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The White Vault - Unsealed - Brandon Boone and Travis Vengroff

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Manage episode 272747445 series 2503418
Content provided by John Bartmann. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by John Bartmann or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The piece of music we’re listening to in the background is called Unsealed. It's the mysterious title theme for season three of the audio drama The White Vault. Today, we'll break it down and look at some of the insights into why and how it was made. You're listening to How I Make Music, where behind-the-scenes musicians get to tell their own stories. Every Wednesday, we break apart a song soundtrack or composition and get into why and how it was made. My name is Brandon Boone. I'm a composer from Cincinnati, and this is How I Make Music.

IN THIS EPISODE

01:17 Intro

I used to have a cello that I rented for like a year for some projects and people would see it in my room like oh, you play cello. I'm like, no, I just use it. I just use a cello. I don't play it. I took lessons with the strictest teacher from Russia who had like the old school like slap on the wrist if you do it wrong.

02:13 Two versions

So today we're looking at two versions of the song unsealed from the white vault. There is the first version that was used in season one and two and then the second version and season three and four. For season one, we were going for a more isolated cold feeling in Antarctica with these researchers. Whereas in season three and four, we wanted to do something more South American and so we started to introduce more instruments from that region.

03:13 Influences

What's most noticeable about the theme song is that heartbeat that's throughout the whole piece. We drew on that from Ennio Morricone’s title track for The Thing. Here's how that sounds. This desolate, lonely research facility. So I kind of tried to start with that heartbeat feeling and glass sounds, sounding as cold as possible. While still having a melody to it. That simplicity kind of lends to being kind of memorable and you recognize it when you hear it. Separating our found footage story is a documentarian who's compiling it together. As she speaks, we have the drone from unsealed playing underneath, to glue the production together.

05:00 A 40-person choir

The expression on my face when Travis called me he's like, how do you feel about writing for a 40 person choir? And I'm just like, yeah, I'll figure it We'll figure that out! We worked with a friend - Steven Melin - quite a bit on this piece. Travis mentioned that there was a choir. And so I wrote the choir piece on my computer and then sent the score to him.

05:32 Remote recording

Steven did the orchestration for the choir. He's very much a classical musician. So you can't just write notes on a paper, there's actually a lot that goes into it. And the directing session also was quite terrifying because I was suddenly directing a choir for the first time in my life. And it was quite the experience at four in the morning. They’re in Hungary. They have a unique Skype-like service that has zero latency, perfect audibility of exactly what your wave will sound like, in real time. It's both exhilarating and terrifying. With 40 people, you've got a split of gender, and you've got a split of alto, soprano, etc. We had different variations of the arrangements. So we've got one where it's just the women doing the higher end voices, whereas there are a lot of rest notes for the lower end. So there are a lot of variations within the choir.

06:54 South American version

For season three and four, we wanted to do something more South American, and so we started to introduce more instruments from that region. What you're hearing right now is a live guitar played by Steven Melin for a track. Hearing the scrapes and taps and breath of an actual guitar is something that's very difficult to fake. Even with high quality samples. There's also an ocarina , which is a small handheld wind instrument. You're probably familiar with it if you've played Zelda. There’s some really cool percus

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  continue reading

54 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 272747445 series 2503418
Content provided by John Bartmann. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by John Bartmann or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

The piece of music we’re listening to in the background is called Unsealed. It's the mysterious title theme for season three of the audio drama The White Vault. Today, we'll break it down and look at some of the insights into why and how it was made. You're listening to How I Make Music, where behind-the-scenes musicians get to tell their own stories. Every Wednesday, we break apart a song soundtrack or composition and get into why and how it was made. My name is Brandon Boone. I'm a composer from Cincinnati, and this is How I Make Music.

IN THIS EPISODE

01:17 Intro

I used to have a cello that I rented for like a year for some projects and people would see it in my room like oh, you play cello. I'm like, no, I just use it. I just use a cello. I don't play it. I took lessons with the strictest teacher from Russia who had like the old school like slap on the wrist if you do it wrong.

02:13 Two versions

So today we're looking at two versions of the song unsealed from the white vault. There is the first version that was used in season one and two and then the second version and season three and four. For season one, we were going for a more isolated cold feeling in Antarctica with these researchers. Whereas in season three and four, we wanted to do something more South American and so we started to introduce more instruments from that region.

03:13 Influences

What's most noticeable about the theme song is that heartbeat that's throughout the whole piece. We drew on that from Ennio Morricone’s title track for The Thing. Here's how that sounds. This desolate, lonely research facility. So I kind of tried to start with that heartbeat feeling and glass sounds, sounding as cold as possible. While still having a melody to it. That simplicity kind of lends to being kind of memorable and you recognize it when you hear it. Separating our found footage story is a documentarian who's compiling it together. As she speaks, we have the drone from unsealed playing underneath, to glue the production together.

05:00 A 40-person choir

The expression on my face when Travis called me he's like, how do you feel about writing for a 40 person choir? And I'm just like, yeah, I'll figure it We'll figure that out! We worked with a friend - Steven Melin - quite a bit on this piece. Travis mentioned that there was a choir. And so I wrote the choir piece on my computer and then sent the score to him.

05:32 Remote recording

Steven did the orchestration for the choir. He's very much a classical musician. So you can't just write notes on a paper, there's actually a lot that goes into it. And the directing session also was quite terrifying because I was suddenly directing a choir for the first time in my life. And it was quite the experience at four in the morning. They’re in Hungary. They have a unique Skype-like service that has zero latency, perfect audibility of exactly what your wave will sound like, in real time. It's both exhilarating and terrifying. With 40 people, you've got a split of gender, and you've got a split of alto, soprano, etc. We had different variations of the arrangements. So we've got one where it's just the women doing the higher end voices, whereas there are a lot of rest notes for the lower end. So there are a lot of variations within the choir.

06:54 South American version

For season three and four, we wanted to do something more South American, and so we started to introduce more instruments from that region. What you're hearing right now is a live guitar played by Steven Melin for a track. Hearing the scrapes and taps and breath of an actual guitar is something that's very difficult to fake. Even with high quality samples. There's also an ocarina , which is a small handheld wind instrument. You're probably familiar with it if you've played Zelda. There’s some really cool percus

Support the show
  continue reading

54 episodes

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