Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

How ‘ Succession’ composer captured the series’ gravitas

- By Sonia Rao

The piano is remarkable for its ability to act as a chameleon, composer Nicholas Britell recently mused, noting that it can produce light poetic sound as easily as it can transform into a more intense, powerful instrument. Tenderness can emanate one moment, passionate anger in the next.

Such melodies are present throughout “Succession,” the HBO drama that last year marked Mr. Britell’s first foray into television score and recently earned the two- time Oscar nominee his first Emmy nod.

Before recording the nominated main title theme, which returned Sunday to households that hold fast to appointmen­t television, Mr. Britell de- tuned the piano to “make it a little stranger.”

“You can draw any symbolism from that,” he joked, days before the season two premiere. “But I actually prefer listening to music that isn’t perfectly in tune. When things are perfect, they lose a little bit of their humanness. What I love most about hearing musicians play music is that they’re real people with individual sounds and a set of emotions. When things are too perfect, you lose that.”

Mr. Britell layered the title theme’s piano melody over a hip- hop beat, abandoning the tinkering tune for roaring strings about 15 seconds into the 90- second track. The melody returns close to the end. The results are dissonant but radiate gravitas — fitting for a sometimes absurdist show centering on the dysfunctio­nal family of an aging media mogul. The scheming Roys consistent­ly snipe at one another, as do the piano keys, but all of that gives way to loud, sweeping drama from time to time.

The first season of “Succession,” for instance, concluded on a darker note — with the onetime heir apparent, Kendall Roy ( Jeremy Strong), who struggles with addiction, winding up in a Chappaquid­dick- like incident on his sister’s wedding night. Kendall had planned to rebel against their manipulati­ve father, Logan Roy ( Brian Cox), to gain control of the company but must now return to the family’s side with his tail between his legs after Logan gets his people to cover up the fatal accident.

Mr. Britell works to ensure his music feels “like it’s somehow woven into the fabric” of every project, he said. The second season of “Succession,” which picks up a couple of days after Kendall’s accident, features foreboding strings in the very first scene.

“I was actually talking to some of my colleagues, ‘ What if I imagined the score for season two as almost like a second movement of a symphony?’ We’re going somewhere else, but it’s completely connected at the same time,” Mr. Britell said. “I’m still exploring a lot of the same instrument­al and tonal universe, but the music itself, I hope, feels like a next step in the story.”

The “Succession” score almost serves as a secondary character, adding weight to the narrative but bending to the Roys’ every whim. Logan, a snarky and intimidati­ng force, felt as though he would prefer “this very dark, sort of quirky classical music,” Mr. Britell said, whereas it is establishe­d at various points that Kendall listens to hip- hop. In collaborat­ion with creator Jesse Armstrong and executive producer Adam McKay, the composer also aimed to juxtapose the “seriousnes­s” of wealth and power being so concentrat­ed with the “crazy moments and absurditie­s of the story.”

Among the first pieces Mr. Britell played for Mr. Armstrong was an experiment­al “combinatio­n of weird bell sounds and out- oftune pianos and these huge hip- hop beats that I was making.”

Mr. Armstrong “kind of does it all,” Mr. Britell continued. “The show has this very complex set of tones; there’s this darkness but there’s also this humor. The hope was that the music would capture both of those, and wouldn’t step on either one of them too much. ... I found that whenever something was funny, if I made the music even more serious, it helped the humor. That was an interestin­g artistic discovery.”

After attending the precollege division of Juilliard, Mr. Britell studied psychology at Harvard — alongside Natalie Portman, with whom he’s worked since — where he wrote music for and toured with a hip- hop band called the Witness Protection Program. (“The WPP,” he said, laughing.) He spent hours making beats each day, cementing a love for the genre that, before “Succession,” manifested in the chopped- and- screwed elements of the score to Barry Jenkins’ best- picture winner, “Moonlight,” for which Mr. Britell earned his first Oscar nomination. ( Mr. Jenkins’ next film, “If Beale Street Could Talk,” earned Mr. Britell his second.)

Before composing full time, Mr. Britell traded currencies — an apt gig in hindsight, given how arithmetic music can be. He first collaborat­ed with Mr. McKay on “The Big Short,” a 2015 film about the lead- up to the financial crisis that, while different in subject and tone, shares the calculatin­g quality of “Succession.”

“Adam’s first question to me was, ‘ What is the sound of dark math?’” Mr. Britell recalled. “I had this idea of layering all these pianos on top of each other, and seeing if there was a way to create something that occasional­ly would line up and feel very stable and in between those moments would feel very unstable, kind of a metaphor for the financial markets.”

Having establishe­d a relationsh­ip with Mr. McKay, Mr. Britell knew going into “Succession” what their process would be like. But the series posed a new artistic challenge for the composer, given how much more real estate there is in television. Mr. Britell had to stretch his vision of a score’s architectu­re — where to introduce certain ideas, where they might return, what emotions to trigger in viewers, what the show wants to say symbolical­ly — to fit 10 hours of material, as opposed to the two- ish hours of a feature- length film.

“There’s always this question of, what is the music supposed to say? How is it supposed to feel?” he said. “I have this philosophy that there’s an infinite number of possible scores for something, and you end up finding one of them. You chart this path where, for you, it just feels right.”

It seems to feel right to most fans of the show, too, as the striking title theme has become a vital component of “Succession” discourse online. Lots of people have gone so far as to remix the track, according to Mr. Britell, who added that he has “seen a few people lay some rhymes on the beat as well.”

“It’s amazing, honestly,” he said. “The dream of any artist or any composer is to be able to share music in the first place — that’s the primary goal, I think. But the true hope is that people hear it, and it moves them, and they dig it.”

The soundtrack to the first season of “Succession” is now streaming online.

 ?? Peter Kramer/ HBO ?? Brian Cox plays media mogul Logan Roy on HBO’s “Succession.” Composer Nicholas Britell says he tries to create a soundtrack that juxtaposes the seriousnes­s and absurdity brought on by the characters’ great wealth and power.
Peter Kramer/ HBO Brian Cox plays media mogul Logan Roy on HBO’s “Succession.” Composer Nicholas Britell says he tries to create a soundtrack that juxtaposes the seriousnes­s and absurdity brought on by the characters’ great wealth and power.

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