SPOTLIGHT ON COMPOSER FORREST GRAY

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Interview by John Wisniewski

AMFM MAGAZINE:  when did your interest in music begin, Forrest? Did you study musical
Composition?

FORREST GRAY: I think it’s fair to say that my initial interest in music started at birth. I was born into an unusual situation, where my parents weren’t married and lived apart, and my mom shared a big loft in Tribeca with an experimental performance group who would later go on to become the Blue Man Group, if you can believe it! I’m told that as a baby I’d watch the three original members, Chris, Matt, and Phil, practice in the apartment with a certain curiosity, which would later blossom into an early interest in the drum set at the age of five. I started studying guitar later, at the age of 11, and eventually piano. Piano allowed me to start studying composition seriously in my senior year of high school, which helped prepare me for my Berklee audition. This period marked a dramatic transition for me, since I had been playing guitar in a rock band all throughout high school, and didn’t know the first thing about the art of composition, let alone reading music! Although I was a film scoring major at Berklee, which was a fairly tech-oriented major at the time, I was a dual-major in composition with a minor in conducting, and I had the chance to study with some of the finest composers and teachers; Alla Cohen and Dennis Leclaire in particular had the most lasting, profound impact on my writing and understanding of composition. The conducting minor exposed me to a repertoire that was completely new to me, having never studied concert music as a kid. After Berklee I went on to the USC scoring program, where I had the chance to study with absolute giants in the film scoring world; Bruce Broughton, Chris Young, and Jack Smalley, to name a few. I’ve also continued my music education since graduating. More recently, I studied at the Nadia Boulanger Institute in Paris, a month-long composition intensive, focusing on lessons and practices passed down through generations of French composers and pedagogues. Many of my professors there studied with Boulanger herself, who, in her youth, studied with Fauré. The setting was almost monastery-like in how sacred the methods were treated. It was arguably the most transformational experience I’ve had as a composer.

AMFM: Any composers who have inspired you?
FORREST GRAY: I’m inspired by so many, it’s hard to choose. But I should just mention John Williams first, for so many reasons. First and foremost, his music introduced me to the practice of scoring for film. The score for Hook was the earliest memory I have of hearing a soundtrack as a distinct component, separate from the film. And even to this day I would attribute so many of my compositional instincts and understanding of orchestration to Williams. While studying at Berklee, I’d check out a new score of his from the library almost every week and pore over it obsessively. Danny Elfman, too. If Hook was the first score that caught my attention as a child, then Elfman’s score for Edward Scissorhands was the first score that inspired me to pursue a career in film scoring. As of late I’ve gotten really into Nicholas Britell. I’ll watch a movie just to hear a Britell score; he’s always changing his palette, and every score is tailor-made for the film, while still containing a certain indelibility. His score for if Beale Street Could Talk is a masterpiece. John Tavener, whose choral music is astonishingly simple, yet sublime. Keith Jarrett, Quincy Jones, and Jacob Collier. And lastly, Alexandre Desplat, and Carter Burwell. Desplat is such an intentional writer, where every idea is so clearly expressed, with a wonderful sense for pacing, and letting the music breathe. Maybe one of my favorite dramatists; the way he interprets a scene is always noteworthy. And with Carter, while I’m admittedly biased, every score of his is so special, boldly intimate, and unique to the film. He has the ability to do so much with so little, such that even a chamber ensemble can feel expansive. His dramatic instincts are phenomenal, too. Fargo is in my top ten, without a doubt. And Bach! I play through the Well-Tempered Clavier every morning, and am still mystified by pieces I’ve played for years. One could spend a lifetime studying his music and only begin to scratch the surface.

AMFM Forrest, your music combines traditional orchestral score, with experimental music. Could you tell us about this?
FORREST GRAY: Yeah, so trying to combine electronic elements with orchestral elements is something that is fairly new to me. Most of my education has centered around orchestral scoring. From Berklee, through USC, and in the workshops I’ve participated in since graduating, I’ve clocked countless hours working with orchestras, and I’m really most comfortable in that setting; what you write on the score is what you hear in the room. But the practice of film scoring has changed significantly, even since I started at Berklee in 2010. It’s rare that you’ll find a score with purely orchestral instrumentation anymore, and that’s great! I mean the sonic boundaries of film music are constantly being pushed, as they should be. Incorporating electronic elements into my scores has posed a new set of challenges, but has proved endlessly rewarding. Once you realize some of the basic principles of traditional orchestration apply to electronic instrumentation, then it’s easier to hybridize the two. And modern film-making really demands these innovations from composers, too, because the aesthetic of film has changed a great deal.

AMFM: What are you working on currently, Forrest?
FORREST GRAY: I’m currently working on an Apple TV animated series of my own. I can’t divulge too much, but so far the process has been really rewarding and I’m excited to start recording sometime next year. I’ll also be composing the score for an independent feature, an Irish noir, starting in early January.

AMFM: Could you tell us about working on “The Morning Show”? What was the concept for this?
FORREST GRAY: I was very lucky to be brought on by Carter Burwell to write additional music for the series. I actually auditioned for the gig by writing a 10-minute suite based off of his themes, and by the time I had access to picture, a lot of the original suite I wrote was conformed to the first few episodes by our terrific music editor, Adam Smalley. Carter really did the lion’s share of the work, and I was there to help out in certain areas. I’m hesitant to speak too much on his behalf, as it relates to the concept of the score, but I know that the sort of guiding philosophy for the music was to play up the irony, playing against the seriousness with which the characters comported themselves in their day-to-day workplace goings-on, while staying more or less out of the way for the genuinely sobering, poignant moments. His use of restraint in the music was so effective in allowing the heartrending moments to stand out. There’s an incredible cue that he wrote for the season one finale that is so heartbreaking, and works so well because, I think, the judicious use of music in the preceding nine episodes allowed for so much sonic space to be taken up in the big, emotional climax of the series. It was such a privilege to have a front-row seat to his process.

AMFM: .Most recently you scored the film “Space Force”. Could you tell us about this?
FORREST GRAY: So this was another project that Carter Burwell brought me on for. As a diehard fan of the Office, getting the opportunity to write Americana orchestral music for a Greg Daniels show, starring Steve Carell no less, was such a thrill. The show follows the Carell character, General Naird, as he leads the haphazard launch of the Space Force program. John Malkovich plays the head scientist of the program, and the chemistry between them really made the series. Their relationship kinda follows the “smart jerk-nice moron” trope, but with a lot more depth, so there were plenty of great moments for score to accentuate their unique relationship. Before I started on the series, Carter had written these wonderful, tuneful themes that lent themselves to variations. It was another great opportunity to just kinda be a fly on the wall and see how a master like Burwell tackles a more traditional, orchestral score.

AMFM: Could you tell us about any upcoming plans and projects, Forrest?
FORREST GRAY: I’m currently the composer on a new animated series for a major streaming service. It’s been an absolute blast, and the cast is phenomenal, too. The show will include original songs and a big band score, which I’ll be recording here in Los Angeles (hopefully!). The timeline for animations are more drawn out generally, so it’ll probably air sometime in the summer, maybe fall. I wish I could say more about it, but that’s all I can divulge right now. I’m also writing on an independent Irish film, which will be released this year, too. I can’t say too much about this project, either, other than the fact that it stars one of my favorite television actors, so It’s been a real treat to write music for. These two projects couldn’t be more different- one an upbeat jazz score, and the other a melancholy, chamber ensemble score, but the balancing of the two in my day to day life has been a wonderful challenge. It can be hard to transition between the two sometimes!

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ABOUT FORREST GRAY

Forrest Gray first made a name for himself when he scored a documentary by award-winning director Steven Soderbergh. Titled and everything is going fine, the film chronicles the life and career of Gray's Father, Spalding Gray. After graduating from USC's film scoring program in 2015, gray was invited to participate in the Sundance Composer lab, and has since gone on to make his mark in the film scoring world. his credits range from his work with singer-songwriter Mike Posner, as both an arranger and composer, his podcast theme songs for Tina Brown and Hillary Clinton, to multiple film and television credits as an additional composer, including Apple TV+'s debut drama, The Morning Show, and Netflix's Space Force, both under the musical direction of Carter Burwell, and Netflix's Dear White People and Bridgerton, under the direction of composer Kris Bowers. He is currently writing songs for an upcoming Apple+ series, in addition to completing a score for an undisclosed feature film.

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