‘Gladiator II’ Composer Henry Gregson-Williams Sought Mentor Hans Zimmer’s Approval To Tackle Sequel and Borrow Cues From The First Film – Sound & Screen Film

You May Be Interested In:Yeast shows physics can give rise to multicellular life sans mutations


The moment after director Ridley Scott informally tapped Henry Gregson-Williams to craft the score to the long-awaited sequel Gladiator II, the composer knew his next phone call would be to his early mentor Hans Zimmer, who’d created the music for the original Gladiator film.

“As soon as Ridley called me and said, I think you’re going do the next one,’ yeah. I called Hans immediately and said,’How do you feel about this?’” Gregson-Williams revealed onstage at Deadline’s Sound & Screen event Friday. “And he said, ‘Just make me proud. Go for it.’”

Ultimately, Gregson-Williams decided he didn’t just want his mentor’s blessing; he wanted to use some of the original music cues, too – and the same vocalist and co-composer Zimmer collaborated with on Gladiator’s sweeping anthem “Now We Are Free.”

“A few weeks later, I called [Hans] and said, ‘Look, I don’t see any negative reason to not use your theme in a couple spots, and also to utilize [vocalist] Lisa Gerrard in a slightly different way than you did in the first movie,’” the composer revealed. “So that was the plan, and I hope when you see the film in a couple of spots it’ll give you a warm and fuzzy feeling.”

“Writing a score like this gave me such an opportunity to have a very palleted sound, and it’s an action movie on the one hand, but on the other hand, it’s a story of – not so much for revenge, but redemption, and there’s an emotional heart to it,” said Gregson-Williams, who embarked on his own sort of epic journey, spanning the globe in search of unique musicians and instruments to give his score a distinctive sound infused with a sense of exotic sounds and a sense antiquity.

“I had to chase down my friend Martin Tillman, who’s an electric cellist,” he recalled. “One of the motifs I created really was for Denzel’s character Magnus, and that needed an instrument that could slip and slide as elegantly as he can with an electric cello.”

Traveling to “a field full of goats” in northern Spain, Gregson-Williams tracked down a musician who’d crafted a series of instruments plucked from ancient times. “He had a studio in the back of his farmhouse and played these amazing ancient instruments, all built, were based on pictures, artists’ renditions, of what instruments might have been in Roman times,” recalled the composer. “He made some extraordinary noises in that field. So I brought them back to base here and manipulated them in the way I felt. It was great fun.”

Check back Monday for the panel video.

share Paylaş facebook pinterest whatsapp x print

Similar Content

Jimmy Carter Tribute Programming Planned For ABC & CBS After Former President’s Death
Jimmy Carter Tribute Programming Planned For ABC & CBS After Former President’s Death
Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande reveal the props they brought home from ‘Wicked’ set: ‘What didn’t we take?’
Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande reveal the props they brought home from ‘Wicked’ set: ‘What didn’t we take?’
Former WME Corporate Strategy SVP Joining Board Of UK Agency Insanity
Former WME Corporate Strategy SVP Joining Board Of UK Agency Insanity
‘Babygirl’ Director Praises Intimacy Coordinators For Achieving “More Extreme Sex Scenes”
‘Babygirl’ Milk Scene Was Based On Real Moment That Left Halina Reijn “A Little Nauseated”
Jason Kelce explains why he couldn't have been sleeping at Taylor Swift's concert, despite viral pic
Jason Kelce explains why he couldn’t have been sleeping at Taylor Swift’s concert, despite viral pic
‘Rocky IV’ Actor Dolph Lundgren Says He’s “Finally Cancer Free” After Being Given 2-3 Years To Live
‘Rocky IV’ Actor Dolph Lundgren Says He’s “Finally Cancer Free” After Being Given 2-3 Years To Live
Super Tiger News | © 2024 | News