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Volker Bertelmann
Composer
MODERATOR: Peter White
“I had the feeling there are creatures somehow under the Earth who are moaning in a way, crying silently about what’s happening on Earth. I was trying to figure out how I could achieve that with woodwinds.”

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Simon Franglen
Composer
MODERATOR: Anthony D’Alessandro
“I designed the instruments for the Windtraders to play. I sketched out instruments, gave them to Dylan Cole, the production designer. He then made them into something useful. Then the prop master 3D-printed them. So we have real instruments that are played.”

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Laura Karpman
Composer
MODERATOR: Anthony D’Alessandro
“All the beautiful snare work in the foreground with the percussion, that was all worked out with Second Line because of course [Anthony Mackie’s] Sam is from New Orleans. I wanted that to be in the DNA of the music even if it’s not explicitly obvious.”

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Sara Bareilles
Singer/Songwriter
MODERATOR: Peter White
“You hear poetry and cancer and you’re like, that sounds like a ‘must miss’ … [but] it is the most life-affirming, hilarious, beautiful, poignant, brilliant film. I was blown away the first time I watched it. I have never felt more, excited to be alive than watching this film.”

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Diane Warren
Songwriter

Kesha
Performer
MODERATOR: Anthony D’Alessandro
“What was interesting about writing this song is I had to write a song, a personal song, but it’s maybe my most universal song. It really speaks to [us] because we’re all that wounded child.”

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Alexandre Desplat
Composer
MODERATOR: Anthony D’Alessandro
“At times I wanted to do something very restrained and very French. [Guillermo del Toro] said, ‘More Mexican, more Mexican, more Mexican!’ On the other hand, I know when I’ve laid the tune or the moment, the picture that really is spot on because he cries. Because he’s Mexican. French don’t cry.”

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Aiyana-Lee
Singer/Songwriter
MODERATOR: Peter White
“[Spike Lee] really wanted a climactic moment that encapsulated the feeling of the film, kind of also touching on my own personal struggles. He really wanted it to be a raw, real thing, and right from the heart … I had a lot to pull from.”

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Mark Sonnenblick
Songwriter

EJAE
Singing voice of Rumi/Songwriter
MODERATOR: Peter White
“The song in general, if you just hear it as a pop song and you haven’t seen the film, it’s a great pop song, But if you watch the film, it has a completely different meaning. In the bridge … you see the depth of the song and the lyric and what the song really means when you watch the film.”

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Ludwig Göransson
Composer
MODERATOR: Peter White
“I bought [his guitar] in L.A. right before we shot the film, because the movie takes place in 1932 and this amazing Dobro is from 1932. It’s a beautiful guitar, and also Sammie’s playing this in the movie, so why wouldn’t I write the score with this as well, right?”

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Jeremiah Fraites
Composer
MODERATOR: Peter White
“I had expressed a great deal of interest in scoring this film. I had written some demos, and I thought a lot about how I want to attack the score. I think I thought more about what I wanted not to do versus what I wanted to do, and I wanted to stay away from an overly polished sound.”

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Nathan Johnson
Composer
MODERATOR: Anthony D’Alessandro
“Rian really wanted me to push into a bit more of this underlying dread. The very first thing you hear … is all the strings just scratch tone. Then they resolve from that nails-on-a-chalkboard sound into just a single pure tone. That represents this jewel through the movie.”