With Suspiria, Radiohead Frontman Thom Yorke Faces His Fears, Writing First Film Score & Surprising Himself In The Process

Films

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One of the most influential musicians of the last 30 years, Thom Yorke has always had a crisis of confidence, when it comes to scoring films. Approached to score David Finchers Fight Club back in 1999, the Radiohead frontman wouldnt come around to film for another 19 years, making his debut as a composer this year with Luca Guadagninos Suspiria. Centered on a Berlin dance company run by a coven of witches, this homage to Dario Argentos 1977 giallo classic would seem, on the surface, like a perfect match for Yorke, possessed of a tone and style that was right up his alley. And yet, even with Suspiria, Yorke needed convincing. “I was dithering a lot,” he says. “I put it off, and off, and off, because thats what I do.”

Known for electronic experimentalism, his unique falsetto, and his beautifully melancholy compositions, Yorke explains his reticence to transition into film as such. “It was kind of knowing that the process is not your own,” the artist reflects. “That had always worried me.” Time was also a factor. As prolific as he has been to this point—recording nine albums with Radiohead, and two solo efforts—Yorke knew that signing on to a film meant placing himself in someone elses hands for an extended period of time.

Before working with Guadagnino on Suspiria, Yorke knew very little about the director. “I knew I Am Love,” he says, “but that was kind of it.” Making one of the biggest leaps of his career alongside an artist he didnt know, Yorke thought of Jonny Greenwood, his longtime bandmate, who has found success (and an Oscar nomination) scoring films for Paul Thomas Anderson and more. Tapping into the freedom with which Greenwood has gone about his work, Yorke found invaluable wisdom in the guitarists experience. “He was saying, Spend a lot of time at the beginning, before you get locked into picture, or locked into a particular scene, experimenting, f*cking around, doing what you want,” Yorke recalls. “And that sort of experimenting, I found, was the best part of it.”

In the end, Yorke found that film composing, while tiring, was far more rewarding than he imagined, and less unmanageable than it seemed. Putting his all into Suspiria, the musician has found his efforts rewarded several times over. With “Suspirium,” Yorke made the Oscar shortlist for Best Original Song, though hes faced with stiff competition (from the likes of Lady Gaga and Kendrick Lamar), as he looks to make the categorys final five. Undoubtedly, a statuette would be nice, but fortunately, Yorkes first film experience offered him so much more. Reinventing himself musically over the years, in pursuit of a sound that felt right, Yorke had an interesting moment, listening to his Suspiria score for the first time. Reviewing his double album, which now stands on its own, Yorke didnt hear himself in it at all. Sitting down with Deadline today at his Los Angeles residence, the musician explained what this meant to him.

What convinced you to say yes to Suspiria?

When they approached me, there were so many good reasons to do it, but it started ultimately with this joke I had with myself: “If Im going to do a film soundtrack, then obviously its going to be a horror film.” It went from there, really, but I just really enjoyed the way Luca and his guys—the producers, and the editor—talked about what they wanted to do. I thought they had a really good attitude, and there was an air of madness to the whole project, which I immediately was attracted to.

What were your conversations with Luca and his team like, when you decided to take this on?

They talked a lot about trying not to do any horror clichés, and the idea of female energy, and not wanting to remake the film in any normal sense.They were just taking the initial scenario and then going their own way with it. It was more just a general attitude, which I cant really put into words, about where they wanted to take things, which I thought was really cool, and felt some identification with. Then, they sent me the script, and obviously scripts are a good way [in] for me. Even though theyre not necessarily indicative of how youre going to feel about something, it at least gives you some idea of the characters involved, and the mood.

What kind of relationship do you have to the medium of film? Youve said in the past that youre not a film buff, per se.

I guess Im not a film buff, but films really affect me, and I am awe of anybody who can get a film off the ground, even if its sh*t, because it takes so much commitment and energy. It makes making a record look a relatively simple process, just to coordinate and be the artistic director of all these different areas, and all these different people, and all these different moving parts, and actors and f*cking technicians, and trying to get the money together. And I just basically have to sit at a laptop with my mates.

I spent Christmas watching loads of films. We watched, probably inappropriately, Children of Men the other day, and thats a work of f*cking genius. Ive watched it maybe five times, and every time Ive enjoyed it, but this time it was like a religious experience. It was f*cking incredible, I think because theres elements in that film now, when you watch it, that are absolutely shocking. I know its based on a book, but theyre soclose to where we could go next. It starts with this footage of immigrants behind fences, being subjugated by the police. It has footage of people being put through immigration channels to try and get in the country. I mean, Ive been through those immigration channels; when you come off the f*cking train back into England now, its starting to feel like Children of Men. Theres whole areas of that film that are like, “Jesus Christ, man.” Its so beautifully put together, the way he uses music, the pace of it, the fact its absolutely terrifying. From beginning to end, it never lets up. F*cking genius, that film.

Suspiria

Working with Luca on Suspiria, did you note any parallels between his process and yours? Are there connections to be made between the process of producing films, and the process you undertake in music?

I think the processes are similar. I guess Ive done enough music videos now to maybe understand a bit of it. Ive watched Paul [Thomas Anderson] work, and Ive watched Luca work, and Im guessing that to some degree, you have to have some sense of where it needs to go, and some sense of, “This will work; this doesnt.” Youre making decisions all the time. You can see something in your mind, and youre trying to get there, but you have to enjoy the process. You have to allow it to develop. You have to allow the people you are working with to bring things to it.

If you take Children of Men, for example, I feel like the film had a great story to tell, and its how you choose to tell it, and the decisions you make every day in order to do that. So, likewise, I find that trying to make a record, youre trying to get somewhere. Youre trying to piece together something. This sounds really waffle-y, but its not. Youre just making a series of creative decisions, and you dont know necessarily if theyll work. The other one I watched the other day was Dunkirk, which is such an elegant movie, because he uses space so much in it. Its all about the endless ocean, as the Spitfire falls into it. So, initially, your question was “Am I a film buff?” No, but I do get very f*cking carried away by watching films I love. I find it very inspiring, and Ive discovered over the years the two processes are not that dissimilar. But the one I do is much more manageable. [Laughs]

Do you consider yourself visually minded, as an artist? Your music tends to paint a very specific picture, and I know youve collaborated with Stanley Donwood on artwork for most of your albums.

Yeah, we met at art college. We did English Literature and Art—we were on the same course. I used to just simply say, “Oh, well, when the music works, I see pictures.” Which is true, but Im sort of halfway between the two. I see the music, in my mind, as the actual physical placements along the sequencer. I see it as words Im saying, which is another thing completely, and then the overall thing will be some sort of visual element. So, its strange to work with someone else. Before I worked with Tarik [Barri, audiovisual composer and computer programmer, who has toured recently with Yorke], the only times I would really experience this was either when I was making videos—trying to have a conversation with the director, so that wed get somewhere visually that felt right—or in a live scenario with Andi [Watson], who does the lights for Radiohead. So, Ill have my personal feelings towards a song visually, but what Ive discovered over the years is to say as little as possible, and just shout when someone does something similar to what I see. I dont necessarily trust my vision of it, because Im a musician. I dont think Im close enough to get that right, but at the same time, when I see something visually that is close to what I have in my mind, the circle is complete.

For example, when we were working on Kid A and Amnesiac, it was a long, torturous process, but what was really interesting was I spent a lot of time working on the artwork with Stanley, and we had two studios operating most of the time. In this sort of mezzanine, in the middle, we were doing the artwork, and we were also painting in the shed, in the garden, that had rats in it. And that was a kind of revelatory thing for me to discover—not that the visual is as important as the music, because its not for me. Im writing the music with the guys, and thats where the energy for it comes from. But when I discover with Stanley something meaningful visually that goes with it, whether it be something really stupid like the bear, or a pool of blood, or the mountainscapes we were creating with paintings, for some f*cking reason itll press a button in my head, and Ill think, “Thats it. Now, were getting somewhere.” And I have to have that bit. If I dont have that bit, its not right. I dont know what Im doing yet.

Suspiria centers on the world of dance, a world you seem to appreciate. Youve collaborated with dancers a number of times. Most notably, you joined choreographer Wayne McGregor in orchestrating a wild, viral dance video for your 2011 track, “Lotus Flower.”

It was a wild, real-time conversation/collaboration thing. It was really fun.

You also worked with the late dancer and choreographer Merce Cunningham, on a project called “Split Sides” in 2003.

His method of doing it was like randomizing, which I guess was a collaboration. It was certainly inspiring, yeah.

In your live performances, music and dance seem inextricable. Was the experimental dance of Suspiria a compelling aspect to this film from the start?

Yes, it really was. I thought Damien Jalet, the choreographer, really did some amazing work for that film.

What do you enjoy about this form of expression? What do you get out of it?

I dont know. Ive always wanted to dance. I always have danced, even in my own bedroom, and it was quite weird for me to then have a guitar strapped around my neck for years, or be sitting at the piano for years. Then eventually, we started doing tracks like “Idioteque,” where [it was] like, “Oh, okay, now Ive just got a microphone. Finally.” But I never said to myself, “Im into dance. I like dance.” It just sort of happened. Its one of those things where I dont know what the f*ck Im doing, and I dont care anymore. But at the same time, I would not say Im dancing. I would say Im just not, not dancing, if you know what I mean.

Suspiria

But at the same time, human movement and music for me is a really exciting thing, and the more interesting choreography, the more interesting dancing is being produced and put on television, the more pushing of the boundaries of human movement, the better. Because Im f*cking sick of seeing all this lame ass choreography in music videos.

Supposedly, while crafting your Suspiria score, you were examining the ways in which music can support a film, and how it can be used to cinematic effect. What did that look like for you?

The obvious thing is that every time I sit down to make music, Im hanging around a song, hanging around a structure of chord progressions, or a melodic idea. With this, I was building my own studio, however badly, and getting all this equipment that Id bought, and f*cking around with it—and having an excuse to do it, but not one that was like, “Please, just write me an album of songs”—was a huge thing for me. And realizing that nothing is wasted when youre working in studio. You think it is. You always have that butt-clenching fear of, “Oh my God, Im wasting my time,” and then you realize quite quickly that theres no such thing. Yes, you might do stuff that you might not use, but in that process, youve discovered something. Youre creating things, and you have a vague idea of some aesthetic sensibility, of where youre trying to go. Its a horror film, but you dont want clichés, so youre finding another way. And its not just songs. Youre not constricted in that way.

What about the scoring process was dramatically different from what youve done in music to this point? And how did being put through this process impact you, in the end?

Partly, the big risk was working to commission. Someone is saying to you, “I need a dance sequence to a piece of dance thats already written, and it has to follow certain mathematical rules.” And youre like, “What the f*ck?” Its a challenge, a problem-solving thing, and youve also got to find some emotional thing. So in the end, you find yourself doing a huge amount of work that you would never normally do, because each piece is essentially a response to either a request, or a scene that youve been sent, or some idea in the script, or a character. So, none of those things are you.

The lyrics in your songs for the film arent about you. But then, your lyrics often sit somewhere between the personal and the oblique.

Yeah, its never autobiographical, what I do, and its always to some extent oblique. But it was like taking that to a new level. When they were mixing the film, me and Sam[Petts-Davies, producer], at the same time, were taking all the elements, used and not used, and trying to make it its own record—and in the process of doing that, discovering that we created something so f*cking dark that even I was surprised. When I finally sat down after wed mastered it and listened to it, Im like, “Wow. What the f*ck is this? Who is this guy?” And that was really nice. That was the nicest bit, to barely even recognize myself in some of it.

Suspiria

Lyrically, what was the hook on these songs? Thematically, the film contemplates the human body, its fragility and its destruction.

Cheating death, or the consciousness of death, impermanence. I had this vague idea of what Luca told me before the film started, of there being some sort of melancholy, which was making it not a normal horror film. Then I read the script, and I could kind of understand what he meant. And I found that really inspiring, the idea of a sadness, in the midst of what is kind of a horror film. So, I started writing a waltz, and it just sort of came out. The lyric, “This is a waltz, thinking about our bodies, what they mean for our salvation,” thats literally the first thing that happened, and everything else flowered out of that. I sent it to Luca, just a recording on [my phone], and said, “Is this a good place to start?” and he was like, “Oh my God, this is it.” So, it was one of those weird things, where I signed up to do a horror film, expecting to do all these great electronic experiments, and the first thing I do is sit in front of a piano, and record something on a phone.

You dont strike me as someone whos particularly concerned about awards. What would it mean for you if you were to earn an Oscar nomination for Suspiria?

The way Im looking at it is, Im very aware that normally, soundtracks get lost—and I dont want it to get lost, because I worked really f*cking hard on it, and it was really important to me. Youre right: Normally, I would be like, “F*ck that.” But to be honest, any sort of attention that the work gets, Id be really happy about, because of everything Ive been saying, really. Collaborating with Luca and creating this whole thing was a massive thing for me, and a sh*t-ton of work—and Im surprised at how proud I am of it.

Its been suggested that you may have another solo album coming next year. Is there truth to that?

Yes, thats all based around what were doing with Tarik. What Im trying to do is finish that, and then I can move on to the next thing, because its been hanging there for ages, and its been [in] this live show, and we need to get it down into a record now.

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