Girls Gone Canon Cast - HIS DARK MATERIALS Patreon Episode: The Music of His Dark Materials with The Dust Podcast
Episode Date: September 24, 2021Due to some personal life updates, we're experiencing a few production delays—but that just means all of you get bonus episodes! Our regularly scheduled episode for The Amber Spyglass will be delaye...d a few days, for release between September 26-28, but until then, please enjoy this special episode brought to you by The Dust Podcast (check out their links below!) and our patrons. When season/series 2 of the His Dark Materials show ended, we joined our good friends Matt (Double M) and Holly of The Dust Podcast to dissect some of our favorite musical moments in the show and what makes the music of His Dark Materials so good. This episode, though, is just a snippet, a taste of the sort of musical analysis and story analysis that you can get regularly from The Dust, so be sure to check them out and subscribe to them. SPOILERS ALL THREE MAIN TRILOGY BOOKS AND SEASONS 1 AND 2 OF HIS DARK MATERIALS The Dust Podcast Twitter - https://twitter.com/thedustpodcast Holly's Twitter - https://twitter.com/Huntpants Matt's Twitter - https://twitter.com/musicalconcepts Matt's Audio Blog - https://mattsaudioblog.com/ The Dust Podcast on Apple Podcasts - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-dust-a-his-dark-materials-podcast/id1466312718 Other Links Mentioned Æsahættr (metal band) - https://aesahaettr.bandcamp.com/ Philip Pullman's favorite songs - https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09bbdlr Città gazze by Portico Quartet - https://youtu.be/cN4kn7SdQq8 Jacob Collier songs -  https://youtu.be/RIZzsx52sPI Green Valley by Puscifer - https://youtu.be/Y4Y9TO3X5WM
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everyone, and welcome to Girls Gone Canon, Patreon episode 29.
Patreon episode 29.
The music of His Dark Materials
with a special guest.
The Dust Podcast.
But also,
I am one of your hosts. Oh wait, shit.
Your other host wants to tell you about us all.
They know who we are.
Oh my god, no.
Eliana, they know who we are.
It's us.
It's not about us right now.
It's about our friends Matt and Holly from the Dust Podcast.
I am thrilled.
This is a very exciting day.
Most pleasing to my His Dark Materials podcasting career.
Thank you so much.
How the hell are you two?
I will say first, and then I will turn over to Holly.
But I feel like the kitchen boy has finally been invited to the scholars table.
Thank you so much for having me. I appreciate it.
This is Matt. For those of you who have not heard my voice before, Holly, how about you? How you feeling?
I am feeling unqualified to be here. You're the music guy, but I am very, very happy to be here.
I've been longtime fans of you
too so this is really exciting when worlds collide thank you again for coming i'm so excited you two
are so silly you're cracking me up because matt is as much a scholar as any over here with all
of his musical claim to fame all the i'm excited for all the takes on music and then holly and i
are going to be shit posting in the margins during this episode and eliana and holly i feel like will be kindred
souls shit posting in the margins which is what this is all about and i do have to say you're
saying you're sitting at the scholars table but i want to remind folks at home that this is the
podcast with the take that joppery was edging for many years
and that's why he was able to bring down the Zeppelins in the sky.
I mean, it's true.
I watched an anime meme
and it said that you become a wizard if you're a virgin until you're 30.
And that's what happened.
Joppery.
Will was immaculate, you know what I mean?
Conception-wise. it's a religious joke.
Friends in the holiday season.
If you don't get that one.
Happy holidays from your podcast to ours.
This is crazy.
The season's done.
The series, sorry.
The series is done.
Us Americans got to recall that it's a series, not a season.
And I know that you two have been slammed putting out not just first looks at episodes, but second looks.
You crazy people.
What is up with that?
You're like going in depth.
Every scene, every moment.
Let us know what you've been up to.
What's on the docket for next year for 2021?
Holly, you got plans for, are you even staying with the podcast?
I mean.
As long as we quit the three words, then I will stay.
Oh, shit.
Or what's worse.
Actually, let's quit what's worse.
That one's worse.
Oh, my.
Yeah. We've had a lot one's worse. Oh, my. Yeah.
We've had a lot of fun doing two episodes a week.
It's just the sheer amount of feedback that we get, and especially with the delay between
the UK airing and the US airing, it almost feels like it's doing a disservice to the
American audience if we don't put a second episode out.
Plus, being the music geek that I am, there's always more to talk about for each episode.
Yeah, that delay has been killer, hasn't it?
It's not a great choice for me, personally, gonna say.
Yeah, it sucked.
Unfun. It was an unfun wait.
Yeah, one day behind last season last series and now we're like two
two whole episodes behind every week it's sad it's it's tough to be an american it's so hard
actually in some ways real hard yeah uh i know we deserve it but i mean and you two understand
with game of Thrones, obviously.
We've been around from the Thrones days.
All of us have been covering them, Thrones, for a bit.
And I know that the UK got those like a day later.
And some people are trying to hold that against us.
Be like, well, we got Game of Thrones a day later.
And I'm like, I don't know.
I don't know if that's going to make the cut for this argument for a good book to show adaptation.
You know, the funny thing about this pairing up between HBO and BBC is it works out best for both companies either way.
BBC can put it where they want.
We're lucky that we're not in one of those situations where BBC puts it out in October and then
we don't get it until March.
Because that gate
has been swung that way
sometimes with some franchises
going the other way.
Just because we
Americans like to hold on to our rights
to stuff longer, the British
are much more generous than we are.
That's for sure.
Yeah, I'm interested to see if there's ever any, I don't know, just public follow up on what happened.
You know, what were the contract deals behind the scenes?
Because as we know, especially from some famed movies like The Golden Compass, things happen behind the scenes.
Things that we silly humans without our
demons in this world do not get to be privy of it's interesting because i was looking at some
of the viewership numbers and ratings for uh both of the seasons between like the uk and the us and
i don't know if this like affected the decision but i don't know how many people watch i mean
probably not a lot of people watch it on hbo live and I don't know if the ratings are based on that or not,
but it's like, in the UK, what?
It was like in the six millions or something, right,
for some of the episodes, and like half a million in the US.
And I mean, this book series was also, I think,
much more popular, perhaps, in the UK than it was necessarily in the US.
So it seems like quite a few of us, you know, read it
anyway. And it was on some school reading lists, interestingly, like it was for me, which is how I
came to it. It was like a suggestion. They're like, I don't know, pick one of these books.
I was like, that's a cool sounding book. I actually didn't know anything about the Philip
Pullman series until Holly suggested it to me and I found out that
they were actually making it into a television series and then I went back and I watched the
movie the Golden Compass movie wasn't all that impressed to be perfectly honest Chloe was like
the only person impressed by that movie I've watched it too many times and it wasn't great
but it wasn't the I think it's very obvious there was some shenanigans happening, some shenanigans afoot, so to speak.
You know, I think that was very obvious, even as like a I don't know, it was what, 2007?
Yeah.
So even as a oh, my God, I'm not going to age.
I'm not going to say what my age is.
Let's just say that even then even as a youngster
I was like all right interesting I think I got it for Christmas that year it was like a five dollar
Walmart bin pick oh that hurts to say yeah but even then I was like cool series but I just never
came back to it and then Eliana of course uh was the holly in this scenario and put them
in front of me and then i read all of them everything i could get my hands on faster
faster and i consumed them and uh now she still hasn't finished that one book that we won't even
talk about yep i finished it on the way back from her house i thought that was the other book oh
maybe that was labelle savage i finished
it thinking of you does that count i saw the movie first actually um before the books and i was a
young adult and i was inebriated with my friend when we saw the movie and we were just blown away
by the idea of having demons in the form of animals. We loved it. So then after that, I discovered there was books.
And then, like Chloe, consumed all of them fast as I possibly could.
Ate them up.
For like the seventh time now, right?
It's been a few reads, yeah.
Damn.
Well, you know, with all that, how do you guys feel?
You know, you've been talking about it, obviously, on the cast,
but I think you still haven't put out, right,
your thoughts on the latest series slash season, depending on what cast but i think you still haven't put out right your
thoughts on the latest series slash season depending on what side of the pond you're on
because i don't think you've put that episode out yet and what what do you think i think we both like
it better than season one for sure yeah yeah it just great great i say a lot every episode this
season everything new they added was fantastic
maybe a little heavy on some magisterium scenes for me earlier on in this particular series
but overall i thought it was great that lee and mrs coulter scene will live in my heart forever
and i really like what they did in the last episode too with the changes between will and
his dad i thought it was very well done, I never have a problem with changes in adaptation so much. I will go back and in our book reader sections and cite, well,
this is what happened in the books as opposed to what happened in the show. But I believe that
Jack Thorne and Jane Tranter have really carried the spirit of this series of what I've read. And
I've only read the trilogy. I have not read
La Belle Sauvage or Secret Commonwealth. But the original trilogy, I feel like the spirit of those
books just literally bleed through the television screen. And so any adaptation changes that they
make have not bothered me in the least. I'm always pleasantly surprised by them.
Well, I'm glad to hear that you too are in a similar state as me.
I mean, I've made some of my way through the secret commonwealth,
but, you know, it's going to just keep being a secret to you and me, I guess.
We have a commonwealth of secrets.
I've been hoping out for long.
We do.
but we have a commonwealth of secrets. I've been hoping out for long.
We do.
Matt, Holly, this is great.
I'm so freaking excited.
This is going to be a stoop.
We're stupid.
I can't wait.
This is going to be silly, and I love it.
Where can we find you on the internet?
Tell everyone at home where they can log on
on the World Wide Web and find your episodes.
Well, I think you can find the Dust Podcast probably just about wherever you get your podcast episodes regularly.
Our feed and all of our back episodes can be found at mattsaudioblog.com.
That's M-A-T-T-S-audioblog.com.
audioblog.com and if you have
trouble finding us
that way then just hit us up on Twitter
at the dust podcast and we'll be
happy to direct you in a
direction that works for you and your device
wonderful you know to start us
all off I've already asked you all your
thoughts on the season
I did have some like overall other
questions right more pointedly to the
topic of our discussion for both of you, for Holly and Double M, as he likes to try and get us to call him on the cast.
I'm hoping you have some doubles for us this episode.
Oh, God.
Holly will kill me if I do that to your guys' podcast.
She really will.
No.
I won't.
I mean, maybe.
Who knows?
But, you know, I just want to get a sense.
You know, you were saying that you like Season 2 already more than you liked Season 1.
But I'm kind of curious how you both feel, like, that the soundtrack has evolved from Season 1 to Season 2, right?
feel like that the soundtrack has evolved from season one to season two right are there any changes that you've seen in the tone overall like or the composition that in the soundtrack between
the seasons i think the tone i guess for the first season is a lot lighter and there's a lot more kind
of fun things happening versus the season two soundtrack where it's it's scary and sad those
are my very basic thoughts, like I said.
I'm not qualified to be here.
Totally qualified to be here because that's all the purpose of the music is, is to heighten our emotions of what we're seeing on screen.
So I think that that's Balfe used, but he is kind of a stickler for what he feels like his sound is.
You'll hear very similar orchestrations in his other soundtracks, like for Genius, like for Mission Impossible, like for The Crown Season 2. He was part of that.
And that's just kind of Lawrence Sound, where he comes from.
He's originally, as he grew up, was very much a drummer.
He's a multi-instrumentalist now, of course.
But you'll find a lot of stylistically, like the cross-rhythm things
where the lines kind of overlap each other
a great deal and what I find most interesting about that is the way that he has used those
types of things in both seasons or both series this series a lot more than in series one he's like look i'm a rhythmologist i'm gonna i'm
gonna show you how to use some rhythms which i've loved for this particular soundtrack yeah he's
honestly a super popular composer right like he's kind of got his paws in everything uh if you go to
his spotify page you're not just seeing his dark materials you're gonna see a lot of stuff that
you didn't even realize lorne was doing i mean i think he's he's doing the black widow soundtrack
yeah yeah yeah that's gonna be that's that's a reason i may be going to see black widow after
one of the reasons is all i'm going to say that is that's one of the reasons why i've been waiting
for a year for the darn thing to come out, it feels like.
I know. I guess
time's moving more slowly
here, as we're seeing,
and I'm sure Will and Lyra could
understand that whole time moving
differently thing, so
glad we're on board with it.
I thought it was interesting that you were saying that
Balfe was originally
a drummer. He was talking about how his collaboration with, like this season, right, he brought on the drummer from the Red Hot Chili Peppers.
Chad Smith. And he actually used him in the season one soundtrack, too.
That was kind of the thing that finalized his feelings about the Mrs. Coulter theme.
Right.
You know, he felt like he'd really hit it right
by the time that Chad came on board and worked on that.
And on his Twitter, he posted video after video
of Chad recording that.
He's just so proud because I think Chad
is one of his heroes as a drummer.
And so that had to be great fun for him.
I asked him in our interview last year
what it was like to play to hear his music played
by world-class musicians which is nothing new to him of course because he's been doing soundtracks
for everything from video games to movies for a long time now and he's been in hans zimmer's
composer group forever uh the last 10-15 years so this is nothing new to him but there are moments like
chad smith playing the drums for him that just makes uh his day which is really cool that's
awesome that's so cool that that's really fun to hear and you know we were talking a little bit
about the soundtrack overall but zooming in on like some of you know what what chloe and i like
to talk about a lot are um these really deep character moments right and i'm just kind of curious how you found that
maybe some certain characters maybe their themes evolved or like what are some of your favorite
ways i i know you talk about this a bit on your cast and some of the ways that you've seen things
change but what are some of your favorite ways you've seen those themes evolve from season one
to season two the most obvious? The most obvious one,
the most overt one, is probably for me the treatment of Lee Scoresby's theme. Most of the
time in series one it was done with the same kind of instrumentation. It was a lot more guitar heavy
in series one, which is fine. It represents the kind of that Western element that goes along with Lee.
But to hear that theme throughout the course of this season, and especially given the result of the end with this piano tiny kind of thing or even with a theremin, but to hear it played with a French horn, to hear it played with a trombone, to hear the strings being used in the way that they are to harmonize it is something that we really didn't get really much of at all. We didn't get much of that at all
in series one. So that's was a way that made Lee's whole storyline this particular series
even more cinematic than maybe we're used to. Yeah, I think we have a lot to talk about,
about Lee's themes today. I know that's probably our biggest uh everyone's got some
stuff to say there and before we get into all of that i'm so excited to hear about that and
i do want to know i know you have a bunch of ground rules matt for what you analyze a series
with when you and holly discuss the music of his dark materials over on the dust and kind of where
it takes you so let us know what kind of the base foundational
notes you have on music are when it comes to His Dark Materials.
Sure. The thing that I like to do, because I'm a pretty simple person,
is I like to bring everything down to the lowest common denominator so that I can talk about it.
So one thing that we have to understand is we're going to be rattling off a lot of titles
in this particular episode. The one thing that you have to understand is we're going to be rattling off a lot of titles in this particular episode.
The one thing that you have to keep in mind is that there are cue titles, which are specifically things that you'll find in soundtracks that usually just point to a scene.
They're only titled that because of how the scene starts or the music that is accompanying a certain scene.
That is not necessarily a theme.
A theme is a piece of music that you might hear over several of these cue titles, just orchestrated
in a different way or perhaps harmonized differently. A perfect example of this is that
if you have, for instance, in the season two official television soundtrack,
there's a cut called The Female Scholar, and that's a cute title.
But it starts with Mary's theme, the theme that was created for the character Mary.
And then it totally shifts gears, and it becomes the theme for The Shaman is played,
John Perry's theme.
So when we say the female scholar,
we'll probably be referencing either the first half or the second half simply by the cue title
cut, but realize that there are different themes being played in all of these different cuts,
because that's what narratively music does for television. It helps you inform whose point of view this is or who we're looking at or those types of things.
And so kind of as a shorthand, most composers just say, OK, this is where Mary taps the computer.
And so the cue title becomes taps the computer,
which may not necessarily have anything to do with the music that's being played.
Another thing that I'd like to point out for sure is that not all of the cues that you hear
on an official soundtrack actually make it into an episode. Sometimes things are either
faded back to the point where you can't hear it or even cut off.
And at the same time, sometimes there's music that ends up in an episode that does not make it into a soundtrack.
In fact, just less than a month ago, Mr. Balfe was asking Twitter to help him make a decision on what their favorite cues from the series was so that he could help them get compiled
into the soundtrack which I love that he is so fan friendly he'll answer any tweet that you send at
him he's very cool with that and he actually asked for input for that and I'm sure that people's input
actually helped him evaluate what he wanted to have put on the soundtrack by silver screen records and at the same time sometimes you might have something from one scene that's 15 seconds long
and another scene that's 30 seconds long and those things may be put together by music editors
even though they may be in totally different episodes. So don't think that
when we're talking about a particular title cut, if part of it relates to one episode of television,
the other part of it might not even be the same episode, or let alone the corresponding scene.
Oftentimes they try to put them together as much as they can but sometimes other considerations
like are these two pieces in this are in the same key or are they the same tempo also come into play
and that's not something that has happened a whole lot until maybe the last 15 years or so
but cut length used to be sometimes you'd listen to an old official soundtrack and and some
cuts would be only 30 seconds long now they try to make them at least worth the money to buy a
single mp3 for and that's why they're cut together that way now there's something i really noticed i
spent a lot of time driving this week so i used that time wisely and had both series one and season two soundtracks
playing on repeat got through them a handful of times but it was very obvious which songs were
used before the intro when you get driving when you can literally physically recall watching the
episode and going ah right that was the the open before the intro music played aha and that struck me while driving i
could hear it and i just started jamming every time i'll do do do
yeah you know you guys know the whole thing but yeah that that was pretty obvious and
it does seem that there are a couple things like you said that had some extension added to it or
things that had to be trimmed down that were kind of uh or blended in right series one it feels like a lot of the music from series one
didn't have uh it's not that the the transitions weren't seamless but some of the transitions were
a little stiffer than i think series two was blended really seamlessly musically i think that
uh it found its flow a lot more than season one, and not in a bad
way, just series two evolved. It evolved to kind of incorporate all these sounds together and all
these characters together, which is exactly where Mr. Balfe, I'm sure, is heading.
Right. And there's such an infusion of new themes for this particular series. I mean,
seven or eight new themes. And we typically look for what those
themes sound like in his anthology series, which he'll actually create a lot of music. And this is
what ends up in his anthologies, volume one and two. He'll create music to send to the showrunners,
to send to Jack and Jane and say, this is what I picture for the specters, or this is what I
picture for, you know know the shaman or whatever
and then they'll say yeah I like that no I don't really like that and and decisions are made from
there and then when it goes to actually scoring he has a kind of a template with which to work
is okay I'm going to take this music from here and this music from here. This music's for the knife. This music's for Lee. And he'll know how to combine them together. And ultimately, Mr. Balfe is very adamant about
this. Ultimately, all of that stuff in terms of what gets in and what doesn't get in is up to the
director, which makes perfect sense because they're setting the overall tone of everything.
Very, very interesting. And these are good ground rules and
and a great primer as we head into the episode and talk a little bit more about our favorite
musical moments of you know the whole entire series and this time when i'm saying series i'm
saying it the way that americans mean it the whole show thus far both seasons so so you know start
off um doesn't have to be in any order. What are some of your top
musical moments? Yeah, let's start off talking about Lee Scoresby. I know we have a lot to talk
about when it comes to Lee, our dashing spaghetti Western hero who Lin-Manuel cuts a very nice,
a little bit younger Once Upon a Time in the North, Lee Scoresby. And the themes for Lee are prominent.
You'll know that when you hear them, we'll talk more about some of their possible origins as we
tear in. But specifically, I think we're talking about what Lee's Choice, the tales of Lee Scoresby
gateway to the north today. Yeah, Lee's Choice was absolutely one of my favorites and of course it didn't appear until the seventh episode it's
it actually covers a couple of scenes it's used in two different scenes the first half is used in
the scene where John Perry leaves him and well he sends John Perry away in the second half
is used as he's calling to Serafina Peclo using the cloud pine.
And there's a very emotional type of harmonization that is used with that.
And it's also what I like to think of as true Americana,
which is the Copland kind of sound.
Aaron Copland was a composer who is often associated with
the quote-unquote American sound.
And as we all know,
Texas in Lyra's world
is essentially all of the United States.
So it seems fitting that
as a kind of a goodbye to Lee
that this bag would be used by Balfe.
The parallel, what we call parallel fourths, But this bag would be used by Balfe.
The parallel, what we call parallel fourths, are very prominent.
That's a Copland harmonizing technique, which makes you feel not just tense, but also sad.
And if I had to pick one version of Lee's theme throughout either of the two series so far, this would definitely be my favorite.
Hallie, I know that the Tales of Lee Scoresby is a favorite of yours from the series.
Yeah, it's fun talking after Matt when he goes into depth and I'm just going to be like,
I like the way it sounds.
And when I listen to the soundtrack, I want to just listen to this one on repeat.
No, I really do like...
to the soundtrack, I want to just listen to this one on repeat. No, I really do like...
I like the, I just like the Western style piano. And not to talk about other composers from shows we like, but it just kind of reminds me of Romain Djuadi from Westworld. I really like
his use of the same instrument in his score. But with this one, it does seem like not like American Western.
It does feel otherworldly Western.
So I really believe it's not of this world, if that makes any sense.
Yeah.
Holly, one of the things that I love about you bringing that up is when we first meet
Lee Scoresby, he's coming to Trollison basically to
start trouble he's coming in as the cowboy who walks into the saloon and and is ready to challenge
the nearest gunslinger more or less because he's looking for Yorick and he's trying to figure out
what the heck's happened to his friend and it really sets up the fact that this theme,
literally in everything that we've seen in terms of old Western movies,
has that kind of vibe, just like you mentioned,
even Ramin with his Westworld soundtrack.
But the other thing that I really like is the fact that he did evolve it
all throughout series two uh to a point where it became bigger and just like he is crossing
in different worlds so the orchestration is enlarging his universe as well i'm going to
circle back to that exact point on a different track i'm going to talk about later because that's how i feel about some of some of my choices here interesting teaser teaser foreshadowing um no but
uh yeah i i also had like tales of lee scorsese there because a friend of ours fred emailed the
podcast and i think we said this on one of our earlier episodes and was comparing Lee Scoresby's
you know the way that
the music goes
and how it has that western
genre vibe comes back to
his theme referencing Enrico Morricone's
composition The Ecstasy
of Gold from the western The Good
The Bad and The Ugly and
he sent us links to those here
and we can link Morricone's the ecstasy
of gold and you can all check out lauren balfe's thing on i don't know spotify or apple music or
wherever people access music nowadays title i don't know if it's on there or not but yeah i
thought that was a really really great great pickup that Fred found. Yeah.
There are definitely some similar motives, Eliana.
It's kind of an inverted one, but like the Lee Scoresby theme starts like this.
Whereas Morricone starts like this.
Same notes, just going in a different direction and there's also that little motive in Morricone's like that
and with with Lee it's
very very similar so I did put a question into to Mr. Balfe when we first started talking about this, this email,
because him and I messaged back and forth every once in a while, and he had not responded, unfortunately.
There are things that could point to the fact that it might be coincidence,
just because after Berg's 12-tone road there's no way to create
anything actually original but it does seem way too similar to me to not think that it was something
that he might have thought about or maybe even had watched some of that movie that that's from
on top of that as I mentioned at the top of the, Mr. Balfe for a long time was part of Hans Zimmer's composer group.
And because of that, if you read interviews with Mr. Zimmer, Morikani is one of his absolute favorite composers and biggest influences.
and biggest influences. So I can only imagine that as Balfe and Gregson Williams and Zimmer are sitting around, Zimmer's probably playing Encino all the time. So it might've come out of
him just because, oh, that's the Western sound. So I think Fred's onto something. It could be
just coincidence, but I think he's onto something. Yeah. I think Fred is 900% onto something for
sure. It's definitely a reference. I mean, this is so we talked about the origins of Lee Scoresby's name and Lee Van Cleef is actually a Western character who he's named for one person he's named for. He's named for another explorer by the last name of Scoresby. We'll talk about some other time, but no music's original, for sure. Nothing's original.
Movies are terrible.
Everything's terrible.
But I think of that, what was it, Simpsons, yes, movies are terrible line.
My fiance says that all the time, and we laugh about that whenever we talk to pretty much
any media, because it's all awful.
But Morricone started composing for Westerns in the 60s.
You know that sound, the bow, bow, bow, with the tumbleweed going by? That's Morricone started composing for Westerns in the 60s. You know that sound, the bow, bow, bow, with the tumbleweed going by?
That's Morricone.
You know, like when you think, boom, exactly.
Yeah.
Exactly.
And that is what we're hearing here, right?
Like that is straight up Western, whether it's exactly from Ecstasy of Gold,
which let me just say Clint Eastwood is looking mighty Western fine
if you ever want a nice Saturday watch.
You know, I didn't get it when I was a kid.
My dad watched a lot of Clint Eastwood and then he also watched Steven Seagal.
So I don't know.
They don't really even out in my opinion.
But my dad watched a ton of Clint Eastwood when I was a kid and I didn't get it.
But now as an adult, I'm like, I get it, dad.
I get it, pops.
So yeah, that tumbleweed going by, you know, that's what you hear and you think that's Morricone.
And he's composed so much.
He's composed Good, Bad, the Ugly, Once Upon a Time in the West, which notable as Holly might appreciate, right?
Because Once Upon a Time in the North with Lee.
You have a huge mishmash of movies he's been in,
like Dueo Nei Texas, Bullets Don't Argue,
Pistol for Ringo, Seven Guns for McGregor's,
Julio Petroni's Death Rides a Horse,
Bullet for the General, you name it.
He's done music for it.
But he was also, this is so crazy to me.
When I learned this, I thought this was wild.
Morricone was an influence for Muse, City of Delusion, Hoodoo, and Knights of Cydonia,
they have said, are influenced by Morricone.
Is that not insane to you?
Knights of Cydonia is influenced by Spaghetti Westerns, and it makes total sense when I
think about it.
I want to play Guitar Hero now.
Yeah, me too.
I'm like...
I thought that was just an anime.
I'm not really into Muse.
We'll work on it, Eliana.
We'll work on it.
I've tried, I've tried,
but there's just something about the vocalist's voice
that I can't...
It was a high school thing for me.
In high school, it was just, they were the band.
But, I don't know, Morricone's a big deal, right?
Metallica uses Ecstasy of Gold as an intro to their concerts,
and the Mars Volta uses, what do they use?
They use Fistful of Dollars.
Gnarls Barkley'sley's crazy that song that's influenced
because of morricone he's literally said that's what inspired him to write it excellent that is
cool the other thing that you might want to consider if you're looking for that kind of
western sound and you can go back even a little further of course is to copeland and you you hear
a lot of copeland influences in what Balfe did, especially
in this season, not just with Lee's theme, but also with a couple of renditions of John Perry's
theme. But if you think back to that kind of sound, like Billy the Kid, Appalachian Spring,
all of that kind of sound wasn't stolen by Morricone at all. Morricone was very much using Italian
music and Italian musicians to create his scores which I found fantastic
especially since we consider them spaghetti Westerns now. But the whole
idea of that kind of sound has been around for quite a while, and many musicians have gone to those two kinds of influences
to create that sound.
But I'm in total agreement with you here, Eliana.
I feel like that some of these motives that Balfe put in Lee's theme,
especially, have a direct correlation to Ecstasy of Gold.
Thank you to our friend Fred for his insight there.
And yeah, you know, we've been talking a lot about Lee's theme
and the way that the instruments have changed and how it's evolved.
And I'm just wondering, you know, is there anything that you might anticipate
for some ways that it could change to really play up some of the scenes that we'll see him again.
You know, as book readers know, we are going to see, we probably should have put a spoiler
thing at top of this episode.
Well, we kind of did.
You know, we're going to see Lee again in season three in the underworld.
You know, what might that sound like?
I think it will depend on the perspective.
If this is something that's very emotional for Lyra or for Will or whoever, I don't know that you'll hear that much different. If Mr. Balfe wants to try and use
timbral changes, he could go back to the original kind of theremin sound that he was using.
Do you think maybe it could be blended with the Shaman a little bit more as far as melodic themes?
Because we'll probably see both of them in similar moments
and it'll probably harken back to here where both of them have such horrid ends in so such sudden
ends right in the same handful of scenes and moments and those two themes are already if you
look at the the notes contained within those themes they are linked already uh if you just think about the motif of of lee
just that little lick that's always in lee's guitar that same thing is used in john perry's
theme They both have this melody part of it.
So all of those things are already interconnected a great deal.
So you could definitely maybe have Lee Scoresby's harmony with John Perry's melody.
The interesting thing about Balfe is that he always composed things with two layers.
The interesting thing about Balfe is that he always composed things with two layers so that the harmony can stand by itself or so that the melody can stand by itself.
And so that offers a lot of choices of versatility.
And what he does with that timbrally then adds a whole third layer.
So it's exciting to think about.
It allows the focus to change pretty well, right?
Like it allows the camera, it allows the scene.
And earlier we talked about how music, you know, it tells you more than just tone, right?
It tells you what character's in charge of the scene.
It tells you pretty much everything about the scene. If you take away the dialogue, you can still understand what's going on,
everything about the scene if you take away the dialogue you can still understand what's going on mostly from whether it's just the physical whether it's just the the tone etc yeah agreed yeah you
know i think we get a little bit of a sneak peek in terms of um your both reactions right to episode
seven and how did you all feel how did you all feel um about the way that they executed that uh
last those last moments of lee i mean i cried on did you all feel about the way that they executed that last, those last moments of Lee?
I mean, I cried on our podcast just talking about it, if that tells you anything.
Same.
Same, you cried during recording your podcast about it?
I don't think it's very fair to ask that of anyone, first of all.
Second of all, yes, I did, bitch.
What of it?
It's my podcast.
I'll cry if I want to.
Fuck yeah, I cried.
I was so sad.
I cried.
Eliana, did you hear me cry a little bit?
Almost cry.
Choke back tears. Almost cry.
I mean, you called me like right after the episode finished.
I was very emotional.
I did.
I straight up like opened my phone got on discord
called this bitch and i was like we have to talk about it she finished like half an hour before i
did i cried a little bit in the episode where i held back tears about will and his dad actually
same same i didn't really that was sad that part was sad but lee got me the most. Yeah, no, Lee hurt. Lee hurt. The music in the episode during Lee's choice,
ha ha, no pun intended.
Actually, no, the pun was absolutely intended.
I don't know why I'm lying to you.
So the music there in Lee's choice,
I caught something interesting.
And like I said, shit posting in the margins.
As you know, I am a very avid shipper, which is the fandom term for when you relationship with someone or when you want someone
to be together very badly with all of your little broken, blackened, bruised soul and heart.
And there's something between You Loved a Witch from series one, episode four, and there's something between you loved a witch from series one episode four and lee's
choice throughout its couple of uses in the finale that we mentioned earlier in season one episode
four armor you loved a witch plays when farter quorum tells lyra about his past right and tells
her how he loved a witch before the scene then changes and we get Lee scores these first entrance into a bar
to cause trouble, as Matt said earlier. The first 15, 30, 45 seconds of You Loved a Witch is those
sad, swelling, emotional, heavy strings, right? Let's fast forward to Lee's Choice. Starts out Lee's theme, which then gets bastardized into these sad, heavy, swelling, emotional strings by the mid-end of the song. It's going pretty hard, right?
you mentioned the second time we hear Lee's choice the last time I guess I could say uh Serafina Pecola is receiving Lee's call you know why because you loved a witch I'm just saying
Lauren Balfe ships it too okay I'm just saying these literally line up this is a parallel from
series one to series two I'm I'm just saying am i wrong have you considered that the intermixing
of lee's theme with john perry's theme could also get out eliana do not ruin this for me do not do
this i like shipping that that's that's my thing right there i'm all for that well i think that's
the last smart thing i have so thanks here i am ruining Chloe's life
Bringing in other people to ruin Chloe's life
I think there's reason to ship the two of them
I absolutely think there's reason to ship
Serafina and Lee
She didn't give anybody else
No cloud pine
I'm just saying as of series 2
It's a part of her right
And there's that
Scene of like A she kisses him on the forehead
but then ruda garnitas right on her twitter she has like a she shared a picture of herself kissing
a photo of lin-manuel or something it's canon that's all i'm saying it was pretty funny
all jokes aside i thought that was an interesting parallel that like the first like
we get obviously lee's entrance a little earlier in a hot air balloon singing another jam eliana
and i know a little well but uh lee ends his plot with the witch calling for the witch and seraphina
like realizes what's going on to that end of his theme and that's actually how we hear lee's theme in the
beginning i find that interesting good parallels yeah yeah moving on from our cowboys and our
shamans let's talk a little bit about another one of our top musical moments which comes in
the female scholar i guess i'm kind of slipping in a little bit of a write-in vote here underneath this title because we can consider that
Mrs. Coulter always thought of herself as a scholar even though she wasn't rewarded as such.
But for me, one of the most poignant versions of the Coulter theme this particular season
was right at the beginning of the episode The The Scholar, where she was watching everybody on the
outside. She was brand new in this world. She was in that car and she was watching everybody.
And as I mentioned before, Mr. Balfe does things where he can separate harmony from melody. He
always writes in two layers. So you have the typical Mrs. Coulter harmony going on,
which has just this descending bass line.
Normally you would hear her melody be like this.
But in that particular case, one of the things that I loved is we were seeing how she was so intrigued by it all,
how she was happy to be seeing this different place.
In psychoacoustics, we use what we call major chords to create feelings of happiness or
lightness and we use minor to create sadness or we use it to create scariness
and he put a whole different melody on top of those chords at that beginning moment
by going like this.
The chords were telling you it was Mrs. Coulter, but the melody was telling you she was happy to
be there, which I thought was just fascinating because we'd never heard Mrs. Coulter's theme done in that way.
I thought that was a very poignant moment for the character and for our perspective of her, you know, as viewers.
Yeah, it's amazing how much dissonance there was brought to both of those characters, right?
there was brought to both of those characters, right? Both of their notes seemed to clash just like both of their characters would have clashed had Coulter not been putting on that happy Mrs.
Scholar face, so to say. And this is one of those show invented scenes we kind of mentioned earlier
at the top of the episode. And I know, Holly, that you really enjoyed this episode among a couple of the other invented
meetings so what what did you think about this meeting with Coulter and with Mary I really liked
it I wish it would have happened in the book that's that's how I felt that's how I felt about
a lot of these added scenes I'm like these this is my headcanon now like this actually happens
yeah it's it was thrilling to watch Mrs. Coulter get to see what she's missed out on and all the
opportunities she doesn't have. Um, I could say that because she's bad, right? Um, so I can
not feel, I can, yeah, I can, I can say, Hey, yeah, you suck. You don't deserve any of this.
Uh, you couldn't have it in your world anyway. Suck it. Uh, I don't know. I, I really did enjoy
that scene a lot. Yeah. It was one of, I think, the highlights
of invented scenes. And I think, as you've said, you really like the way that they've been adapting
Mary Malone throughout the series. So I think that's been really interesting. And yeah,
that dissonance that you're talking about is interesting that it might be like happy
because it feels like mrs coulter's acting right there isn't quite joy it's more like a uh i was
actually for my thing i was actually referring to the very first scene of the episode uh which
it is this this scene actually occurs much later when she's sitting in the car you mean and just
like watching everybody and boreal she's sitting in the car watching everybody and waiting on boreal's coffee
that one had a sense of wonder to it which is interesting um and posed a very interesting
like philosophical question of like or kind of a prop argument right that you know our world
is less spiritual and therefore more corrupt but
i don't know i don't know if it is or not i feel like she looked at that world too and she saw
nothing but opportunities right where boreal said every moment charles just said oh this world's
shit it's bullshit nothing's great about this world exactly and there's even something to it
right that that music that uh that clashing that you played, that right there is her saying, I'm happy.
I have everything I want.
Don't I?
Question mark.
Trailing off.
And that's what the episode is all about.
That misnomer of the scholar, as we mentioned in our show coverage.
I think that is really brilliant just
that you open the episode thinking we're gonna get all of this mary malone content but it opens
with coulter and it's about coulter's journey seeing this and in her her parts of the music
is is more it's busier right it's more complicated complicated than Mary's Whimsical Theme that we'll talk about
in a bit. And it still has those soaring strings that kind of indicate adventure. But like you said,
Lauren admits that writing her theme was so hard, he rewrote it the most. It was the most challenging.
And he mentioned that looking at full storyboards helps him write a theme, right? Like that when he's looking at
writing music or themes, he's looking for color inspiration and flow of the story and being able
to see the big picture at once. And there's this descending bit of the song where it slows down,
right, to almost a complete soft lull of rushing strings and it changes from being so busy and it
starts to get a little, I don't know, it starts from dark and then it light rushing strings and it changes from being so busy and it starts to get a little
i don't know it starts from dark and then it lightens up and it makes me think a little bit
of her entire arc against this song right like it's busy it's full of mystery there's energy
but there's also diligence and then it slows and crashes toward the middle and by the end it has a
new direction it's softer and and brighter and it feels almost like
Maryse's art put against it.
I wish, I wish, I wish that that cut
from the opening scene
had been included in the soundtrack.
It was not.
I think it totally paints
Mrs. Coulter in a totally different light.
And as for the scene that you brought up, Chloe,
earlier about her meeting with Mary Malone, I mean, we don't praise Ruth Wilson enough, right?
But we... Emmy, Emmy. BAFTA, BAFTA. BAFTA, Emmy, BAFTA, Emmy. Yeah, exactly. She, that just not only her acting but the continuity of seeing the realizing how kind of out of her
league that she is with mary registering on her face slowly slowly slowly uh to the point that
by the time later on in the episode when she's sitting with Boreal, you know, and he asks her to describe Malone, you could just see all of that happening again on her face. that I don't think direction and acting can ever be given enough credit for,
because you know they had to do a ton of shots, different directions, whatever,
and it just seems so seamless.
So I love that moment.
That's a great time to move into a few songs from Series 2 specifically.
Study the Dark Matter, Journey Ahead, Matter of Dust, to move into a few songs from series two specifically study the dark matter journey
ahead matter of dust basically any scene with mary either communicating with dust
or any parts of her journey uh very heavily include her theme and different bits i really
loved the way that they did those scenes of mary um especially the ones in the cave uh in general across the season and
wrote in that music i think that in i don't remember which of it so it wasn't uh i think
you matt were talking about how it was a play some of this music was a play on a
song or one of the themes from the previous season and had been adjusted for it but like
they really just
interweave it with this like beeping instrument or bell is how i'm interpreting it as a
unknowledgeable person and it feels like both technological but the way that it's like spaced
out gives it this really sense of whimsy or of the divine to me and the way that it also
goes in well with the sounds that the cave software is making and sort of meshes with that instrument.
And it's just...
Yeah, you're spot on, Eliana, because using those bell kind of sounds, high bell tones, the actual waveforms, if you look at them on a computer the same way that we do when we edit our voices,
you can tell whether a timbre is more pure or not simply by how smooth it is,
whether there's more jagged edges in it or what have you.
And bells typically, in most ranges until you get into the lower ranges,
have very smooth, almost sign-like waveforms, which is literal sonic purity,
which is a great way to show that this sound
is kind of representing the angel's message to them
because they are coming from a place of divinity, of superiority.
And I love that you threw in the whimsy bit because
there is those spaces like the...
Also just the distance when you go, when you jump things by octaves, this creates
a huge amount of leaps, what we like to call the melodic shape. And when you have large melodic
shapes like that, you think of Mary having to take a literal leap of faith in order to buy into all
of this stuff. So I think that Mr. Balfe put a lot of thought into how he was going to approach
Mary's theme in general. Yeah. And I mean, that makes sense because Mary does a lot of thought into how he was going to approach mary's theme in general yeah and i mean
that makes sense because mary does a lot of thought and thinking exactly you know the light
bells are really prominent and the song is different than uh it's similar to like how we
can discuss lee's theme and melody at length the way we did earlier that's how mary's is right it's
so singular it's so specific it's different
than anyone else's theme in the story and there were a few things i noticed in this uh it's not
just the divine whimsy which in a way it also reminds me of chinese bells uh they used to be
cast out of beaten copper most of them since the bronze age were cast out of regular metal but
chinese hand bells were often used to communicate with ancestral spirits and it reminds me a bit of
that and there's also a bit of childlike whimsy right that mary is the keeper of the children
through this whole series that it sounds like innocence her theme sounds like innocence the
bells ring like innocence like children playing in the streets of shigatse uh and you even hear
during these for example in i think study the dark matter lyra's theme right that overarching
that overture of the oxford theme and lyra's theme joins into the bells at one point,
which is significant of Lyra joining her plot. When you get to Journey Ahead, you have that
similar background melody riding, but it's changed a bit because Lyra has changed Mary's journey.
She's changed her theme. You hear these sounds start to kind of soar more and as you get to matter of dust it
sounds like a bigger soaring over sound right like there's all these strings and different
things soaring above that are just slightly different from study the dark matter so it's
almost like things are falling into place and all this understanding and it's really interesting
i recommend listening to all three of them together Great point Holly, what did you think of Mary's scenes with the cave?
I know that you read this book at around the same time I did
So obviously me in 2003 had a really different conception
Of what the cave would look like
And this probably makes sense for our time
Well actually you read it a little after
No, it's the same though
I don't know what I imagine
Like a big server box of computers or something silly.
I and then I was just really blown away.
I talked about it on our episode of the podcast of quantum computers.
Like there's computers that look like that that really exists.
And I was like, oh, I was blown away.
I had no idea.
It's good.
Absolutely.
And I think there's a big journey.
I had no idea. It's good.
Absolutely. And I think there's a big journey. And I'm kind of curious, you know, what your thoughts are as well on like, you know, how did this evolve as she meets the children in It's the same kind of similar music when she's using the I Ching. So that's why I said communicating with dust earlier.
But I don't know that it is the same when she's doing it in the world of Chittagatse.
There are two different instances when we first see Mary in Chittagatse.
The one where she's using the I Ching.
Again, this is where Valfe divides harmony and melody.
So sometimes you don't hear that melody, but you'll hear this.
And that was present when she was doing the I Ching almost everywhere but you don't necessarily hear the you know those types of melody parts
and again Balfe can take one idea divide it up into several parts and that way he can use it
for different situations I think you do hear the bell parts when she's sitting near the shore and we see the angel i think that you you hear them there
uh and again the bells representing the divinity of the angels uh as they are protecting her
speaking to her whatever yeah and that's a great point bringing in um the angels and of course
that's uh that is dust that's communicating with dust as well
and i think we'll come back to that in a bit but first we're going to talk about our uh person
who's you know the biggest expert that we have in the series when it comes to communicating the dust
lyra yes
the best song.
Lyra has basically two themes, right?
She's got the prophecy theme.
And then she's got her more fun theme that we first heard with her and Roger in the very first episode.
Like that. So those are her two basic themes and they've both been used a whole
lot. But I particularly, as far as picking a favorite of versions of Lyra's theme, it is that
second version, the more fun version that I found in episode four, was it, of series one called Armor.
And you have Lee Scoresby looking in the balloon overhead and he looks down, he sees the ship,
and all of a sudden there's Lyra running through the ship and we hear that theme being played.
And up until that time, I had kind of just associated this theme with her and Roger more so than just her on her own
but obviously she's going to try and find Roger but Roger's nowhere around and she's having some
fun on her own so Schoolastic Sanctuary was the name of it on the Anthology Volume 1 album
and it outgrew its namesake in that very scene, because now it became more of
Lyra's fun theme, and we've heard that used a whole lot in Season 1, like when she was riding
on York in the Season 1, Episode 6, but you even heard a whisper of it in the beginning of this series because she's been exploring a new world of Chittagaze
and you hear the this part
but then all of a sudden the theme for Chittagaze itself or the specter kicks in and in kind of an answer to it so that's kind of demonstrating that she's
going to be exploring it didn't sound nearly as happy as it normally does either
because of the different kinds of harmony from the chittagaze theme being played around it
so that was beautiful but for me, the version at the
beginning of the armor episode is the one that I would definitely list as a favorite.
So one of my favorites is in season two. I think that the ones that you were saying of Lyra,
especially what I think the one with armor that was stuck in my head earlier today,
but this is a different one. And in episode two, right, when Lyra's about to go into Will's Oxford, I think this might be one of her themes.
It's a theme for her and Will, I believe.
Yes.
Beautiful.
It's from the season two anthology.
If you look up Children of the Prophecy, you'll hear that melody played.
But I know where you're going with this and I love it.
Yeah, I love it.
I love that they made new themes for the two of them.
So beautiful.
They deserve all of the themes together.
But sorry, distracted by being sad.
So sad.
All the time.
And we're going to only get sadder as the episode goes and start talking about this more in depth.
But this part's actually funny. the children of the prophecy theme right
Lyra's like oh sick new door
and just like runs through
she's like yeah how hard can it be
I've crossed worlds before
and there's like the theme starts getting really like intense
and like there's this wonderful swelling of the music
as though something amazing's about to happen
and then it just immediately cuts off because Lyra gets hit by a car that's like how it ends and they
just like use the music to this great comedic effect it's like in mulan where they're like
all singing about a girl worth fighting for then something they're like oh fuck uh it was kind of
like that but less less less like everyone died already yeah Unbelievable. So good. Just for folks' reference,
the theme that she's talking about is this one.
But she's talking also about how this chord builds up
at the end of that,
because that happens as she's walking through the window,
and Will's like, hey, wait, wait, wait.
Then there's this big chord that builds up and all of a sudden bam she's she's sitting on the side of the road a car's hit her
that was funny that was great and that that's another one of those uh things that you point
out that's fantastic is how music can uh create a whole different vibe.
What if he'd have played something really dark and ugly there?
Would we have been more concerned for Lyra being hurt?
You know, all of those things can make a huge difference.
But in the way that you put it and the way that he did it, just the push makes it comical
to a point where it's like, see that's what you get for running
out into a place that you don't know so love it and whom's amongst us has not almost been hit
by a car oh it's happened to me oh definitely but at the same time do you guys think that this is
foreshadowing lyra's treatment of pan this series the fact that several times she made pan jump in
her bag or get hit by a car or uh treated pan very poorly is that foreshadowing for next season
now i'm sad i said now now i'm sad because this is what makes me the saddest is Pan or Lyra. Lyra having to leave Pan is, that's the moment.
The end is sad too. It's very sad.
But I lose it
when she has to leave him on the
shore. Every time. Every time.
I can't take it.
Who doesn't? Are you human?
I mean, you have to.
Sorry, I'm going to go on a tangent and chase that now.
Do you see that as the
great betrayal
because Philip Pullman does and I saw it as Roger interesting I think it's either I think Roger is
almost like a red herring you know and you can believe it but this is even greater I don't know
but I and she does this betrayal because she betrayed Roger like she's having she's just doing
it to make oh I don't know it all all just comes around. She has to fix it.
Yeah, it is all interconnected.
Absolutely.
It is all connected.
But damn.
Yeah, I don't know.
I thought you were saying that it was foreshadowing for me
eventually getting hit by a car.
I was like, damn, Chloe, what the fuck?
No, oh my god.
I was, I don't know unbelievable
in the words of piana layman in season two unbelievable that is that episode that is
that episode um i'm still saying that to my cats i hope you know that like whenever i move my cats
against their will i just go unbelievable again that's what i picked up on eliana against their will you have
a will too um have you met a cat oh my god you know they don't want to do you have a will perry
oh oh i wish
can we pause and talk about how cute amir wilson is by the way oh my god he's so adorable that boy
he's a handsome young lad isn't he and he is
those kids you know a lot of people are worried about them getting older i don't really care
about that i don't i don't i'm worried about it it looks like amir ages a little throughout this
series or maybe it's just he got beat up more because i was like watching the beginning
re-watching some of those beginning episodes i I'm like, he looks so young and innocent here. And then in the end, he's like,
I'm haggard and I watched my dad die
in front of me.
To me, there's definitely
a difference between the way that
Amir looks in Series 1
and the way he looks in Series 2.
Daphne, I don't think
aged quite as
much as Amir did
in between seasons
i don't know she's she's getting older too but honestly i don't think it's a big deal because
they already exactly 12 and 13 right like that's a period and yeah i think like honestly i i think
that the suspension of disbelief is already a little hard and some of the things they go through, obviously, and not saying it's not possible, but they are young heroes and heroines.
I think that it'll be fine for TV.
And I think also we're lucky that I mean, some shows like Doctor Who put it right in their premise, right?
They're like recasting happens every couple of years when contracts are up.
But for this, I think it's okay because it's
about puberty so it doesn't really matter because like it also makes it like their bond will be
stronger in a way like if you are perceiving them aging more and that they're going through a journey
together also time moves differently maybe in the world they're going to you know how about that let
me borrow your guys's opinion on this since since we've got the scholars in the room and i'm the kitchen boy when in episode six of this series when the
specter attacks uh reina the witch and lyra tells will to pull the knife out. And he knows exactly where to chase them.
So he's seeing them now.
Is that right?
I didn't interpret it that way.
Really?
Because he pointed the knife at them.
They scooted off to the right.
He went right around to the corner, right around to the right corner, right after him.
And I don't see how, if he can't see them that he does it that he does that i i don't remember it specifically in the scene but
i just kind of assumed he was maybe he was just following the witch's eyes who can see them um
maybe so it it could have been clumsy directing but i think in one scene and earlier in the series
they showed him almost just almost seeing a shimmer, right?
I agree.
Yeah.
Right after they got the knife and they were headed back to the tavern.
Yeah.
He saw it.
I mean, Angelica does say to him, you know, like, oh, soon.
You're going to see him soon.
So I don't think that it's like canon that he saw them per se,
but I think he's on the verge of seeing them so he could at
least feel their presence probably i mean that's the thing is you could probably feel their presence
also he does this thing where he brandishes it first one direction where they aren't and then
he turns around and realizes where they are by the witch is kind of how the stage directing works so
it could have been kind of awkward just stage movement because that set is kind of how the stage directing works so it could have been kind of awkward just stage movement
because that set is kind of like all the rock everywhere you know and they have to stay in one
line and he can only turn so much block the actresses that are behind him so much because
that's the thing is he has to make sure he's not blocking the witch as she's like behind him
collapsing the more convincing part of that shot was this to me was the specters darting to the right and then him going to the right specifically.
I'm going to have to rewatch it.
Yeah.
Mm hmm.
Okay.
Maybe.
I just yeah, I was just gonna say like earlier, I mean, like if they age, I mean, it's believable regardless.
And seeing the shimmers could be as well.
Like it's a sign of, you know, even Lyra saying that she feels herself changing right and i think that's part of changing right you start
at that age i mean you know so far from that age now um in my late days um and
and uh you know you you do start to get glimpses of and start having those your thoughts like the
way that you think starts changing and things like that and i mean like things are wildly different
in puberty and if they even look older like kids hit growth spurts you know and like next thing you
know like one kid is i have a funny story about a friend who she was like
what tallest kid in her eighth grade class but now she's like the shortest amongst a lot that was me
um actually i was i was i'm as tall as i am now in eighth grade five seven which is not that tall
but like i went to a small school and um yeah i was like maybe the second tallest girl and then a lot of people
passed me up in high school
I was just done
actually 5'7 is not short as a 5'7
we are technically above average
right I guess we're not like supermodel
tall the six feet
requirement if that's still a thing
it was back in the 90s
they let us in at 5'11 now don't worry we know we know you're the
tallest lady well holly holly i'm the same way as you i grew i grew to a whopping five eight and a
half and then nothing so i'm i really got towered over by the boys by the time we were
done with high school.
Anything could happen in puberty.
Puberty is a time where you're between
different stages in your life.
In a way, you are kind of between
the worlds.
Let's talk about that.
Nice transition.
Thank you.
I need to learn segues from you elliot oh don't don't she's a bad influence oh
i'm gonna do it i'm gonna talk about the theme song because
i mean we got to we have to it's iconic I loved it in the first season and on every episode watch,
I loved it more and more.
And then I think I even mentioned that I didn't even really notice the
difference in instrumentation right away, but I think I did.
I just didn't realize I did because it was just,
it just felt bigger and it's that added brass.
I think Matt referred to it earlier.
It just feels bigger and bolder and better and
fuller, like more worlds. There's more worlds inside of the theme song this time around,
because as we're seeing more worlds, I don't know. But it went really hard. And I think I
didn't realize it at first, because every time I heard it, I was just so excited to have it back.
I think my level of excitement was matching the theme song in my ears.
I don't know.
I loved it, though.
I loved it.
No, you're spot on.
Mr. Balfe said several times this season that he reworked the brass parts.
I mean, the first season, basically, the only time you really heard the brass was during that low part.
That's where it really stuck out.
And there were other parts in there, but they were buried way down in the mix,
and I'm not sure if he had had those being played at pianissimo or whatever
while the strings were carrying the bulk of the weight
and other instruments were carrying the bulk of the weight.
But he definitely reworked some of those
brass bits for the main theme this time around so good ears holly excellent ears learn from the best
i paid her to say that he pays beautiful really good
she's hourly you guys she's hourly pays me with very kind editing
maybe maybe by the end of the episode depending on where we are in our lives maybe this will be
the episode where we suddenly do a beautiful acapella version all of us of the theme song
which set of let's see how we're feeling which set of lyrics are we going to use the season one
lyrics or the season two lyrics you're're the Latin expert, not me.
Dude, neither of us took Latin.
Listen, the lyrics
are...
You know the lyrics. You do it
every single week. I don't know why I'm
telling you the lyrics, okay?
See? Those are the words.
Lorem Ipsum.
Oh my god, did you say Lorem Ipsum? I love you so much.
I did, yes.
I got so got this season.
You know, I have that knack for looking at details too closely.
They got me on the Lorem Ipsum a couple times, you guys.
They got me a couple times i was
like oh this is fake latin and it means nothing yeah damn it painting practice one of the things
that i love about balfe is that uh when he puts new versions out that have latin lyrics he will
post what they are and their translation which i i don't know latin so he could be totally fooling
me and i wouldn't know the difference.
But nonetheless, I appreciate it when he does that stuff.
Yeah, him doing that, the series has been so helpful, actually, because I remember last year at the beginning of the series,
he ended up posting about halfway or a couple episodes into the series because there's a bunch of us at Reddit that were trying to figure out each word and what it meant.
So he finally hooked us all up. So we don't have to do that anymore and it's kind of nice it is nice it is
nice of him to do especially for somebody who's you know again a kitchen boy like me
speaking of kitchen boys let's talk about roger who oh you like that one better thanks eliana oh rude oh you're right sorry i like it equally as well
i like it equally i taught her everything i know no you didn't if you had i would be better at this
oh well i was doing a good sad listen to where is ro, which is beautiful, right? It's swooping. It has
the Lyra theme and Oxford theme within it. And that against I Had a Best Friend, which Matt,
I know you're going to regale me with everything that's within I Had a Best Friend soon, but
I Had a Best Friend has a lot of the slower Oxford and Lyra themes in the strings at the beginning.
of the slower oxford and lyra themes and the strings at the beginning and the contrast of the middle end of the songs really stands out the end of i had a best friend is really heavy
heavy music very emotional but the end of where's roger is light and feels hopeful and open i found
that juxtaposed really really interestingly yeah those that stuff is beautiful.
He goes through so many themes in that particular cut
that it's hard to keep up with all of them,
but he's got the...
That's the reference to the prophecy theme.
He's got the Mrs. Coulter melody,
which ends up going down here.
And then it's got the main theme in it as well.
And it's also got the Mrs. Coulter chords.
It shifts keys and goes to here.
And then it's also got the specter part in it.
And then...
Not only that, but then the specter chords,
which are just really bizarre.
They like go...
I don't even know what the last one is.
Let's see.
It all goes around this kind of diminished chord
is the way that that's all built around.
And then finally, it's got the Ruta Scotti theme at the end of it as well.
So it just goes through so many different things that it's hard for me to place it in
the episode, actually.
Oh, it's the bench, right?
Yeah, I think it is the bench.
It's the bench.
Oh, that fucking bench.
God damn it.
God damn it, another bench. It's the bench. Oh, that fucking bench. God damn it. God damn it, another bench.
Also rude.
I think it's really interesting that Ruta Scotti's theme gets worked into that, right?
Another song that has all of those big motifs kind of hanging out together is Tortured Witch.
You started off with Coulter torturing her and the music is very different.
But as you get to that very end it becomes an opera piece right the
the the very end is the the strings going as ruda just murders them all oh it's so good god it was
so good so emotional she's flying there she's like i hear you i'm gonna come save you girl
i got you it's me ruda scotty she flies there she shows up and then she does the murder stuff and then she's all bah, duh, duh, bah, bah you know. Right.
That was my melodica, thank you
it was my voice. So
but that was another song that has
like all these themes at the beginning
it has that prophecy kind of theme going
that melody playing and then
it gets emotional and then it becomes
all of a sudden a huge switch and I really
like how much he was able to fit in and
layer with that kind of two layer switcher switch-in, switch-out, fade-in, fade-out system he's doing this series.
A lot to work in together is the other thing.
He has a lot of characters to make happen together.
And he did it really well.
Yeah, and one of the biggest challenges for composers absolutely is if you have montage montage scenes if you have scenes where you're
switching perspectives a lot a way to be narrative with that can be really challenging to work themes
together as well so again excellent job by Mr. Balfe. There are a couple really good themes as
we talk about some of these characters that have been drawn together through the world.
And yes, we got a glimpse at Andrew Scott's Joppery, whatever that pronunciation is that I now am using.
It does sound like Joppery, and that's kind of how I keep it in my head.
Oh, yeah, I get it.
Like, I literally get it.
But it also is problematic. it's problematic it makes me think of how oh that must be what the tribe could say when they said
his name of people that he then became the shaman of whatever anyways i digress i get it i hate it
i'm gonna do it anyway so joppery yes john perry we met him in series one albeit briefly from some
youtube videos and now he's back full time in this series, Sexy Priest.
Hot Priest.
Hot Priest.
I'm sorry.
Oh, my God.
Sorry.
Don't crucify me there.
We call him Hot Shaman in our podcast.
Yeah, that's true.
We do.
Hot Shaman.
Well, Hot Shaman.
Matt started Fleabag finally.
Did you get to season two yet, buddy?
I finished it all.
It was beautiful.
Did you cry? It was beautiful did you cry it was beautiful though it was yeah it was it was amazing i uh there's some very moving moments in that absolutely yeah it was a lot speaking of you know sympathetic potentially
female villains i don't know but coming back to the shaman yeah the shaman theme i think it it's called in the anthology
track the shaman but the melodic shape of that
again very related to lee scoresby's theme also very related to Lee Scoresby's theme. Also very related to the Children of the Prophecy theme.
If I play the Children of the Prophecy theme in that key...
All of the exact same notes,
which musically connects the lineage between John Perry and Will,
which I love that they do that.
But again, I'm a sucker for copeland and one of the
most beautiful treatments of that particular theme for me uh was him and lee in the balloon
and uh there was this very wonderfully copeland-esque kind of version of that
typically chloe i had seen that you had made a note that
you like the way that the trumpet sounds in some of this stuff. And I think that
probably 90% of the time that this theme was played, we did hear a trumpet play it. But my
favorite version is actually the second half on the official soundtrack of The Female Scholar.
It then plays that Copland-esque version.
It's kind of like the second half of the track.
You have Mary's theme in one part and then the Shaman's theme in the other part.
But that's done with a slightly lower brass, which I love.
It's got a French horn or trombone which i've
yet to decide it's either a really really beautifully played trombone and mr balfe is
a huge trombone fan uh he specifically wrote that line so that he could hear bass trombones play
that it's what he told me he said i love I love the fact that I can get that splat
out of them. So he loves brass. And we've talked a lot about how he's used a lot more brass this
series than he did last series. And I can't decide whether it's a beautifully done French horn or a
beautifully done trombone, but that's the version of it that i truly love i love that and i will say for those
listening at home that uh the lyrics in latin to that part of the song are
just so you know is that wow amazing that's latin i know latin can you translate can you
translate that for me chloe yes it means oh wow bum bum oh wow how amazing i mean i'm looking at
the series in a whole new way i am well you're at the scholar table now i finally reached the
scholar table uh do you guys do you guys want some crumpets can i bring you can i bring you an omelet No eggshells, please. Omelette. Omelette. Omelette. Du fromage.
No, I jest, but something interesting about all of this added brass,
City in the Sky, a track that comes up later on.
Not Spirit in the Sky, though I feel very similarly,
and that probably should be on our His Dark Materials playlist now that I say that I digress that the City in the Sky track is such an like a huge combo of brass
that's where Lorne had a lot of fun with brass did he not and this song uh this this theme kind
of leading up there with that kind of lower brass treatment in the female scholar.
But later on with City in the Sky, there's a lot of different brass that actually comes together so well with the strings and isn't too overbearing.
It's really nice.
He's always used brass very well.
As we talked about with the Lee's Choice, the very end of that, it's not nearly as poignant if he doesn't have that high trumpet playing that note at the very end in the swell.
That's one of the things that just make that just tear into your gut at the end, because that's right as Serafina is flying off to go towards to find Lee.
And or actually, I think the shot is actually on on lyra's face after she's just
flown off but the poignancy of the way that brass can be used and i love the that you pointed that
out chloe because when used properly a single note from a trumpet can say worlds around what
a piano can do uh playing furiously and fastly, as I often did playing
in blues bands for years. So I just love saying as much as you can with as few notes as possible.
To me, that makes a lot of sense that he can use that brass and balance it out with the string so
well. I often wonder also, because he used the National Orchestra of Wales for the original
series, for series one. This time around, he used the Vienna Orchestra, and depending on the locale
and the type of recordings used, say if the National Orchestra of Wales had recorded
last season's where, at the same location, where the Vienna had recorded last season's where at the same location where the
Vienna Orchestra recorded this season how might the the mixes have been a little different because
you do you throw up just tons and tons of microphones around the whole orchestra and
what really makes the sound of an orchestra isn't the direct instruments that the mics are picking up but the
bleed through from across the room or the way that the sound bounces on the walls and that
creates a whole different timbre in itself a whole different set of sonic frequencies that can really
come through in a recording if you're an engineers they go through this kind of stuff all of the time.
I remember one time recording a record that we spent six hours getting a tom,
a drum tom to sound right.
And it was costing us a ton of money.
But this engineer was very particular.
And so you had to you had to go
through those kinds of things because they do make a difference so i would have loved to have heard
uh either the vienna orchestra recording in the national orchestra of wales uh location or vice
versa just to see what differences in mixes we would have had so my musical background is not near
matt's on as far as like performing in an ensemble performing with other people my problem is i'm an
only child and i don't get along with people and i've been a problem in almost every band i've been
in anyways i digress i am a problem but uh i did once record an ep when i was like 17 16 years old right not
to flex on everyone it was a long time ago but i recorded an ep once and this doesn't work for
instruments but my voice was messed up and i had to have whiskey which smooths the vocal cords okay
right right uh and musically I
mean it depends on what you're playing if you have strings if you have violin you can you know
wax your bow a little more you can retune your guitar but that's not something that just happens
so hearing kind of an orchestra actually play all of it and have a full sound is wild it is a wild
thing to hear for every single song and I know that shows like Game of Thrones and have a full sound is wild it is a wild thing to hear for every single song and i know
that shows like game of thrones and westworld have soundtracks and ramen is amazing ramen shuai is
so good but like there's something about these songs something in the shaman or something even
in uh we'll talk about yorick's theme in a minute but even in just the foundational
songs in series one that feel like magic right like it feels like fantastical magic you know
the harry potter wintry hogsmeade theme that makes you feel like you're literally in harry potter
like you have a robe on and you're there like that's what i feel when i hear the shaman and when i hear all of
these songs and i don't know what the magic is but lauren has captured it agreed yeah and i think um
i feel like that's captured so well also in between the worlds yeah i didn't know it had a
name i was like what the shit um well something that eliana was right about in the finale or in the series in general was
seeing yorick this year eliana was very gung-ho i don't know if it's because her senses were
bubbling or if she just really loves yorick it could be a mix of both personally but she was
right he was there and his theme was too he didn't have a speaking role so i felt i was like what about he said i know that bird's paycheck
yeah he did say i know that bird oh in the finale you mean um in the finale no we just he's just
looking at the glaciers falling melting yeah i mean i guess he's not in the book so we should
be thankful that he appeared at all but i was just like poor joe i'm worried
about his his salary his paychecks he got one speaking line he'll be fine he'll be fine he's
probably making his voice actors man they make a whole lot of money but uh the funny thing is is
that you mentioned that we heard his theme i I actually didn't hear it in this season, which was very weird when Kaisa flew to him.
Now, I'd have to go back.
Maybe I just missed it and have to go back and rewatch the episode.
But I actually didn't hear it this season because the theme that I'm used to hearing from him is this.
All done with low brass, all done with trombones. You hear it prevalent in
series one when he's charging to get his armor back also my favorite version is the way that it
just sneaks up out of the middle of nowhere in the sixth episode during the battle of balvanger
and that's where you find it on the season one soundtrack is the battle of balvanger
right at about 139 all of a sudden his music just pops up in the middle of it going along with all
of the other action things that are going
along it just the same way that he just kind of popped up to and Lyra saw him for the first time
as he was you know throwing magisterium and and everybody around he just kind of pops in and says
hi to Lyra from overhead and that's when that music shows up. And I loved that. And that theme is so powerful.
It's got this really neat harmonic twist to it.
It goes to a place you don't expect.
And that's one of my favorite just overall themes in general.
But especially that appearance in that particular episode, the demon cages.
Yeah.
I thought I had heard elements of it in, think it was what kaisa kaisa reveal is that the
kaisa song when kaisa has his little yeah kaisa reveal actually went underneath where seraphina
showed up to save the kids from uh that's what it was i thought i'd heard elements of it in one of
the songs on the album but i'm pretty sure it was mixed in if it was it wasn't anything prevalent but i swear i
thought i had heard something maybe it was during the northern posters in the university with the
the exact melodical lines he played yeah yeah looking at the bears in that maybe then yeah
over true not kaiser reveal but well like i said it's been several episodes since that that meeting with
kaiser and yorick happened so i might just require a rewatch honestly i need a whole watch of the
overarching season because i feel like there are certain things now especially like after seeing
each other there were episodes where there were some lulls it doesn't mean it was bad it just
means that there were a couple scenes that i was like all right i'm waiting and now watching a handful of scenes that i needed to to prepare for this
for example or other things things feel better as an overarching story than they did watching
every week on a monday night several days after other countries several i mean they can't all be bangers chloe i said that before and i stand by it
you gotta have some interludes every now and then on like the album all right we can't just all
be lit we can't all be lauren all the time all the time well there was actually a lot less incidental music is what we call it in the biz uh in this
particular series and there wasn't any television series that i've ever heard i likened it to lost
actually giacchino always always using character motives and there was very little
incidental music but in this particular season wow there almost everything was theme oriented
which I absolutely loved for instance that Bollwanger cut that I was just talking about
a second ago that's mostly not thematic that's mostly just specifically written for that action set piece with just an
appearance of themes here and there and that was not the case this particular season at all which
i i personally loved because it made it easier to keep track of things interesting i have a lot of
uh you'll be probably familiar with him but like thomas bergeson for example are you familiar with
any of his music matt uh it's only somewhat familiar he does a lot
of soundtracky fantasy super medieval kind of music that it could be filler it's probably been
purchased for a handful of movies you might hear it in a couple uh and there's a handful of different
osts that have songs that are like that but it's like medievally background music but there are some things that are so background and they just fit in for a battle scene etc but i mean lauren operates
like a musical casting director like the second he understands who a character is and where a
character has to be throughout the story and where that character's story is going he writes for
that and he writes for the
actor as well he said in interviews as i know you know that like he writes for these actors and who
their characters and how they play them and i just think that's really interesting because i think it
is a very and we've said it that they're just being very considerate with how they handle all
characters all plots uh let's not be hasty in saying i mean the witches this series they were amazing
everything was fixed right i've been likening it to that uh moment from the avengers where
samuel jackson is like i understand the council has said this is their decision and i've elected
that's a dumbass decision and that's what i felt like with the witches they just fixed it there were band-aids and they were like this is better now and it was and lauren is not one to
just like make a song for the show every song has a meaning and he now especially in series three
when he has themes that he's gonna have to write for oh melodic moments for the galavespians
melodic moments for the angels there's a lot of stuff he's
going to have to write.
Exactly. He has to keep it
tight. He has to keep it
tight.
Oh my god.
That's a double M.
She's hired because I'm fired.
Fired. Absolutely fired.
You can have her. You guys can have her.
No, hired. Hired. Absolutely fired. Hired. You can have her. I'm fired. You guys can have her. Hired. Hired.
Matt.
You can join me then if you're going to take this.
I got fired a lot less on this season.
Matt used to fire me all the time.
Was it season eight?
You fired me every week, Matt?
Well, that was just because I had to.
Every once in a while, you know, you just got to,
once you start something, you just can't end it. So I had to every once in a while, you know, you just gotta, once you start something,
you just can't end it.
So I had to make up reasons to fire her.
And then I would instantly rehire her at the end of the,
I haven't been rehired ever.
I think I don't know why I'm still here.
And yet you keep coming back.
See,
that's,
that's a real professional right there.
You just keep coming back.
Worse.
She keeps editing the episodes.
You'd think if you were fired after an amount of time you just she just edits out the part where she gets fired
and there you go no i keep that in so everyone knows keep coming yeah
well my professional eliana i need you to tell us about the strength of strength of the Egyptians before we go into some of our honorable mentions.
Yeah, so this isn't solely actually just about the song, the strength of the Egyptians.
But I do want to tip my hat to some of the music for the Egyptian scenes in series one.
And especially that funeral scene for Billy Costa, where, you know, honestly, and I still stand by it.
I was looking through our notes, as opposed to re-listening to our episodes but our notes for that scene last season and there was
a lot that i think we were critical of and in the execution that did leave me wanting and i still
uh i think those are really valid uh you know re-watching some of the scenes from series one
i'm like damn the direction and the way that it the whole series is done feels just so different
some of those shots like visually as well yeah it feels like a very different show in many ways not
just because it's a different setting but i i thought this was like a it's different in the
way that some of the music is done and that they really just incorporated it it's it's a vocal
element uh the funeral rites where the gyptians all sing to send billy off it's
very haunting it's sad and i just kind of wanted to pay homage to the way that the music was
interwoven into this series yeah that theme is beautifully sad um in in many ways.
The theme that he uses under most of the Egyptian scenes has,
it's beautiful.
It has the sadness to it, but it also has this pride to it,
which I feel like really exemplifies what that people are all about.
And that was one of the things that I loved about it.
My favorite version of that
particular theme and i you know uh john fa leading a chorus of people to sing that was extremely
moving for me but more moving for me was the scene um when they first found out that Billy was missing, I believe.
It was a scene that focused on Ma Costa,
and I can't remember exactly the scene now
because I haven't re-watched that series since Series 1 in so long.
But there's one very early on in the season
that just totally gutted me and uh mr balfe uses in that he uses
what we call a dorian minor as opposed to a pure minor uh and it takes a little bit of the edge off
and gives it just enough of an exoticness that makes you feel the pride of those people which
is fantastic yeah i don't remember that scene i haven't watched it
as as closely as well either something i remember from that scene was lee and lyra watching right as
the funeral rites went on and lee telling her you know like hey back down kid they've just lost
their family you just want to wait and let them have it. But also I remember the zoom in on Sophanax and Hester during the singing, the very slow zoom in and Hester looking so sad and Sophanax looking so sad.
And I think that's really interesting to think about just the sadness of the demons in that moment of those two specifically and of what's to come for Lee.
Yeah. moment of those two specifically and of what's to come for lee yeah right in loving lyra and
losing right like in pledging to the cause not to to win not to get money but for others for lyra
and quorum as well right quorum and sophinex and the things they've gone through for lyra as well
and it's just sad yeah just sad thinking about it and thinking about
some of those ties to the episode we just
watched a little bit ago
Lee's the one who comforts and as you said
tells Lyra to
guide her through that scene and you know what the lyrics
for this song are in English
everyone so
no need for any Latin
expertise here
Ba? Ba translates as Ba yes bah bah bah bah but the
well the song itself that they sing right it's like the dear son god does never leave you yeah
so i can understand that well we can't fit all of the songs of the series in this episode though
matt may try if we let him long enough, right?
Can I just name a few? Just a few honorable mentions? Just a few?
All right, Matt, this is your moment to shine. Give us your honorable mentions. Give us a monologue.
Go for it, my friend. Okay, well, I did have 76 planned, but I'll just stick it to maybe to the danger motive we actually heard that the first
time in the very first episode actually when Azrael and Stell Maria were on the cliff taking
pictures and the storm was coming in and I thought oh okay there's a theme for Azrael. And then it showed up later with Mrs. Coulter. And when Lyra was trying to find out what the general ablation board was, and she found all those papers in the office, and then it showed up again, time and time again, I thought, oh, this is just about a threat. That's what this motive is about. And the best version of that ever was in episode five. During the time Lyra sets Pan loose, you know, as a Wolverine on the Golden Monkey. And from that point on for the rest of that scene, it's all variations of that little motive done rhythmically in such different ways like or
same melodic shape.
It is that motive.
Again, Mr. Balfe, being the drummer and the rhythmologist that he is,
loves to use rhythm to disguise theme, but it's still just enough to make you think that that
is, seems familiar. What is that? What is that? It's lovely the way that he does that kind of
stuff. And that particular sequence was just amazing. And I broke it down on one of our
podcasts. It's something that just fascinated me. It made that particular part of it outside of, you know, scrambling around trying to talk to our friends from the UK. Did they say Osmendius in the captions or not? You know, so I searched for screenshots for that forever. But that music right there made it for me that entire scene and really built the
tension and did a fabulous job with that oh there's also you know we never mentioned boreal's theme
we're never gonna see him again uh it's one of the most exquisite and most complicated themes
harmonically uh that's ever been done for television period and i i love that one as well and i i got 74 more or does someone
else what do you think about a look to the stars i really love to look to the stars that was a
beautiful series one right the end of series one there i believe am i right in that i i i find it
hard to understand anything by title when it's just a cue title.
Understood.
It's always got to be a theme.
Can you hum a... In typical piano bar fashion, can you hum a few bars for me?
Let me think about this.
Hold on.
Hold on.
I wasn't prepared for that, but you know what?
For you, Matt, let me just...
Bum, bum, bum, bum.
But what's the translation, Eliana? What's the translation? Bum, bum, bum, bum. But what's the translation,
Eliana? What's the translation?
Bum, bum, bum, bum.
Oh, so we got the beginning.
You start off slow. It's got
Lyra's strings and it's all
boo-doo, boo-doo-doo.
Boo-doo-doo-doo.
Yeah, that's the main theme.
Yeah, well, okay, listen. That's the main theme yeah well okay listen that's the main thing no it comes
no it's it's slower though it has lots of strings i can't say that last part just for
um no this comes it's in i want to say it's in episode three of series one it's a little uh
it's after demons to dust it's it's right after the list in series one i don't know how else to
tell you because it's literally based on myra's theme but it's slowed down and it's about looking
to the stars and it's right before gateway to the north that great mix of Lee's theme a little bit there, right before You Loved a Witch that comes up.
So like when she's on the Egyptian boat with Tony looking at the stars?
Yeah, I believe so.
I believe that's it.
Oh, yeah.
Looking up at the Aurora Borealis.
Yeah, that would make sense if the main theme is used there a little bit, because it is
part of the larger story, right?
It's pointing towards what's happening in this particular series this time around so a city in the sky
well you know speaking of uh actually that's not a phil gorfan song at all so this segue doesn't
work but shit um who had the great flood i did i just took it off because i was gonna say i like it
and nothing else um because i'm really i like i'm good with words talk about um okay it's the i
guess the visual that goes along with it when you're watching it uh just getting to see what
that flood looked like i've experienced floods in my real life, and it's not fun. I don't know, the end of that track, it kind of starts to become a little bit more of Lyra's Jordan kind of theme with it.
And it's just really pretty and calming, and I enjoy it.
And the imagery.
Wet.
It's pretty interesting that it becomes Lyra's theme, especially, you know, when you tie it with La Belle Sauvage, the beautiful sausage.
theme especially you know when you're you tie it with labelle sauvage the beautiful sausage it makes me wonder what music may have been cut or planned that was in the bottle episode
especially because originally jack thorne mentioned that he had wanted to have a flashback to lyra as
a baby in that episode it got cut it was cut before the episode was even really happening
he just mentioned that you know his uh ladies in the writing department told him no and said it was cut before the episode was even really happening he just mentioned that you know his uh
ladies in the writing department told him no and said it was too much thankfully and fixed that
but it uh i wonder if there was any music that lauren was thinking of then you know like was
he thinking of any renditions of the flood in different different tone different mix. I don't know.
Yeah, because that scene primarily does use a lot of Lyra-ish kind of stuff.
When you look at that initial scene, after we get our little indoctrination into what this world is, you hear an awful lot of the prophecy theme and what have you, especially as Asriel and Stelmaria are wading through the water
and bringing Lyra to the Master.
So, awesome there.
Played by the great Clark Peters.
Yes, yes.
Yeah, I loved him.
So good.
He did a great job.
I'm really excited to see him again, right? We should see him
again end of season three.
Gives Lyra a spot.
He's a school.
You mean he gives her, he offers
her sanctuary.
I'm so sad. Okay.
Let's get unsad for literally
three minutes before we get sad
one more time. we're gonna move on
to a very fun portion of the episode this is the last leg right of our app and we're gonna talk
about two things first we're gonna talk about filk and fan music so just a handful of songs
that we've come across that are actually literally written about his dark materials.
And after that, we have a little holiday surprise, a little winter cheer for you all from the
US, which is us.
We've compiled a little playlist.
I've compiled a handful of songs and I've had some really great help from Eliana, Holly
and Matt with some other songs to add to it that are about, I don't know, just stuff that makes us think about His Dark Materials, right?
Just songs that make us think about His Dark Materials.
So before we get there, first, I want to talk about,
did you know other people like His Dark Materials besides us?
No, really?
Seems like a lot.
I mean, are you sure sure i have a few others like two maybe three four four
and they're all famous it looks but like by your list here are these our friends i wish oh my god
if justin vernon from bony ver was my friend a lot of things would be different no I'm just kidding
maybe not I don't really know what he's like
but Boney Ver
Boney Ver's
lead Justin Vernon
he's like a really big
fan of his dark materials
I did not know this was a thing you might know
Boney Ver from their scratchy
high indie vocals against
some electronic music where they're like
that's kind of what they sound like but like with some acoustic but sometimes
sometimes it's a little different for example like skinny love which is like
so that's kind of what they sound like usually sometimes they're better sometimes they're on
taylor swift so yes uh exile featuring justin bernard of bony bear but he is his dark materials
fan his song 10 death breast with lyrics that are i'll wrap you up and take it by the touch
darling don't a failure fright time's the breaker I'll rack it up
I'm unorphaned in our northern lights
Dedecoding every demon
Taken in the tall grass of the mountain cable
And I cannot seem to find I'm able
That is a lyric he wrote
He wrote about demons y'all
That's
Yeah
And with northern lights
Yeah That's canon Orphaned, unorphaned Unorphan yeah and with northern lights yeah that's canon
orphaned unorphaned unorphaned
in the northern lights that's
that's about his dark materials
and there's another
song Salem
yeah and the lyrics for that one that are
related to the series are to speak
supportively big guy there's
no automatic peace but I bet
you'd keep all these in-betweens that
bar my youth though no anna bar dream far as i know i tried too hard to see what i thought it'd
be asking constantly how's it gonna be you don't know me how's it gonna be oh that could be a his
dark material song yeah i i mean the anabaric definitely that i who has
written them off i mean definitely because of like the the anabaric right because i remember
when i was looking up anbaric and roots in an art world turns out it's not it's just literally made
up for lyra's world there's no mistake in that for sure and that's not the only thing he he's in a project the staves and why music
collaboration called the way is red and stavely taylor has a sister named millie from this group
who says you wouldn't be able to tell if you didn't know but we connect elements to our music
basically that go along with the witch's idea of being ageless or perspective or uh there are
certain tracks that they've written on the stavely and why music's collaboration the staves of like
for example take me home and the way is red they literally talk at one point about lyra how she
gets those three rungs below and hits into the alethiometer, right, and hits into reading the alethiometer.
And I think that's so interesting that Justin Vernon's not only in one project
where he gets to write lyrics about his dark materials,
but two projects where he gets to write music about his dark materials
and people just keep letting him.
That's nuts.
This other one links to actually someone who's in,
who is in the show interestingly i don't know if either of you or any of you i don't think you have eliana have listened or
watched in the heights the musical no i have not i know it exists lin-manuel mir Miranda have said that When the Sun Goes Down from In the Heights
was inspired
by Will and Lyra
it's very emotional
if you know the musical
it's very sad but the lyrics that
most speak to me from this one
are you know that I'll be
waiting when you're gone but you're here with me
right now we'll be working hard
but if we should drift apart let me take this moment just to say you're gonna change the world someday i'll be
thinking of home and i'll think of you every night at the same time when the sun goes down
when the sun goes down when the sun goes down yeah so it's unfair so i think that alone right
there i'm like lynn manuel you're allowed to be
lee scoresby that's a lee scoresby thing lee scoresby would write lyrics about will and lyra
totally that was one of the things that really drew him and his wife together isn't it yes
the whole history i think they read it like as a couple um yeah that's pretty cute yeah
that's awesome i i have a similar story to that.
Me and the guy I was dating at the time when I started reading the books, he started reading
it too.
And we both got like pretty into it.
And, uh, we've been broken up for like, uh, four or five years now, but we, we were texting
recently about the show.
So, I mean, you know, sometimes you could still talk about your favorite things with your guys
all have people to share this stuff with i just sit at home waiting for somebody to send me a tweet
what do you think holly is matt we do a whole podcast
literally like weekly twice a week where have you been yeah but well i mean holly's always schooling me so much that i
don't feel like i can properly express myself oh are we mediating matt listen
you know matt if you want this is a safe space you know we can just beat these out
totally giving you guys trouble i would not be able to do this podcast without holly there's no doubt about that
i kind of like her too don't tell her though yeah i'm embarrassed i'm blushing
eliana i know you're not a big metal head but you have found a metal band to tell us about. We've mentioned it before
in episodes. Now's your time to shine
So this was actually a fascinating
find. I think I found it because I was
looking up the pronunciation of
Taliatea Makera
which is in the
maybe it's in the
Amber Spyglass where that term comes up and it's called
it means the last knife of all.
And I don't know if I pronounced that right, because believe it or not, another one of the languages I do not speak, along with Latin, is Greek.
And what came up for that search was also Isahitra.
And I was like, yes, that's true. Those are both the same thing from the books.
are both the same thing from the books but turns out isahitra is in fact a metal band and tell you is one of their metal songs interesting i as soon as i saw this in the notes i went through
uh their band camp page and i listened to the the album that they had up and i noticed that
their cut four is called among witches and uh one of the things that they had up, and I noticed that their cut four is called Among Witches.
And one of the things that I noticed was that the opening sounded like this.
And then it shifts to...
where you have the same top note, but all of the harmony shifts down a half step.
And that's exactly, and what I find funny about this,
is the fact that Loren Balfe used that exact same kind of treatment,
but for the opposite of the witches, he used it for the magisterium,
where it's with New Cardinal Rises, the Macphail theme.
The bottom shifts down a half step step but the top stays the same we call it side slipping or i call it side slipping i don't know what the technical term is i'm sure that if i went back
through my you know volumes and volumes of music theory stuff from 30 years ago i could probably
find it and tell you what the exact technical phrase is.
Not in this case, but I just loved hearing that kind of same musical approach used for
a similar type of idea, genre, even though they do come from different angles.
I think you hear a lot of that uh metal tends to sometimes have dramatics
right is the easiest way to call it sometimes you get that build up that rise yeah well and
that's the easygoing part that's before it goes into the whole you know the actual crunching stuff
that's just the kind of beginning of guitar intro Loved it, though. It was fantastic.
Loved that cut.
Yeah, there's a couple bands like that.
Have you ever listened to From Autumn to Ashes?
Is that a song familiar? No.
They're kind of a heavier band, but there's a song.
There are two songs, actually.
There's one called Short Stories with Tragic Endings, which ironically is not short.
It is like several minutes, many, many minutes.
One of those long-ass like six, nine minute songs uh but it starts off with this beautiful whining violin
right like this tragic sad melody and then it just goes with the violin just all
and i love shit like that i love what yeah eliana's like busting her head right now. She's headbanging
because I love shit like that.
You get that violin leading you in
and then you're in
and it's heavy on you
and I don't know, not bad.
So I was into that.
I don't listen to a lot of heavy stuff anymore
in my older age,
but I used to get pretty down with that.
So I could appreciate Isahitra.
I could.
All right, everyone. This brings us into the most exciting the most freeing the the no rules no more the free will free will free him will
someone please free him or my blanket no one knows it could be either free my blanket anyways
i've made a handy dandy little playlist. You guys have added some songs that
I have thrown in. There's going to be a link to Spotify with the playlist. I'm unafraid of all
of you people judging my habits, the songs I listen to. So no, I will not go private. I am
not afraid. You will get the playlist link. It will take you to my personal spotify but if you do not have a
spotify you can check out the track listing which will be available at our patreon patreon.com
slash girls gone canon where this episode will be posted we'll also have a few significant lyrics
highlighted for you and you know if you're not done being sad about his dark materials series two eliana and i have a home for you matt
and holly have a home for you it's with us come get sad listen to the music with us and we're
gonna jump in let's talk some of our favorite songs that remind us of his dark materials
matt what do you got first i just want to say that I checked out your playlist and I loved it.
Anything iron and wine will always get my attention because I played in a band a long time ago, 10 plus years ago, but we covered Naked As We Came, which is one of the cuts that you have on there.
I hadn't even at that time exposed myself to anything, His Dark Materials or Philip Pullman or anything like that but now
that I've listened to that song again it does remind me a lot of his dark materials and of
Philip Pullman I love that and I've I can't say that I'm an original Imogen hipster so to speak
because it wasn't until like the Frufu album that I got on board with her.
But the album that her song is from, the album Speak for Yourself, Hide and Seek, that record,
the whole record is just an amazing record. And one of the things that I've always loved about
that is that that particular song really essentially created a whole new industry for the synth industry because it repopularized the vocoder, which was an instrument that was used a lot where you blew into it and you played chords on a piano.
You could only find them after the 70s.
You could really only find them, maybe Moog would make one every once in a while,
but you generally only found them in a studio. You only found them, and only high dollar studios,
say like in Minneapolis, like in Nashville, like in LA, like in New York. They were pretty rare
to find. And then all of a sudden this song comes out, and every synth line, I had a Roland
sponsorship for years. uh when roland
came out with their version of it i had to try it out i was horrible at it it didn't work for me
because i wasn't that great at it but roland and yamaha and moog and just everybody came out with
their own version of of a vocoder the exact next year. By the next year, there were models of it anywhere,
and you could get them relatively cheap.
So I don't know if that killed the incentive for everybody to keep using it
or if it made it that much more accessible,
and you heard hide-and-seek a lot in the clubs.
But I just love those two cuts.
Yeah. So that's my thoughts on that the the first time I heard
that I'm a gin heap song it was 2006 and I was at a grad party or 2007 I remember the exact place
the exact time some kids were playing like home laser tag they had their own laser tag
stuff and i just remember kids were outside playing laser tag it was like 11 p.m uh and then
of course it was popularized with garden state soundtrack which is one of the best soundtracks
of all time of any movie ever created the garden state State. 100% agree. Amazing, right?
Yeah, it is.
There's nothing bad or wrong with that album,
and you should listen to that and go on rainymood.com while you do
and just blast the rain.
That's what I do when I'm sad, which is often.
But I guess the Jason Derulo song is what bigly,
to use a bad adjective, popularizedized it like hugely popularized the song
and of course the cultural moment that was thanksgiving in what was it series three of
gossip girl uh at thanksgiving when jason derulo's much a say was played so that song has had such
culture it has evolved over time it has gone many places and i
feel like now the biggest moment of that song of hide and seek's life is being on this playlist so
it's canon there you go i mean it's got a lot of popularity amongst teen dramas in general i
believe what that same song before jason drulo was also in that that scene in the OC which I actually
haven't watched but I believe they also use that same scene and then they spoofed
it right in- I've seen the OC but now it's been a long time and I can't
remember. The one where everyone gets shot. Oh okay. Like a bazillion people get shot I
think it's that and then I think they spoofed it on like what was it SNL or
something like that and people just kept getting shot and coming back to life and
shooting each other and I was like I don't understand
this reference
because I didn't watch the OC at that time
but I'm thinking of adding
it to my list it is the same
I think producer right as Gossip Girl
and I think I came
across Image and Heap maybe through
FruFru surfing on MySpace or Zynga
and someone just had it playing if anyone remembers zanga yep i had at least four zangas i remember it very well there
was xxk thanks omg stfu i don't say that one lightly i'm willing to reveal it to you all
i will never reveal that was it they're all gone now yeah they are thankfully holly what makes you sad
about his dark materials besides you know like willow myra lee scoresby i mean musically
outside of the actual music i think the direction i kind of went with was at least for this first
one just kind of the whole world and the journey itself so So I, I'm a big fan of Puss Fur.
Just a big fan of Maynard James Keenan in general.
I know that's controversial maybe to some people.
I don't care.
He's talented.
And this song is one of my favorites from the Conditions of My Parole album, which I
think in general, this album is kind of a
story of a person's life from birth to death but this one stood out uh called green valley just
lyrically literally the lyrics are talking about strangers meeting and having to go on a journey
together no direction but to follow what you know no direction but a faith in her decision
no direction but to never fight her flow and no direction but to trust
the final destination uh there's another line in there that says uh come the sunrise will descend
through judgment valley and i'm like okay like this is like hitting really hard and all of all
of his dark material things for me world of the dead stuff and there's just a lot of i think there's
a lot of symbolism in that song that you can interpret in a thousand different ways that make it relate to his dark materials from uh the
river just being like the river of life or i think about like the river of dust that they can see in
the sky and the malefic world near the end of the series um there's so much it's really it's a really
really good song and it's very pretty it reminds reminds me of the prophecy, too, in general, around Lyra,
and Lyra being the anchor in this world that everything is following,
with the no direction but to never fight her flow.
And especially in this series of His Dark Materials,
with kind of Lyra's interesting relationship with the alethiometer, right?
It wasn't quite as smooth as it was in Series 1.
Mm-hmm. Yeah yeah no direction but to
trust the final destination and then just destroying destiny final destination i don't know like i've
ah there's a lot there's a lot in there it's i didn't even think of that that's awesome that was
very you're good at this holy shit what else you else you got? Give me next one, bartender.
Throw it at me.
Now, if I want to be sad about Will and Lyra,
I saw your Regina songs and I had to raise you How by Regina Spector
because it's the most sad, I don't know, breakup song, I guess.
It's heartbreaking. The song like will make me cry if
I if I listen to it hard enough. And I haven't even really experienced a relationship or a breakup
like that. But it's just I feel it in my bones. Yeah, so some lyrics are, how can I forget your
love? How can I never see you again? How can I ever know why some stay, others go,
when I don't?
Oh, I don't want you to go.
So it's pretty just kind of on the nose there, but.
Yeah.
I don't think we're going to survive series three.
I don't know.
Yeah.
I don't know.
You might not.
I don't know, man.
There are so many Regina Spector songs that
worked here in fact originally I had Samson on there I did take it off just because it's close
but it's not perfect maybe it'll go back on you don't know it could happen there's time between
when you're all hearing this and when it happens you never know but I did load a bunch of Regina
on there uh we need to balance it you know we need another happy regina song to balance out your sad i think
because i put one sad one happy in this final mix the sad one i put is eat it reminds me of lyra
losing both will and the ability to read the alethiometer, you know, all the fun stuff, you know. Oh, great. Yeah, happy stuff.
And of course, the lyrics that resonate the most are,
It's like forgetting the words to your favorite song.
You can't believe it.
You were always singing along.
It was so easy and the words so sweet.
You can't remember.
You try to move your feet.
It was so easy and the words so sweet.
You can't remember.
You try to feel the beat
it reminds me just of you know the negative capability that she has to enter into right
that third rung just to enter into but i did balance it with us okay i would never make that
connection and i'm so glad i'm talking to you right now because you just made me leverage
genus specter even more than I could have.
I know, I'm like, what do we need?
Fidelity?
Should we just put fidelity on here?
Because that could make us happier about all of this.
I don't know.
Folding chair is not related, but it's just happy.
So you could throw that up there.
Sure ain't folding bench.
We haven't had enough bench talk, you know?
I feel like they were just throwing that bench at us through the whole series.
They were.
They said it like three different benches in three different episodes.
And then they tweeted about it.
Hey, talk about some foreshadowing.
And I'm assuming that we saw the bench right in episode uh what was that
episode two the cave episode but uh just the fact that like okay uh every time they have an emotional
connection they're sitting at a bench which is what i love about it thematically they have
of course the bench in the botanical garden they have the bench
just outside the window where she talks about losing the alethiometer and then they have the
bench in Chittagaze where they sat right after the whole deal with Angelica and seeing Tulio
where Will is all you know emotionally a mess so it's just like
it makes perfect sense that these two are going to find a bench that they have in common in their
in their own worlds uh to spend time with each other even though they can't spend time with each
other so oh the bench is foreshadowing oh it is we're for benching we're four benching. We're four benching. Yeah, it's brilliant.
Benches have four legs.
Well, not all of them.
Not all benches are created equal, Aliana.
It's true.
There's some legs under those benches for foreshadowing.
You know, there's another song that you pointed out, Holly.
I think it's from Irma Thomas.
Yes.
Anyone who knows what love is would understand.
If you watch Black Mirror, it shows up at least once a season.
But yeah, it just came on when I was in the car the other day, not long after watching
the last episode.
And I was like thinking about it as the monkey kind of singing it to Mrs. Coulter. And it was just a dark, kind of dark.
So sorry, but, but that's, I don't know.
That song is iconic.
And it just was like, this is, this weirdly works for this.
I'm going to put it in the podcast, I guess.
All of the suffering and he still loves her.
It's an interesting concept of the monkey having a song to Mrs. Coulter.
How else is he going to communicate with her?
That's true.
I'm telling you, we need a musical episode of His Dark Materials.
It's got to happen.
Well, there are two songs I really want to hear from Matt on.
And one of those songs is Chittagotse by the Portico Quartet the other one well could be a
couple of songs from Jacob Collier so Chittagazze I don't know how findable that particular cut is
you can find it on YouTube and Chloe maybe you'll want to put that link in if you didn't find it for
the Spotify list but uh it's basically the theico Quartet, and it's a jazz instrumental. The title
is, of course, will instantly remind you of His Dark Materials, but even the timbres that are used
in this particular piece do, the instruments that are used, they do give you kind of almost that
tropical or Mediterranean kind of sound, which is very easily linked to the television series, if not
the books, at least. And the Jacob stuff, Jacob is an amazing young musician. He's just absolutely
much like a Lauren Balfe or whatever, that there's no instrument that he can't play that
and play most of them world class. lyrically when he writes stuff,
it's pretty general in a lot of ways.
So you can interpret them in a lot of ways,
but there's one particular song that he did on his first Jesse album that
really got me.
And that was,
uh,
once you,
it has just a few lines lyrically that always make me think of Will and
Lyra at the end of
the Amber Spyglass. And those lyrics are, time passes us by, seems like our day is gone,
but I know in my heart, I'll always care for you and you'll care for me. And I'll always remember
the world we shared. The road may be long, long, long, long long but someday i'll hold you close once more
and uh it's just that kind of longing that and the way this song is orchestrated very dramatically
by the metropole orchestra is uh wonderfully done and uh that always makes me think of his dark materials now
when i hear it sad about little myra again yeah yeah we're gonna check this out we're really good
at that if you want to if you want a little bit lighter maybe chloe you can put this in your notes
as well if you want to just consider his dark materials from philip pullman's perspective the bbc uh had a
program where they had him on and had him select a whole bunch of tunes and i mean it's got everything
from i don't know james brown through elvis through all of these different songs but if you
think about that they're phil's favorites that's double F. You know, he does have his...
Double F?
It's not a double F.
Phil's favorites.
Oh, wait.
I got that wrong.
Oh, it's PH.
It's a double P, Matt.
It's a phonetic fail.
P-H-A-V-O-R-I-T-E.
Favorite with a PH.
And an O-U while we're at it because the British.
But yeah, there's a link to the list.
It's bbc.co.uk slash programs spelled the proper British way.
B09BBDLR.
So check that URL out and you'll get all of Phil's favorite songs.
He does have his very good friend Kate Bush on there.
He does?
Yes.
And funnily enough, I had cloud busting on this playlist already before you had sent me this link.
So I felt pretty good.
I was like, Philip and I are connected.
We're very connected.
And interestingly enough.
Interestingly enough when it comes to Kate Bush.
You know she did a song.
For the Golden Compass.
The movie.
You may remember it from the end of the film.
I don't know how you could forget it.
That's film with a PH by the way.
Just in case you were worried Matt.
But I don't know how you
could forget it the song was called lyra and kate bush sang the ditty it went like this eliana join
with me you know when you want yes lyra lyra her soul box beside her yeah so so it wasn't it wasn't probably my favorite song it's actually grown on me it went from being
ironically good to unironically good like there are days where i sing it to myself
i'm at the point maybe it's quarantine maybe that's what has me is the pandemic but like
i'm at the point where it might be unironically decent.
Hysterically enough, it used to be called Into the Wild and was a Disney reject song.
And it was reworked.
And it became this song Lyra for her very good friend, Philip Pullman, who has said that she is his very good friend so much.
In fact, that if you have heard of the book, sorry, the novella,
the story, The Collectors, The Collectors by Philip Pullman is based off of a story that
Kate Bush told him and he decided to expand upon. Wow. Yes, he released that little nugget. I got
real lucky recently in the Waterstones event where he discussed Serpentine and he answered my question.
I asked him, he very, very just blasé was like, and we're going to release the collectors next year.
And I was like, what?
But like, there's an audio book, Bill Nighy, yada yada.
So I asked a question like, can you tell us more?
like can you tell us more and boy did he and he told us all about kate bush coming to him with the story of two pieces of art that kept accidentally coming into the same collection
over years and he turned it into a couple of other pieces of art and if you haven't yet read it i
really recommend you do matt looking at you but uh i just thought that was so cool so she ended up
reworking one of her songs into lyra for the Golden Compass and they're
buddies.
How cool is that?
Every time.
Every time.
Every time.
Eliana, are you going to make me sad now?
Is it your turn?
Dance.
Dance for me.
This is like a mix of feelings.
I don't know if it's sad or not, but the way I imprinted on these songs and none of these
are indicative of my musical taste at all
I don't like listen
to these songs
but they make me think of Will and Lyra
because last year when I finished
my reread of
His Dark Materials I was
finishing it up I finished the Amber Spyglass
and I was on a plane
to London and
we took a red eye flight and I had the brilliant
plan of you know I'm gonna sleep on this flight wake up two hours you know land two hours before
my workday my meetings in London time and in British time and you know what? I didn't sleep at all during
that flight.
Partially because I was just
so devastated again
as an adult about the ending
for Will and Lyra, and then
I was just delirious in the car
heading to the office.
And also
one of my co-workers will tell
you, and she interestingly might actually have
access to this episode but i fell asleep in one of our meetings uh because i was just so tired but
everyone just felt so bad for me they were just like oh that poor girl and everyone was just
trying not to laugh apparently but i apparently also took the best notes in the entire meeting
but I apparently also took the best notes in the entire meeting.
But in the car, yeah.
Well, no, I would wake up periodically, and I would make eye contact with people and nod,
and people were trying not to laugh because they were like,
I don't understand, wasn't she asleep?
But I also took the best notes.
Anyway.
Amazing.
I'm very talented.
Anyway, so on the car ride
to the office
in the cab,
the song If You're Not
the One by Daniel Bedingfield
played,
and I somehow imprinted on
this song, being about Will and Lyra,
this is not a great
song at all. I'm sure you've all
heard it somewhere on some adult contemporary
station.
But I decided
in my delirium that this
was about Bill and Lyra.
If you're not the one, then
why can't we be together?
But I can't
take it. I can't take it
I don't understand
so anyway
yeah
me that
well that's the thing you know if I'm not
made for you then why does my heart tell me that
I am is there any way that I can stay
in your arms and they can't
they can't physically
they know like this is awful and I'm about to have an emotional breakdown and about to start
crying in this cab next to my other two co-workers who also didn't sleep on this flight also in the
same car ride hello from Adele played you know again adult contemporary hits all playing while
I'm delirious in this cab and much of this song is not about
Will and Lyra but Hello from the Other Side
is and
in those like moments I was
very vulnerable and just imprinted
onto these two songs
very strongly
so it's also the Adele song
oh no
I don't listen to these
songs in my usual life.
This is not indicative of my taste in music at all.
So.
Since you all Adele's albums next year for Christmas.
Thank you so much.
I mean, she's like a fantastic vocalist, right?
She's got songs that are great to sing to.
But I was just like, great.
Now this is how I feel about this book now.
Anyway.
I mean, I don't feel like the Daniel Benningfield song is technically a negative.
I think it's a bop.
I don't know.
It's something.
It's definitely, I guess, catchy. It gets stuck in your head for sure. a bop i don't know it's something it's it's definitely i guess
catchy gets stuck in your head for sure i mean i don't know there are so many stupid pitchfork
articles that just shit on pop music that are just like it's pop like fundamentally there's a
very basic equation to making good music and if you have something that is catchy it's usually
catchy for a reason so you know what go on with your bad self, Daniel Bedingfield.
Make us sad.
And also, that feels indicative of the time, like the kind of time frame that you seem
to be speaking of.
Like that is completely indicative of just like popular music too.
So I mean, 2019.
This is summer 2019 and someone was playing old hits on their radio station.
Me, who filled this playlist with old hits.
Interesting.
Wow.
That's good.
Another old hit.
Apparently this song was really, really popular in the UK.
And I want to put it on here because it was canonically in the show.
And I had actually never heard this song before this episode was Lighthouse Families Lifted.
And I was just like, I don't know.
I was like, Lord Boreal, what is happening here?
Same.
Eliana, if I could just tell a story about that song.
Yes.
We went over this in our podcast because I broke it down. It was
released three different times in the UK. And the first time it made the top 70. The second time it
made the top 40 is a lot of places all around the world, not the US, I don't think. And then the
third time they just put new artwork on it and released it in 1999. But I've got a friend from
TV podcast industries. That's another great podcast that covers a lot of same shows that Double P does.
Derek.
And he sent me this really wonderful email telling me about how anybody who is middle-aged in the 90s that was having a dinner party,
that song was playing or was part of the playlist that was playing as they were entertaining.
It was that much of a staple.
He also said that he hated that song.
And so it seemed fitting that Boreal would, of course, try to use that song to put Mrs.
Coulter in the mood.
Oh, my God.
Yeah, I saw like it.
It's a kind of irritating song.
I saw that like, it's a kind of irritating song. I saw that someone tweeted.
I don't know if it was to Lorne Balfe or just in general, that they were like, damn, Lord Boreal's, like, really into Lifted.
That's a villain song.
And Lorne Balfe, like, quote, tweeted it.
Like, isn't it perfect?
Or something like that.
It was like, that wasn't verbatim, but it was the same general idea.
It feels like the Dave Matthews band or something. Is that kind of how it is? I thought that's who it was that wasn't verbatim but it was the same general idea it feels like like the dave matthews band or something like is that kind of how it is i thought that's who it was it was it's
like the dave matthews band of the uk that feels accurate oh excellent excellent that's a great i
mean but to be fair that's not very fair because dave matthews band like the band is so talented
that like i i can't it's hard to make fun of dave matthews band because
the band must have sore shoulders from all that heavy lifting they're doing speaking of lifted
you know yeah hey that's my dave matthews band uh
yeah that's just what I saw.
It's like the typical bro band, I guess.
Or like maybe a mixture of like Dave Matthews band with Incubus and like Michael Bublé.
Incubus still bobs.
Yeah, Incubus fucking rages.
And I'm not saying maybe Lighthouse fam, they rage, you know, like you don't know.
There's probably some songs they go ham on.
Maybe there is. I've never seen him live before me either that's true i don't plan on finding out songs where you can go ham and this one uh was brought to my attention and and i think i'd heard
it before but didn't like it's not something i really think of ever and uh our friends pete and
warren brought it up of molly malone that they associate molly
malone with mary malone yes the the classic irish song yeah excellent well you know that that just
leaves you chloe what are your songs i've got a lot you know i uh i was in a long distance really i was i've been in several
long distance relationships actually not let i say that but uh the last long distance relationship i
was in i would drive for like five to ten hours at a time depending on where i was heading to how
i was going etc etc route i was taking and i had so many playlists of music right
i'm a spotify girl on a spotify family i'm only on this family with people that live in my same
house so don't come for me spotify that's a legal disclaimer i'm putting out there aliana don't laugh
they'll know uh i have several songs that make me think of a little vibrant there are some songs on
this playlist you all will see that are like some no brainers,
right?
Some death cap for cuties.
Some I will follow you into the dark.
You can't have a you can't have a true pairing playlist without having that song on it.
B, you can't have a true pairing that is going to dethrone and attack God without putting
that song on there.
Okay, like that's, that's easy. That's
low hanging fruit. And I'm tempted and I took it. But a couple songs that really stood out. There
are two songs in particular I will tell you about the rest I am not going to tell you,
you have to go click the playlist, you have to look at this track list yourself,
find some stuff to get sad about or to think about. The first one is Set Fire to the Third Bar
by Snow Patrol featuring vocals by Martha Wainwright. It feels like Lyra at the end of
the Amber Spyglass as well as, no real spoilers, but post the Amber Spyglass.
Some lyrics that I'm fond of that hurt my heart very much and remind me of Lil and Lyra are
I find the map and draw a straight line over
rivers, farms, and state lines. The distance from A to where you'd be. It's only finger lengths that
I see. I touch the place where I'd find your face. My fingers and creases of distant dark places.
The chorus of the song is sadder. It's all like i'm miles from where you are i lay down
on the cold ground and hope that something picks me up and lays me down in your warm arms it's fine
so god damn it's sad yeah it's real sad it kind of reminds me of again no spoilers for the future
but just a lyra in the future that live in her life going to into bars, try to just, you know, go to school, do her
life, whatever. Just real sad.
Real bummer. This playlist is really uplifting.
You know, it's a
it's a good one.
It's really, it's a positive playlist.
The other songs are not happy. It's a double S.
It's a double S. What?
What does it mean, Matt?
A sad set. Oh my fucking god.
It's really fun to not be the person that does double s i was just trying to copy you i'm sorry if i'm like no you did great no you did
great like try to i'm out here like is it within my jurisdiction to fire him or do i hire him i'm
just not sure what my actual job is anymore. I don't know.
I'm very fireable. It's alright.
Well, if Chloe fires you, I'll hire
you. So, you know, who knows what'll happen.
Cancel out.
That's the goal.
That's the goal every time. Eliana, you
would definitely be on the losing end of that trade.
Trust me. I'm going back to the
kitchen now. And then I have going back to the kitchen now and
then and then i have to take over the music coverage and so the podcast will only be five
minutes long we heard this theme it was great think of how many downloads you have though
i mean if something's five minutes i'd probably download it you know what i mean like i got it
i wouldn't download in seven and a half hour episode of stuff
that i've done i'm glad they will though the people are the best i don't know especially when
it just makes you sad why do you listen to us if we just make you sad to feel anything yeah that's true. I just want to feel something. Well, in closing our feelings,
speaking of closing feelings,
the other song that I want to highlight,
do any of you like Stars?
The band Stars at all?
Yeah. Oh, well, I'm gonna
hurt you. I love Stars.
I was a
big Stars fan as a teenager.
Me too.
So angsty, I was like, stars fan as a teenager. Me too. So angsty.
I was like, I set myself on fire.
Listen, I didn't put Broken Social Scene on here.
Okay.
Dude, that was my, I listened to that album every single day.
I have never felt so old.
I listened to Broken Social Scene every single like night for like months.
Yeah, I listened to broken social scene in memphis
so hard oh god well stars what was dead hearts even on dead hearts was on like i don't remember
it was on five ghosts i want to say so there's an album called the five ghosts that was released in
2010 a great year uh and stars released this album and there's a song
on it called Dead Hearts. Now this is a song that I usually relate to another favorite pairing of
mine from Doctor Who, which is Amy and Rory rip. But it works really well for Will and Lyra. So
the first verse is, did you see the closing window? Did you hear the slamming door?
They moved forward and my heart died.
They moved forward and my heart died.
Please tell me what they looked like.
Did they seem afraid of you?
They were kids that I once knew.
They were kids that I once knew.
Yeah, so it's sad.
It's a real bummer.
That is sad.
It's kind of just like what if they just
didn't you know what if they
got to stay together what if it didn't matter
what if like
health wise it worked I mean it could
happen you know maybe they didn't know maybe
maybe the angels don't know shit
maybe they don't know shit we don't know
I've been through a war i know things you know
it's the angels
sigh yeah well very positive sufficiently sad yep i don't know i don't have a lot of positivity
because it's like we don't have the next book yet in the Companion Sandwich trilogy
where I think we're going to get some closure.
There's no reason to have anything there.
It's not spoilers. I just think it's going to happen.
Lyra needs closure, man.
Adults need closure from trauma and stuff.
I mean, this kid's a pretty special kid, right?
Yeah. I mean, both of them yeah dude both
of them need so much help so much trauma i don't know i think music is part of that healing for us
as people that have to read these books and tear our hearts open and watch this show
and tear our hearts back hoping all over again, as we've been doing.
I don't know.
I wonder what we'll be seeing in the future of the show.
What are your hopes for the soundtrack in Series 3, Matt and Holly?
What do you hope we get as far as moments from the book to sound, etc.? I mentioned it earlier, the hardest, I think the music for Leaving Pan on the Shore needs to be the saddest thing I've ever heard.
It has to be.
Yeah.
That's kind of my moment from that book.
It's really the only moment I think about.
I'll be very interested to see what kind of approach Mr. Balfe takes, if any, regarding
the Malefa.
Because
you could
theoretically
just continue on with Mary's
stuff and make it about that
if you want to make that easier.
I've never known that man to not
take a challenge though
so I'm sure he's got something in mind already
he's such a lover of the books
but I'll be really interested to see how that works out
also new cardinal rises for the magisterium
let's see if we get
first of all let's see if we get a father Gomez
and if we do how prominent that role and theme is.
And I'm being kind of specific,
but we talked about the Lee and Joppery rediscovery.
So that's about all I've got for that, I guess, right now.
It's just pure speculation.
Can't wait to see what they come up with.
It kind of makes me wonder, that's a great point regarding the magisterium if there's
like going to be a you know what what's the theme going to be like when we see metatron and the
authority is it going to be more magisterium-esque are they going to veer more towards the side of
the songs they've been using for dust and the angels is it going to be something different
entirely you know i kind of wonder what
what direction if it'll be a blend which will be weird and interesting i don't know if it's
possible question metatron's theme is just the one-winged angel sephiroth theme
i hope turns out we heard it all along it's
I hope.
Turns out we heard it all along.
Yo, I bet it will be though.
I'm not even kidding.
I bet that will be a very significant part of it, Matt.
Oh my God.
It may very well be.
It may very well be.
Okay.
We got to remember this moment.
Now I can't wait to find out that we're right. Yeah.
Holly can't wait on this moment so that she can hold it over my head and say see you've always been terrible at theories
i never talk to you like that yeah that's mean what is this don't quarrel you two what is this
it's three hours you know they're starting to get fussy with each other.
Yeah. It's time for our naps.
Set them free.
I bet we're going to get a song called
Closing the Windows.
Closing time.
I was going there too.
Oh my god.
I do know that it's going to be
a song that kicks in just
when the angels are explaining to them.
No, sorry.
You got to go close the windows.
Good luck.
I bet it's going to be a devastating overture.
It's going to have children in the prophecy.
I bet it's going to have like some of Mary's theme with the bells coming in.
Maybe some of the shaman.
Oh, it's going to be sad.
It's going to have Lyra's theme over at the end.
Real sad, real small, some strings. Lauren, it's gonna be sad. It's gonna have Lyra's theme over at the end. Real sad, real small.
Some strings. Lauren,
come get it. This is
yours. You can have it. Just, you know,
give me a wink and a nod when you take it,
you know? But there you go. Closing of the
windows. Damn.
Close all the windows and let
no specters in the world.
I don't know.
That's bad.
That's bad.
Series factors in the world i don't know that's bad series three eliana series three i mean i i think i'm gonna stick with what i said about metatron that's my big like wonder now yeah or what the underworld's gonna sound like
in general yeah will everything have a certain like minor kind of variant to it or yeah or even diminished yeah
i would think it diminished could go even further with that because that's basically just taking a
minor and and making it that much more closed and the symmetry of a diminished chord will always
make you uncomfortable because for every diminished chord there's three possible resolutions
and we as humans just don't deal with that very well we like closure us humans is what you're
saying well we we just uh we we prefer to have a more in terms of music western music not eastern
but western music we definitely prefer to have a path laid out for
us that we can follow and that's why dominant chords are so troublesome for us in terms of
if you just leave them at the end or which is great for a cliffhanger or what have you
and why diminished chords are so troublesome for us and why augmented chords are actually
troublesome for us too because they're chords are actually troublesome for us too,
because they're also evenly spaced,
and that's what makes them seem weird,
even though they have kind of a major sound to them.
I could see that. I like that idea.
I guess we'll have to hold out and find out,
which we don't have a release date, obviously.
We won't have that for quite some time,
but we do know that series three has been confirmed.
It is happening.
We all kind of knew it,
you know,
deep down because series two rocked.
Yeah.
Cause series two was kick ass.
How could you not?
But also still was kind of scared,
right?
Like still was like,
what if?
So I'm really happy,
really happy to hear it.
Absolutely.
Yay.
Well,
that's gotta leave some thoughts, leave some things to the future.
So thank you so much, Matt and Holly, for joining us for this episode and for talking
with us for quite a while.
Would you mind reminding everyone where they can find the Dust Podcast?
Yeah, we're at the Dust Podcast on Twitter.
I always like to let Holly give her own personal Twitter if she wishes.
You can find me at HuntPants on Twitter.
It's weird.
You can find me at Musical Concepts.
Amazing.
This episode, for now, is out for our patrons in the stranger tier and above on Patreon.com slash Girls Gone Canon.
and the Stranger tier and above on patreon.com slash girlsgonecanon.
However, in the future, you may see this at a public feed near you,
possibly even over at the Dust podcast feed.
Thank you so much for a wonderful year of podcasting,
specifically His Dark Materials podcasting. We'll be returning in 2021 with much more for you,
including the end of La Belle Sauvage as we get toward the middle of it now.
We'll be continuing throughout the year
until we complete the novel.
And of course, we are hoping to start
the Amber Spyglass in 2021.
Stay tuned for more information on that.
Fingers crossed we can start it before series three.
Yeah, fingers crossed.
And you know, when we get that date,
that'll help us plan a little more
yes next month we will be doing a special episode for our a song of ice and fire patrons
we'll see what's coming out we have a couple of ideas throwing around and we may be returning to
a faraway place or possibly something old stay tuned for more info on that as well that'll come
to you on patreon.com slash girls gone canon,
where you can get all of the most recent updates on what we're doing.
Yes.
Well, you know, we don't really need to remind you all where to find us.
Because here you are on our Patreon.
So thank you everyone for joining us.
And thank you once more to Matt and Holly of the Dust for joining us day, evening, time.
May you find your way back soon. soon thanks and we'll talk to you soon