Interview: Composer Jake Monaco

Interview: Composer Jake Monaco

Posted on September 30, 2016 at 3:56 pm

Jake Monaco is a multi-talented composer who has worked on a variety of projects for film and television. His music will be featured in Fox’s highly-anticipated action comedy “Keeping Up With the Joneses,” starring Jon Hamm, Gal Gadot, Isla Fisher, and Zach Galifianakis. He is also currently scoring three family-favorite animated series, “The Stinky and Dirty Show,” Netflix’s “Dinotrux,” and Warner Bros. Animation’s “Be Cool Scooby Doo.” As a producer and composer of additional music for Christophe Beck, Monaco has contributed to the animated magic of “Frozen,” the record-breaking laughs of the “Hangover” trilogy, the furry hijinks of “The Muppets,” and the award-winning documentary “Waiting for Superman.” What he loves about composing for movies and television is creating music that tells the story. He took time from his busy schedule to answer my questions.

What was the first instrument you learned to play?

Copyright 2016 Jake Monaco
Copyright 2016 Jake Monaco

I started taking guitar lessons when I was 6, but after a year of not wanting to practice, my parents let up. Then my freshman year of high school, my family moved, which left me with a lot of free time. I started getting more into music in general at this point and so I found that same guitar from when I was 6 and started teaching myself. I think it’s still in my attic actually… I should go and get it at some point 🙂

When did you first realize, watching a movie, that someone composed a score that helped tell the story?

My favorite movie as a child was Ghostbusters and although I didn’t know anything about Elmer Bernstein at the time, I remember the music being an integral part of the story.

What was the first composing job you got paid for?

I was accepted into the USC film scoring program 2006-2007. My first paid gig was with a director named Zeus Quijano on the short “Point of Entry”. A few years later he turned this 5 min short documentary into a 20 min version, which I was also lucky enough to work with him on. He is hoping to turn it into a feature eventually. Fingers crossed!

At what stage do you usually come into a project? Before or after filming has been completed?

It completely depends on the project. Some smaller projects, I have started working on themes or sound palettes prior to shooting, or in the case of animation, during the storyboard phase. Although on the last two features, I’ve been brought on only a few weeks before completion. I had two and a half weeks for “Absolutely Fabulous” and five weeks for “Keeping up with the Joneses.” It’s kind of exhilarating to be under that sort of deadline; adrenaline gets you through!

If you could go back in time and score any movie, what one would you pick?

Probably any James Bond film. I love them all (even the bad ones). 🙂

When you work on a film that mixes genres, like the action comedy “Keeping Up with the Joneses,” how is that reflected in the music?

I try to make the action sequences as fun as possible. While there are still stakes in the film, the music doesn’t have to play them so seriously, it’s ok to have fun! There’s a long, exciting chase sequence in the middle of “Joneses” that, while it has a driving beat and action elements, has a funk horn section and some crazy EDM synth interjections. The comedy is really all about timing; when is the perfect moment to drop out. A lot of the time, a joke plays funnier when the music pauses for it as opposed to commenting on it.

Did you incorporate any unusual instruments?

Without giving away too much, there is a running theme through the movie about the Joneses going to this little café in Marrakech in Morocco. So I did a little research and found some instruments native to that region that are sprinkled throughout the score. The two most interesting being the Sintir (or Gimbri), which is a 3 stringed mid/low register plucked instrument that has camel skin stretched over the body and the kemenche which is a bowed instrument that rests on the players knee and has a very distinct, almost nasal, tone to it.

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Composers Interview
New Music from Raffi: Owl Singalong

New Music from Raffi: Owl Singalong

Posted on February 3, 2016 at 3:53 pm

Owl Singalong, Raffi’s latest album (now available on CD and digital download) is one of his best. The title song is inspired by the owls that call to each other in his back yard, what he calls “the charming hooo hoo.” You can hear them for yourself at the beginning and end of the song. He’s adapted some classics, too. Now it’s the Dog on the Bus, and the Lion Pokey. I especially loved his version of the classic folk song “Abiyoyo.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSL3lN98b-A

I have a copy to give away! Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with Raffi in the subject line and tell me your favorite children’s song. Don’t forget your address! (US addresses only) I’ll pick a winner at random on February 12, 2016. Good luck!

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Contests and Giveaways Music
Bruce Springsteen’s Chicago Concert Recording is Free for Just Two Days!

Bruce Springsteen’s Chicago Concert Recording is Free for Just Two Days!

Posted on January 25, 2016 at 10:03 am

Copyright Michelle Holme 2016
Copyright Michelle Holme 2016
Bruce Springsteen has a consolation prize for those who had tickets to the New York performance that had to be cancelled because of the snowstorm — and for everyone else. The recording of his Chicago concert is available for free download NOW — for just 48 hours. If you miss your chance, you’ll be able to buy it starting on January 27, 2016.

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Music

Happy Birthday Dolly Parton!

Posted on January 19, 2016 at 9:22 am

Singer/songwriter/actress/businesswoman Dolly Parton turns 70 today!

This song was inspired by her childhood, born the fourth child of 12, to mother, Avie Lee and father, Robert Lee, in the Smoky Mountains of East Tennessee.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9zLsAf6SCwY

Here she sings one of her biggest hits with her goddaughter, Miley Cyrus.

She contributed a classic song and a deft, warm-hearted comic performance to “9 to 5.”

And she wrote this song, which became one of the biggest hits of all time when Whitney Houston sang it in “The Bodyguard.” Watch this with a handkerchief nearby.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HzQ9j_Ek1ro

When asked if her feeling are hurt when people treat her like a dumb blonde, Dolly says, “No, because I know I’m not dumb and I know I’m not blonde!”

Here she is with her original partner, Porter Waggoner — and some old-style sexist “humor.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=esEu6zfcdlc

And if you have not seen the neglected gem “Joyful Noise,” please wish Dolly a happy birthday by taking a look.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1QJ5e1N1aIc
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Actors Music

Tribute: David Bowie

Posted on January 11, 2016 at 9:51 am

David Bowie has died of cancer at age 69.  So we did not lost one of the singular artists of the 20th century — we lost a dozen.  Bowie was a musician, a performance artist, and an actor whose constant re-invention gave us characters like the Thin White Duke and Ziggy Stardust, as well as a range of movie roles that would themselves constitute an impressive body of work for any performer.  He starred in Nicolas Roeg’s “The Man Who Fell to Earth,” “Labyrinth,” Tony Scott’s “The Hunger,” and “Merry Christmas, Mr. Lawrence.” He played Andy Warhol in “Basquiat.”  He also starred on Broadway as “The Elephant Man.”

His music was heard on the soundtrack of movies as well.

May his memory be a blessing.

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Actors Music Tribute
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