Springfield News-Sun

Are we in a new golden age for the movie soundtrack?

- Esther Zuckerman

After watching “I Saw the TV Glow,” the new film from director Jane Schoenbrun, I felt a sensation I hadn’t felt in a while: I need this soundtrack.

The genre-defying movie is a surreal story about two high schoolers in the 1990s who become obsessed with a “Buffy the Vampire Slayer”-like show called “The Pink Opaque.” It’s a rich film that draws on horror, ’90s television and Schoenbrun’s experience coming out as transgende­r.

But it also boasts some incredible tunes, like a hypnotic cover of Broken Social Scene’s “Anthems for a Seventeen-year-old Girl” by the artist yeule and performanc­es from King Woman, Sloppy Jane and Phoebe Bridgers, who appear on screen as musicians at a club the characters visit.

The full soundtrack has more to love: The swelling emotion of Caroline Polachek’s “Starburned and Unkissed” and the throwback rock of Proper’s “The 90s,” with lyrics about the TV show “Xena: Warrior Princess.” Listening, I felt like a kid again.

That was just Schoenbrun’s intention. The director thought the film needed a “great teen angst soundtrack.” But they were also nostalgic for the idea of soundtrack­s in general. They remembered thinking, “‘Wait, where did those go?’ You know, because the soundtrack­s of my youth were such a huge part of what brought me to movies,” they said

in a video call.

Citing soundtrack “canon picks” like “Donnie Darko,” “The Royal Tenenbaums” and “Garden State,” which turns 20 this year, they admit these are “pretty obvious slash perhaps a little embarrassi­ng” choices. I relate. I also had an ipod in the early 2000s filled with soundtrack­s, and one of the most frequently played was “Garden State.” The accompanim­ent to Zach Braff’s indie

breakout — about a man in the midst of a quarter-life crisis who goes home for his mother’s funeral — was as much a cultural moment as the actual film, going platinum and elevating bands like Frou Frou and the Shins.

Indeed, the beginning of the aughts felt like the last great heyday for the soundtrack. Think of the indie vibes of “Garden State,” the bluegrass foot-stompers of “O Brother, Where Art

Thou?” or even the pop rock of “Shrek.” (If you want embarrassm­ent, just ask me how much I loved that soundtrack.)

It wasn’t as if the soundtrack was anything new — tell that to “The Graduate” (1967), “Saturday Night Fever” (1977) or “Purple Rain” (1984) — but as streaming reshaped the music business, drawing attention away from albums, the soundtrack lost currency. You didn’t need to buy a whole CD if you were intrigued by one song from a movie, you could just queue it up on Spotify or another service. And to be clear, I’m not talking about soundtrack­s with mostly instrument­al scores or those for movie-musicals like “Frozen” (2013). Even “A Star Is Born” (2018) felt like an outlier because music was so integral to the plot.

But we might be in the midst of a new soundtrack golden age. The LP for “I Saw The TV Glow” arrives in the aftermath of the pop delights of the “Barbie” soundtrack, which climbed the Billboard 200 last summer and earned Billie Eilish and Finneas two Grammys and an Oscar for “What Was I Made For.” Last year the “Spider-man: Across the Spider-verse” soundtrack, from producer Metro Boomin, was filled with dreamy hip-hop that sounded like the kind of thing that the hero Miles Morales himself would have listened to. And on television, the Apple TV+ period piece about Chanel and Dior, “The New Look,” recruited Taylor Swift’s collaborat­or Jack Antonoff to produce covers of tunes from the era by modern artists like Florence and the Machine and the 1975.

Schoenbrun explained that when they brought their idea for the soundtrack to A24, the studio was excited. “I don’t think that a lot of filmmakers are as big contempora­ry music nerds as I am, and I think internally they had been trying to do more music stuff,” they said. A24 establishe­d a music arm, A24

Music, in 2021, and this month released an album of Talking Heads covers in conjunctio­n with its restoratio­n and rerelease of “Stop Making Sense.”

For Schoenbrun, the experience of building out the soundtrack, which mostly features original songs, was a creative endeavor unto itself: They chose the artists, many of whom are queer, with the idea of codifying scenes of musicians they believed were worthy of teen obsession. They made each artist a 10-song Spotify playlist for inspiratio­n.

Then Schoenbrun spent more than a year and a half listening to the resulting submission­s in different orders. (They firmly believe that a soundtrack should not feature the music in the same order in which it appears in the film.) “I really did feel like, ‘Oh I’m giving myself the best gift ever,’” they said. “‘I get to make a mixtape that doesn’t exist yet from scratch.’”

When Schoenbrun was working on the “TV Glow” soundtrack they said their producers asked why they were so obsessed with the musical element. “The way I would think about it is the soundtrack, if it works, reminds you of the movie and makes you want to revisit the movie,” they said.

“And the movie, if it works, reminds you of the soundtrack and makes you want to revisit the soundtrack. It becomes less like a ‘fun thing that I watched ... in the theater’ and more, I think especially in a teen angst specific sort of way, a part of you, a place to return to.”

 ?? A24 MUSIC VIA AP ?? The cover image for the soundtrack for the film “I Saw the TV Glow.” The film’s director, Jane Schoenbrun, thought it needed a “great teen angst soundtrack.” But she was also nostalgic for the idea of soundtrack­s in general.
A24 MUSIC VIA AP The cover image for the soundtrack for the film “I Saw the TV Glow.” The film’s director, Jane Schoenbrun, thought it needed a “great teen angst soundtrack.” But she was also nostalgic for the idea of soundtrack­s in general.

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