Tag: Audio

  • Keeping Score | A Segment on Original Soundtracks

    Keeping Score | A Segment on Original Soundtracks

    5 Great Shows that are Elevated by their Original Atmospheric Soundtracks

    Oh Yeah!

    There are times when you tend to doom-scroll your way through the never ending list of streaming platforms and are incapable of zoning in on that one piece of content that will satiate your cravings both on and off the screen – you’re most probably going to be punching that remote while that pizza gets cold!

    Whenever I veer down that path, I don’t just give up and watch a re-run. HELL NO! I revert to the process of scrolling – albeit on another app, my IMDB List to be precise – and browse through a horrendously large catalogue of directors, cinematographers, composers, actors & studios, studying their filmographies and shortlisting pieces I may have missed out on.

    The faster way around this would just be to fire up my Watchlist. But that’s the painstakingly easier route. Who wants easy?! After all…

    Photo: Courtesy FanPop

    Over the years, the process has yet to disappoint and is my go to method to find diamonds in the rough. Coincidentally – or maybe not – some of the best content has received acclaim because of their well rounded, immersive and enriching sound compositions.

    I’ve always been fascinated by soundscapes – with my appreciation only growing and blossoming after developing ‘For The Love Of’.

    After all that hard work – yes, you’re welcome! – you’re just a click away. Here are 5 Great Shows that are Elevated by their Original Atmospheric Soundtracks.

    As a bonus, each show will start off with how I came to know about these by association – a list tracing the journey from a known piece of content to the show in question.


    ZeroZeroZero

    Amazon Prime Video

    Photo: Courtesy Amazon Prime Video

    Dane DeHaan is an extremely enigmatic character in the industry yet a truly magnetic force who continues to churn out some fascinating work. But he’s not the only reason I turned to the crime thriller by Stefano Sollima.

    Enter Mogwai, one of my favourite post-rock bands, and I was sold!

    Mogwai | Photo: Courtesy Neale Smith/Press

    Synopsis: “Following a consignment of cocaine from the moment a powerful Italian cartel decides to buy the cocaine until it has been delivered and paid for. On the way, it is packed in Mexico and transported across the Atlantic.”

    A sweeping & atmospheric score – that breathes, swells and builds as the story unfolds – coupled with a gorgeous Title Sequence that brilliantly sets the tone for what comes next. We really need to get rid of that Skip Intro Button!

    P.S. Mogwai returns to the small screen with ‘Black Bird’ an Apple TV+ limited series starring Taron Egerton.


    Industry

    Disney+ / HBO

    • The Investigation (absolutely love True Crime. HBO does a great job at these and it’s even better if the BBC is involved)
    • HBO Series
    • Industry (a fresh show, with new faces and what do you know?! In association with the BBC!)
    Photo: Courtesy HBO

    There aren’t many tv shows that have exhilaratingly beautiful scores that pull you in from the get go. But this right here is an exception. Nathan Micay’s ambient soundscape sets the tone straight off the bat – elevating and embodying the fast paced and high stakes culture in HBO’s ‘Industry’. ⁣

    Nathan Micay | Photo: Courtesy Karina Galindo

    Synopsis: “Young finance graduates venture out in the cut-throat competitive world to get a job during the recession times that followed as a result of the 2008 financial crisis.”⁣

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PbM84z4XYgc

    With Season 2 on its way – and Jay Duplass (Transparent) joining in on the fun – ‘Industry’ is on the up!

    Here’s a deep dive: Nathan Micay on creating the music behind HBO’s ‘Industry’ | Composer Magazine

    P.S. The Season 2 trailer dropped while writing this! Micay returns and mixes things up a bit. Can’t Wait!


    Hannibal

    Amazon Prime Video

    Photo: Courtesy NBC

    Bryan Fuller’s ‘Hannibal’ surprisingly still remains one of the most sophisticated, gorgeous and tastefully crafted tv shows – an undisputed champion of the genre – considering it’s about a sociopath who devours his victims.

    Apart from serving up a stunning and sumptuous visual treat, Brian Reitzell brings purpose, richness and a sense of foreboding – through an amalgamation of ambient sounds – to the critically acclaimed psychological horror series.

    Brian Reitzell | Photo: Courtesy Louder than War

    Synopsis: “Will, a criminal profiler with a unique ability, slowly sees his sanity taking a hit. The FBI advises he see Hannibal Lecter, a forensic psychiatrist who is secretly a cannibalistic serial killer.”

    Here’s a deep dive: Composer Brian Reitzell Explains His Psychotic Music for NBC’s Hannibal | Vulture

    P.S. Having spent some time on Netflix and now on Prime, I really hope they revive the show for one last hurrah! Bryan Fuller himself has put out a petition. What are you waiting for?


    Chernobyl

    Disney+ / HBO

    Photo: Courtesy Feedly

    Craig Mazin is a genius. A fantastic cast combined with one of the most horrific true stories – a mini-series to fill that large void created by that lousy Game of Thrones ending – gave rise to

    With HBO’s mini series ‘Chernobyl’, the creators made an intriguing choice in Hildur Ingveldardóttir Guðnadóttir who is an Icelandic musician and composer and a classically trained cellist. ⁣

    Hildur Guðnadóttir | Photo: Timothée Lambrecq

    Synopsis: “In April 1986, the city of Chernobyl in the Soviet Union suffers one of the worst nuclear disasters in the history of mankind. Consequently, many heroes put their lives on the line to save Europe.

    In order to capture the bleak and foreboding atmosphere of the show, Hildur created the ambient tracks by recording the sounds of a decommissioned power plant in Lithuania – a hauntingly beautiful soundtrack that is both ominous and frenetic.

    Here’s a deep dive: Anyone Can Write Music” – An Interview With Hildur Guðnadóttir | Score It Magazine


    Succession

    Disney+ / HBO

    • It’s no coincidence that 3 out of the 5 shows are HBO originals/collaborations. Also, Billions had started losing some steam.
    • HBO Series
    • Succession (the rest is history!)
    Photo: Courtesy HBO

    Where would we be without this wondrous, messy, over-the-top drama?!

    Nicholas Britell has been hailed as one of the most important composers of our time and has worked on some fantastic films – Moonlight, If Beale Street Could Talk, The Big Short.

    Nicholas Britell | Photo: Courtesy The Playlist

    Synopsis: “The Logan family is known for controlling the biggest media and entertainment company in the world. However, their world changes when their father steps down from the company.”

    Britell enthrals the senses by perfectly capturing the essence of power, money & greed, and giving them their due, through his inimitable score and Opening Theme.

    Here’s a deep dive: ‘Succession’ Composer Nicholas Britell On the Show’s Hypnotic Theme, Working With Pusha-T, and “L to the O-G” | Complex

    P.S. He’s busy working on ‘Andor‘ at the moment.


  • Speculative Futures | The Age of Podcasts

    Speculative Futures | The Age of Podcasts

    Charting the meteoric rise and the ever changing landscape of the medium.

    Yeah. What’s written above.

    This ain’t going to be a puff piece on podcasting. It’s not going to dive into the numbers and statistics and nor will it bore you to death about the billions of dollars the untapped industry stands to generate.

    Eh, in all probability it will end up being just that!

    But, for a complete backstory and the History of Podcasting you should check out well, ‘The History of Podcasting’. If only everything else were that simple!

    Fun Fact: According to Wikipedia, “In October 2000, the concept of attaching sound and video files in RSS feeds was proposed in a draft by Tristan Louis. The idea was implemented by Dave Winer, a software developer and an author of the RSS format.”

    This is mostly a fun fact because I wrote an article about RSS Readers – How I Read Online – a couple of weeks ago. Just reminding you all. And now you know, if you didn’t.

    Photo: Courtesy Feedly

    So where were we? Aah! Yes.

    Podcasts.

    With the advent of ‘Big Little Screens’ – Yes. Very Meta of me! – we were ushered into an era where radio started being shunned and the visual was everything. Our eyes were being trained and conditioned to look at shiny white pearls, like tiny drops of rain on a leaf, glistening and sliding across the surface until one encounters another.

    Enamoured, entranced, and not knowing where to look next, the digital age ensnared the senses – run by the might of Technical Boy (An American Gods reference, and this is controversial, but I feel the show is better than the book) – and successfully frying our eyes out of our sockets and rendering us oblivious to the world around.

    The first time I ever read the word ‘podcast’ was when I decided to ditch Winamp – still alive and ‘Whippin’ the Llama’s *ss’ apparently – and fire up the freshest and hippest audio player you could lay your hands on – iTunes. There was a dedicated Podcast tab and whenever I’d click on it, it would lead to a window which had absolutely nothing on it. Ingenious!

    Photo: Courtesy Winamp

    Alright. Alright. It was mostly me not knowing what to do.

    But to be fair, you can’t just dump an esoteric niche feature – lying in the far reaches of an undiscovered World Wide Web – on a teenager whose sole purpose was to blast those tunes while staring into the hypnotic void of a visualiser.

    The second instance of a close encounter was when Mugglenet – The #1 Wizarding World Resource since 1999 – started its own audio segment called MuggleCast. Yes, they still exist!

    Photo: Courtesy Mugglenet

    Fast forward an entire decade. The year is 2018, I still don’t know what all the fuss is about.

    Until one dark terrifying night.

    Streaks of light flashed across the sky and the heavens rumbled as The All-Father – yeah, still on that American Gods trip – clapped his hands with glee – fear and trepidation hung in the air. Visual fatigue coupled with a desire to embrace the rhythm and flavour of the night, egged me on to finally follow Alice down the rabbit hole.

    But where does one begin?

    A quick google search brought up multiple links with lists of the top podcasts. One name stood right at the top of each of them – Serial. A show that had grown into a hugely successful investigative journalism non-fiction narrative, spanning multiple episodes. In hindsight, it’s safe to say, had Serial not been around, my foray into the world of audio storytelling would have stopped dead in its tracks.

    Engrossing, taut, chilling and exquisitely crafted, the show was the perfect gateway into the world of audio narratives. With three seasons under its belt – it’s an anthology – Serial set the bar for what podcasts could be and inspired countless other shows across genres.

    The rest is history. Listen in.

    All The World’s a Stage

    While journalism paved the way, there’s been an interesting twist, in recent years, with a sudden surge in content that caught everyone off-guard.

    When it comes to the entertainment industry, podcasts have become a medium for going beyond the obvious visual experience – by trying to add an extra dimension and layer, prior to the involuntary action of googling, right after watching your favourite shows. Streaming giants like Netflix, Amazon, Apple, HBO are either buying companies (Gimlet Media, Wondery, Anchor or are setting up studios – pushing original content or spinning off their existing shows into companion series.

    Turns out Sidekicks are pretty cool!

    HBO, for example, has been doubling down on its strategy of rolling out most of its limited series (some extremely popular dramas like Succession have made the cut as well) with companion shows – diving deeper into the development and production with behind interviews with the writers, directors, actors and producers – providing fans a holistic and well rounded ‘complete’ experience – Chernobyl and Watchmen being some of the best companion podcasts out there.

    Photo: Courtesy HBO

    On the other hand, Scripted Originals and Audio Dramas are charting their own course and trailblazing a path that’s a win-win for creators and consumers alike.

    Rami Malek’s ‘Blackout’ (an apocalyptic thriller, now into its second season) and Cynthia Erivo’s ‘Carrier’ (a sci-fi thriller) stand out as extraordinary audio experiences that prove you don’t really need the heft of large studios.  

    But, Marvel seems to have its own little game plan with Wolverine (starring Richard Armitage as Logan), Marvels (Silver Surfer vs Galactus anyone?), and the recent launch of Marvel’s Wastelanders – set in the Old Man Logan Universe with a keen focus on Wolverine, Star-Lord, Hawkeye and Black Widow

    In some cases, podcasts have made the switch from audio to full blown visual content in Serial – The Case Against Adnan Syed, Limetown, Lore and Homecoming.

    It’s an exciting time for fans of the medium. But in the end, you’ll have to ‘Toss a Coin To Your Witcher’. What?! It’s catchy!

    Join the Billion Dollar Club

    With narcissistic creatives stuck at home – including actors/comedians/architects (yeah, I’m adding myself to the list) – over the past year and a half, there’s only a finite amount of time you can spend inside your head.

    There needed to be an outlet and most turned to the wonderfully lucr *cough*ative world of podcasting. Who would have thought that the Podcasting Industry needed Hollywood? What a shocker! Aided by the pandemic, the podcasting space has morphed into a whole new kind of beast.

    ‘Smartless’ is an excellent case in point! Now an Amazon Original, the show raked in a cool $80 Million, and the latest episode will be available a week before other podcast services.

    At least some have had the good fortune of tapping into that billion-dollar industry! Yeah you read that right. Mr. World is at it again. Sheesh! Julie Miller over at Vanity Fair takes us through the Celebrities who ‘Flocked to Podcasting for Fun & Profit’. But hey! I don’t mean to complain, podcasting is serious business and I’m delighted that creators are finally getting their due.

    In fact, you could and should try starting one yourself. All you need is something to talk about (duh!), a mic and a distribution platform like Anchor, and you’re good to go!

    There’s a complete guide over on the Anchor website – How to Start a Podcast.

    Photo: Courtesy Anchor

    But you don’t have to follow this completely. The ideal way to record would be in person, but since the end of the world is nigh, I would recommend recording over zoom – which has multi-track support – or even trying out Zencastr.

    For editing, you’ve got a ton of options! Audacity is a free open-source audio editor that should get you cranking out those episodes in no time. Alternatively, Reaper is an inexpensive powerhouse when it comes to digital audio workstations – it has a 60-day free evaluation period but can be a bit clunky and overwhelming.  

    And, if you’ve got a Mac, then you could start with GarageBand or even jump straight to Logic Pro.

    Parth (Co-Creator over at Frndship Time, along with Ratik) has broken down his process of editing episodes which could help you out as well! 100 percent!

    Where to Get Your Fix

    This would have been incomplete without a vital piece of information. Where should one listen?

    It may seem obvious with Apple Podcasts, Spotify and Amazon Music ruling the roost– and it’s looking increasingly likely that the three will control a large chunk of the industry – but if you’re like me and want a consolidated podcast experience, read on!

    Pocket Casts (available on both Android and iOS) is one solid podcast app, that I’ve been using since 2018. While it has shifted to a subscription-based model, it should do the trick if you’re looking for a well-designed experience. Now that it’s been acquired by Automattic (the folks who own WordPress) expect some interesting updates and integrations soon.

    Photo: Courtesy Pocket Casts

    Here’s the scoop – Popular Podcast App Pocket Casts Joins Automattic.

    In the midst of uncertainty – I had a Laura Moon moment. Before Pocket Casts found its new home, that is – I tried experimenting with Castro – a beautifully designed. However, this one is only available for iOS users at the moment.

    Photo: Courtesy Castro

    Finally for a barebones experience that works on both Android and iOS – Google Podcasts. Enough said.

    Photo: Courtesy The Verge

    The Future is Here

    First.

    Photo: Courtesy Apple

    Subscriptions. Subscriptions. And more Subscriptions!

    Get ready to splurge folks, because the billion-dollar industry can’t conjure up cash out of thin air. Back in 2005, Steve Jobs had called Podcasts ‘the future of audio’ and well, the man is still getting things right!

    I believe Apple’s subscription model has already upended the landscape – and for the better in the long run – but shaking things up for the sole benefit of a corporate empire will piss a lot of people off. Here’s an article about it by Ashley Carman for The Verge Apple’s Attempt at Podcast Subscriptions is Off to a Messy Start.

    Second.

    Photo: Courtesy Ossa Podcast Network

    We’ll be looking at a bunch of Originals and Exclusives – Joe Rogan on Spotify or Smartless on Wondery/Amazon – that will only be available on certain apps going forward. While the quality, content and pay for creators will drastically improve, the idea of subscribing to numerous apps just for a particular show will become cumbersome and extremely annoying. You could argue that we already do that with streaming platforms like Netflix, HBO Max, Prime Video & Disney+. But, from an ecosystem that has been open to all to one that becomes fragmented, may not be everyone’s cup of tea. But who cares about the consumer right?

    With exclusivity and individual subscription models, comes an added headache of distribution. And creators, this one is for you. If you’ve been using Anchor for cross-platform niceties, this could all change if Spotify decides to drop major players like Apple from their list. Unlikely to happen anytime soon, but the possibility does exist.

    Third.

    Photo: Courtesy Clubhouse

    We just have to address the elephant in the room. Clubhouse.

    No, this isn’t the future of podcasting. It’s long form spoken word Twitter. While helpful for events and spontaneous discussions, Clubhouse has already devolved into a cesspool of hate. Sure, there may be podcasts that do the same. But, YOU decide what you want to hear. Live audio sessions, on the other hand, can spiral out of control in a matter of seconds. Here’s an article over at The Verge: A Clubhouse Conversation has Sparked Accusations of Anti-Semitism.

    And Finally.

    Photo: Courtesy Apple TV

    While, scripted shows and companion podcasts make the entire experience a whole lot richer and raise the level of gratification by a couple of notches, there’s still room to push the envelope.

    What really blew me away was the mixed medium format – with Apple TV’s ‘Calls’. The creator seeks to capitalise on our creativity and amplify our ability to imagine new worlds – effectively serving up a unique experience to each listener.

    These are exciting times for audio dramas and with ‘Calls’ we have a sure-fire winner on our hands – a true sci-fi horror series that speaks volumes without doing much and one that feeds on our own individual deep-rooted fears.

    Would this have worked only as a podcast without those weird minimal visualisations? Probably not. You’ll understand soon enough. The Universe Did It

    Additional Resources

    Some More Favourites!

    Ratik, Parth and I talk about our love for podcasts on Frndship Time. Go give it a listen!

    It’s a two Part Episode.