview
ReplyDeleteStunningly beautiful music. After hearing it on The Paradise, I knew I had to download it from iTunes. I listen to it over and over all day long and never tire of it.
ReplyDeleteIt was so well suited for The Paradise. Especially the last scene in series 1...the kiss. It just wouldn't have been the same without the perfect music.