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Saturday, 15 November 2025

Soundtrack Saturday

In late July I was sitting on the roof terrace of a hotel bar in Napoli overlooking the Bay of Naples with Mount Vesuvius behind me drinking this negroni (a cocktail I became quite partial to in the summer, equal parts gin, Campari and Vermouth Rosso, garnished with some orange peel, a bittersweet drink that went down very well on holiday in Italy). It seems so unlikely now with the British autumn in full effect- at the time of writing this it is dark early, pouring down. So it goes. 

Nick Cave and Warren Ellis' working relationship has gone well beyond the Bad Seeds (Warren joined in The Bad Seeds in 1994 and has become Nick's right hand man. He was instrumental in Grinderman too). Their soundtrack work is spread over a range of films and documentaries, starting in 2007 with The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford and The English Surgeon and then really gathering acclaim with the soundtrack to The Road two years later. There are many others, full length scores, most recently Back To Black (a biopic about Amy Winehouse which I had the misfortune to watch one evening last year. The soundtrack was rather good though). 

Cave has spoken about how their collaborations for film scores comprise a totally different approach than the writing for The Bad Seeds- Warren records music all the time, sometimes just loops, rhythms, a couple of minutes of synth or violin. He sends it to Nick who then works on it, quickly and usually without the pressure of having to present it to a band for working up into a song or having to provide lyrics for it. There's a compilation called White Lunar, two CDs, which rounds up the soundtracks for The Proposition, Jesse James, The Road, The English Surgeon and more with a handful of otherwise unreleased pieces that works really well as a full album, disc one especially. Instrumentals, some only a couple of minutes long, piano, some bass, some violin. Some of it is elegiac, mournful, melancholic. Some of it is tense and droney. Some bleak. Cave's voice appears occasionally, croaking or whispering. It works as a standalone album without the weight that The Bad Seeds songs sometimes bring with them. 

This is from The Road, the 2009 film of Cormac McCarthy's novel. The book and film tell the story of a man and his son trekking through a post- apocalyptic North American wilderness. It's never quite clear what the apocalypse consisted of but it's truly end times- harrowing and tense and unbearably moving in places. For some reason I read the novel while Isaac was in hospital with meningitis in 2008, a six week stay that involved emergency hospitalisation, a coma, brain surgery, a desperate close to death forty eight hours and months of recovery for Isaac. We had a lot of time sitting by his bed and I guess the book didn't seem as bleak in those circumstances as it might otherwise. This piece of music, mainly gentle piano is lovely.

The Road

Song For Bob is from The Assassination Of Jesse James By The Coward Robert Ford starred Brad Pitt and Casey Affleck, a 21st century Western that stands up (as does Unforgiven, a similarly toned modern Western). Cave appears in the film briefly as a balladeer in a saloon. Song For Bob is six minutes long, very different from The Road- slow paced and subtle, a lead violin backed by a string section, piano and some soft padding bass notes. 

Song For Bob

In 2021 Nick and Warren provided the score for a documentary about snow leopards called La Panthere Des Neiges. The long title track has drawn out synth chords and twinkling sounds, violin (again) providing some tension, piano notes rippling in, and a build up that breaks eventually with a ghostly choir and Cave singing, ending with the repeated line, 'We are not alone'. Nick didn't write the words- they were by the film's writer Sylvain Tesson- but they feel like they fit perfectly with Nick's post- Skeleton Tree, post- Ghosteen, Carnage world, a feeling of survival and of something bigger than yourself. 'I was observed/ We are not alone'. Rather beautiful all told. 

L'apparition: We Are Not Alone

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