Incubus, Green Day, Lauryn Hill and other pop, punk bands that represent teen nonconformity tapped to add power to film
Music plays an important role in any film, and that’s especially true in Columbia Pictures’ new animated feature “Surf’s Up.” In making a film about the surfing culture that has always been closely associated with music, the filmmakers’ first task was to ask themselves what sound would best suit the story of penguin surfer Cody Maverick.
“We wanted the music to be very much now,” says producer Christopher Jenkins. “We didn’t want to have any kind of an antiquing quality to the movie. So we naturally went towards pop, punk, surf, bands like Ms. Lauryn Hill, Green Day, Incubus – bands that represent that teenage feeling of rebellion and reaching for something. At the same time, we knew that if we were going to have some ‘historical footage’ in the movie, we could underscore it with music from the era.”
“We are thrilled to be a part of the return of Ms. Lauryn Hill,” says music supervisor Liza Richardson. “She has written and recorded a real summer jam session for `Surf's Up’ that's very celebratory. Apparently, she related to champion surfer Big Z's story of reaching the top, checking out for a while, soul searching, and then reemerging with joy.We're glad to have her back where she belongs!”
As an example of how songs are used to add power and nuance to the story and help define the characters, Jenkins points out that Green Day’s “
As he hinted, Big Z also required his own sound. “If he were in the real world, Big Z would be a 50s kind of surfer,” Jenkins says. “So we thought about surf-guitar safaris. We also thought about the very laid-back Hawaiian slack-keyed guitar pieces for Z – and our composer, Mychael Danna, wrote some very cool pieces for the film.”
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