Trent Reznor on finding the right notes for the āSocial Networkā score: āI saw a story about a guy who needs to prove himselfā
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There was no shortage of critical accolades heaped upon the score to āThe Social Network,ā yet the work was far from conventional. In other words, the composition from Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, which is heavy on electronic atmospheres and forgoes the use of an orchestra, was not typical Academy Awards fare.
Reznor, of Nine Inch Nails fame, and his frequent collaborator Ross stood out in an Oscar field that contained film composer veterans. Among the pairās competitors Sunday night at the Academy Awards were Hans Zimmer, whose booming work in āInceptionā was hard to ignore; A.R. Rahman, who brought a Western-leaning rock ānā roll slickness to ā127 Hoursā; and Alexandre Desplat, who used an orchestra with minimalist grace in āThe Kingās Speech.ā
Once an early favorite for best picture, David Fincherās legal drama āThe Social Network,ā which takes its inspiration from the battle over Facebook and focuses on the companyās enigmatic young leader Mark Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg), is action-less and heavy on the dialogue.
Reznor and Ross spoke with Pop & Hiss about composing the music for the film in late 2010. Now that the pair are Oscar winners (āTo be standing up here in this company is humbling and flattering beyond words,ā Reznor said from the stage), Pop & Hiss presents the full, unedited transcript of the interview.
Trent, you initially turned this down, didnāt you?
Reznor: Sometime late summer, early fall, of last year, David approached me about my interest level in scoring a film with him. Iāve always been an admirer, and said I was interested, but I had just finished several years of touring, and I had made a promise to myself to take a bit of time to get centered and figure out what I want to do artistically. I wanted a fresh, clean mind. I didnāt want to rush into anything.
He sent me the script. I thought it was fantastic, and we talked about a few things, but he hadnāt shot the film yet. A few days after the meeting, I was torn. I really felt like I was depleted. I lacked the confidence, and wasnāt feeling particularly creative. I was afraid I was going to get myself involved into a disappoint I wasnāt sure I could do.
In my day job with Nine Inch Nails, I had alternated between periods of time in the studio that were quiet and reflective and creative, and the other half of the job is being on tour and executing. Thatās more about survival, and it becomes a routine. Youāre just trying to stay alive and you keep playing the same music. You try to do it with integrity, but youāre using a different part of your brain, and I was deep in ending that phase when this offer came up. I felt like I couldnāt do it. It wasnāt David. It wasnāt the material. It was just me. But I felt lousy about that.
So what changed, besides the guilt?
Reznor: Out of tour mode, I was at home and Atticus and I had worked on various production projects. We started working, and things were flowing. The David scenario was nagging at me. I got back in touch with him and said it wasnāt him or the material, but I just didnāt think I was in the place where I could pull it off. I asked him to keep me in mind for the future. He came back and said, āIād love it if you could still do it.ā
Atticus had scored āThe Book of Eliā last year, and we had made a commitment to work on a variety of things throughout this year. I asked if heād do it with me.
At that point, how far along was David in shooting/editing the film? How did that impact your direction?
Reznor: David was in very early edits. We saw 40 minutes of the rough cut, with temp music in it. It gave us an idea of the pacing and look. We spent some time with David, extracting what he wanted from us. Iām saying this very naively. I hadnāt done this before. I think if this were an action picture, or āSevenā or something, it may have been more obvious what was needed. This being a movie with a lot of people in rooms talking, one where you need to pay attention to the ļ»æļ»ædialogueļ»æļ»æļ»æ, and a lot of underlying emotions and tension.
Did you feel pressure to do a more typical film score, like one with an orchestra?
Reznor:We got an idea from David that he wanted something that was not orchestral and not traditional. He referenced āBlade Runnerā and Tangerine Dream. He mentioned sounds that were a synthetic landscape of sorts. Then we just spent a couple weeks with no picture and no imput and thinking of how we could create a world of sound.
How did you arrive at that āworldā?
Reznor: We did that by putting up restrictions to which instruments we would use, and we wanted to articulate this guyās journey -- an act of creativity and the pursuit of a great idea and the consequences that come from that. We thought we would create a very synthetic landscape, and when there was to be a melody, we would make it a very frail acoustic piano. We generated a bunch of things for him to pick through. We werenāt being precious. We just gave him a grab bag full of ideas, and we wanted to see what resonated with him. We thought weād be going back to the well numerous times. What we heard back was, āThis was what I had in mind.ā
Talk about the lack of freedom inherent in doing a film score. Youāre hired to place music to someone elseās project, and you also have a strict deadline. After years of working in NIN, was that a challenge, or welcome?
Reznor: Looking back on how we did this, the smartest thing we did was gather as much information from David. Unlike a Nine Inch Nails record, the music is in a supporting role thatās serving the picture. That was very clear to us. So the smartest thing we did was listen to what David had to say. We werenāt setting the bar too high for ourselves. We were throwing everything down. We told David that this was clay to be molded. Everything just happened to line up. It was exciting for me to work under somebody. I am the top of the pyramid in the Nine Inch Nails camp. I found it very refreshing to serve another master. It was inspiring and challenging, but refreshing.
Ross: I have a friend who says he will never work until he has a [finished] picture. What seemed to make sense for us, and once we saw an early edit and read the script, we knew the world, and we could create without constraint. We could live in that world and make a world sonically that may be appropriate for the emotional scenes that we picked up on. From that, you get to a place thatās really helpful. We had a sonic library, if you like, that would go with the picture but not necessarily in an expected way.
So was it a relief that Fincher wanted a more atmospheric, non-orchestral score?
Reznor:There was a part of me that was really disappointed. The orchestral route was a challenge that I thought would be fun to address. In hindsight, it was the best move. What Atticus and I have done over the years is develop our own skill set. We know what instruments we can get to sound certain ways. We really spent the time wanting it to sound like it came from a place. We wanted it to sound like it came from this movie, in which the way a track from āBlade Runnerā sounds like āBlade Runner.ā One of the lessons weāve learned is setting limitation. Record to record and project to project, we force new creative limitations.
You talk a lot about creating rules and limitations. Was this a process of elimination? How many ideas were tossed aside for not fitting the constraints?
Reznor:We spent time in advance, setting those rules up. If we were working orchestrally, weād have these sounds and this kind of voicing to us. We adapted that to a world of modular synthesizers and an acoustic piano, and a general aesthetic of X,Y and Z. What you hear in the film has been fine-tuned as we got more into working the picture.
Working with an electronic score, is there a line to walk between creating something modern versus something that will sound dated in five years?
Reznor: In the initial writing batch, there was a bit more 8-bit chip-tune-sounding elements that would creep in and out. The only thing left of that is on the track āIn Motion.ā It just started to feel like a gimmick. It was one of those things where there are no bad ideas, and we were letting ideas roll and then narrowing them down. Having watched the film a number of times in different theaters and with audiences, and without trying to sound too boastful, Iām really proud of how this turned out. A lot of that came from Atticus and myself, but a lot of it was the fearlessness of Fincher.
A lot of the score is pretty dark -- and surely wouldnāt catch NIN fans off-guard. But in a film thatās largely ļ»ædialogue, could you overdue it? Meaning, did you want -- or not want -- the music to hint at an emotion the viewer should be feeling?
Reznor:When we were creating these ideas, which werenāt scene specific, we thought, āThis could be the sound of an asteroid hitting the Earth at the end of humanity.ā It was pretty intense dissonance, and diminished ugly stuff. But I donāt know if that fits in with the tale of founding Facebook, when someone finds out someone stole their website. Is that the appropriate level of drama, or is comically overdone? We gave Fincher those options with general earmarks of where they would go. But he fit them in.
Itās not all electronic, though. A piano is used to great effect, lending a sort of sadness to the score.
Reznor:A perfect example of that is the [opening] title track, āHandā I wrote that with frailty in mind. I wrote that with melancholy in mind. It felt kind of noble. The melody felt classic in a way. It felt a bit broken, and it felt remorseful in a sense. But I didnāt write that thinking that would be where the credits roll in the beginning. It goes from a bar breakup scene, which is very familiar territory. Itās a college bar, a guy is being dumped, thereās a lot of verbal jousting and the White Stripes are playing in the background.
Then all of a sudden -- āWhoa, where are we now?ā It suddenly takes a different turn. It is suddenly not the movie you thought it would be. The whole movie takes a different turn. Thereās a level of tension, a level of reserve and a level of anger. Itās not a bombastic title scene. Itās not a comfortable rock song. Seeing David have the taste and insight to try that in that spot defined how the rest of the score would go.
Iām not sure of the best way to articulate this question, but in a film that has inspired some debate as to whether Zuckerberg is framed in a positive or negative light, as a composer what kind of responsibility did you feel? This is a film about a real person, and the score, in many uses, can be used to telegraph whether the character is heroic or tragic.
Reznor:From my point of view, whoever the real Zuckerberg is and whatever the real truth of the situation is, itās not my job to judge that. Iām trying to serve [Aaron] Sorkinās script and Davidās direction. From the onset of this, David wanted to make sure that it had multiple points of view, and the truth is somewhat subjective to what you think it is.
Applied to what I related to, sitting at the piano, and I donāt know if this is the real Zuckerberg or not, but I saw a story about a guy who needs to prove himself. Heās come up with a really good idea, and heās going to pursue it, and the momentum of that idea is going to take him places. Maybe heās not thinking of the consequences, or maybe heās not caring, but in order to make this grand idea thatās bigger than him, he winds up in a variety of scenarios. There are emotional, friendship and moral consequences.
You saw a relatable character.
Reznor: Iāve been that guy in my own mind with the pursuit of my own career in Nine Inch Nails. I know that feeling of having a good idea thatās more important than anything, and more important than any relationship I had at the time. It cost me friendships. I look back and say, āWow, what a [jerk] I was at this period of my life.ā I can see that now, but at the time I was on a quest that was more important. That was the well I dug into.
To aid in what David was trying to accomplish, and readying Sorkinās script with no picture, it was impossible for me to feel like this guy wasnāt a complete [jerk] in this film. Seeing it, with what I thought Eisenberg did an amazing job taking his looks of disgust, sadness or repulsion or whatever it might be, thereās an element of sympathy. You can see the weight of these consequences in his face. Musically, itās our responsibility to this film to add an element -- for instance, when you see him leave the classroom after being [called out] and runs out into the hallway and runs into the [Winklevoss] twins -- musically, thereās a real ominous feel. You feel that something bad is happening, that evil is cooking. Without that, it feels differently, but we set it up so a seed of evil has been born. Something devious is about to happen. The reoccurance of the title track at certain points in the film, when youāre seeing Zuckerberg reduced, and coming back in a diminished fashion, that was our main role. We wanted to add a level of humanity. You can say, āWhat a [jerk],ā but I think it became more human.
That contrast between what you hear and what you see adds a sense of mystery.
Ross: Thereās no single truth. Thereās a lot of questions thrown up. The music remains a certain ambiguity. Iāve seen David talk about that piece and use words as seething, and I see that as well. The music kind of goes along with the idea that āYou take this. You make your own decisions.ā The music is not one of those ones where you see someone sad, and this sad music goes along with it.
How did working on the instrumental āGhosts IāIVā project inform this score? Thereās even a couple snippets of āGhosts IāIVā in the score.
Reznor:Thereās been times when Iāve made a record and Iāve said, āI love the B-side of David Bowieās āLowā album.ā I love it so much that it becomes an archetype. I loved it so much that āThe Downward Spiralā was inspired by the B-side of that album by an insane amount. There are times where I say, āI love the Talking Headsā āRemain in Lightā album,ā and I try to ape it -- the production and the way the rhythms are put together. For this, it really just came from the first few weeks of inspiration where Attitcus and I wrote a lot of music. Everyday, two or three things come out. They come from a subconscious place.
We set up rules. We will use these instruments. We will exist in this space. We donāt record anything as MIDI into a computer that can be fixed and quantized. Generally, everything is a live performance and treated as a performance. Itās treated as something thatās pulled out of the ether. Sometimes itās off. Sometimes it isnāt turned right. That was an example of the rules of this record. It feels synthetic, but it has to feel like people are involved. Itās not coming out of a laptop. It doesnāt sound like whatās on the radio. It feels like people, and it feels imperfect.
So how about performing this live?
Reznor:Weāre deep into the Angels record, but the idea of performing this live is intriguing. As Iām trying to move away from Nine Inch Nails as a live rock band that tours endlessly, the idea of being thrust into something that feels like thereās no safety -- performing this live in a stripped down environment, of some sort, thatās a very appealing idea that we get into later.
-- Todd Martens