MTV
- August 2005
Title: Elliott Smith, Polyphonics Bring Balance To 'Thumbsucker'
Soundtrack
When
director Mike Mills began considering the music that would underscore
his coming-of-age teen dramedy "Thumbsucker," he remembered a similar,
albeit darker film: Hal Ashby's 1971 classic comedy, "Harold and Maude,"
which was scored entirely by
singer/songwriter
Cat Stevens.
Known primarily for his imaginative music
videos for '90s hipsters (Air, Cibo Matto, Jon Spencer Blues Explosion),
his graphic design and album art (Beastie Boys, Sonic Youth) and his
affiliation with Spike Jonze's skate video crew, Mills was originally
pegged as an ironist, but hopes the raw and emotional nature of "Thumbsucker"
will clear the misconception.
Influenced by Ashby's movie, Mills sought a
contemporary analogue to Stevens' folk-inflected songs, and settled upon
indie-rock auteur Elliott Smith, who died of an apparent suicide in 2003
(see
"Singer/Songwriter Elliott Smith Dead; Friends,
Fellow Musicians Pay Tribute"). Before Smith's death, the
director approached the singer about scoring his debut film, and to his
surprise, the reclusive Smith agreed.
"Elliott has always been
an artistic hero of mine," Mills said from his home in
Los Angeles, noting that
he'd met Smith in 2000, when he designed the artwork for the singer's
"Happiness" single. "I gave him the script and I was shocked that he
liked it and wanted to work on it."
Then Smith, who had
well-documented bouts with substance abuse, dropped from sight at around
the same time Mills cast the film and began shooting in
Portland, Oregon
(ironically, Smith's former hometown). Coincidentally, by the time Mills
had completed shooting the film, Smith began his recovery.
"I gave the script to him, and then he dropped
off the face of the earth," Mills said. "He went through his whole crazy
time, but by the time I was done with the film, he was making From a
Basement on a Hill [which was released posthumously last year] and I
was shocked that he was actually making music."
The two reconnected and Mills screened a
working version of the film for an enthusiastic Smith. The plan to score
the film was revived, only this time the pair came up with the idea of
recording a series of covers. "We didn't even know if we could possibly
afford getting all the rights to the music," Mills said, noting that
Smith had planned to cover Leonard Cohen's "Sisters of Mercy" and an
unspecified Neil Young song. "But that was the goal. It was just a crazy
idea, but Elliott was so into it."
Smith was no stranger to soundtrack work: He
garnered an Oscar nomination for his work on Gus Van Sant's 1997 film
"Good Will Hunting" and was approached by Wes Anderson to record Beatles
covers for "The Royal Tenenbaums," though the collaboration never came
to fruition (the film did use Smith's composition "Needle in the Hay").
The singer gave Mills a version of Big Star's ballad "Thirteen"
(previously released only as a snippet in the Jem Cohen short film
"Lucky Three") and "Let's Get Lost," a track that would eventually
surface on Basement.
In the last few weeks of Smith's life, he
completed a cover of Cat Stevens' "Trouble" for the soundtrack, which is
believed to be one of the last songs he ever recorded. According to
Mills, Smith also began work on a version of John Lennon's "Isolation"
before he passed away.
Distraught over Smith's death and left in the
lurch for his soundtrack, the filmmaker attended a show by the
Polyphonic Spree — a group that includes a 20-odd-member chorus and
performs wearing choral robes — that left him electrified and inspired.
"[The show] really changed all the molecules in
my body!" he enthused. "Their performance just made me feel like, 'Why
not be happy? Why aren't you choosing to be positive?' I walked out of
the theater and [felt], 'That's what I want people to feel like in the
film.' "
Galvanized, Mills
approached
Spree leader Tim Delaughter about picking up where Smith had left off.
Soon, the pair were creating a new vision for the film that would
combine Smith's vocal songs with the Spree's choral-driven
orchestrations.
"They rescued me, big
time," Mills said of the
Spree. "In more ways than one — personally and the film's
emotion. They provided the glue for the film."
To Mills, the balance of Smith's emotionally
vulnerable covers and the Polyphonic Spree's inspiring score was the
perfect balance for the film's tone. "The Spree is a lot darker than
people [think], and Elliott was a lot more positive than most people
associate him with being, and in a way they're both very
Beatles-influenced, so it's all in a musical family."
"Thumbsucker" is due in theaters September 16;
the soundtrack will arrive three days earlier and includes alternate and
unreleased Polyphonic Spree tracks not featured in the film.
Track list for the
Thumbsucker soundtrack, according to Hollywood Records:
·
The Crash
Scream & Shout
Slow Halls
What Would You Let Go
Empty Rooms
Wonderful For You
The Rebecca Fantasy
Thirteen (Elliott Smith)
Pink Trash Dream
The Green Lights
Debate Montage (Compliments of Tripping Daisy)
Trouble (Elliott Smith)
Skinny Dip
Sourness Makes It Right
Some Of The Parts
Matt Schraam
Let's Get Lost (Elliott Smith)
Justin's Hypnosis
The Call of the Wild
Wait And See
Move Away And Shine
Acceptance
Move Away And Shine (In A Dream Version)
— Rodrigo Perez