Music to watch movies by
Young Chang
It’s people like Brian Tyler who make you cry. He makes your heart
beat faster when the protagonist is in danger. He tells stories and shows
emotions, but without using words.
Tyler, the film composer for “Panic” and a Newport Beach native, knows
he’s done his job right when directors tell him he’s made a movie better
-- that his music has made the funny parts funnier and the sad parts more
sad.
While some see in color and others in shapes, Tyler sees in song. Sit
the 28-year-old down in front of a movie scene and within seconds he’s
scoring a piece in his head. Eating dinner, driving to the studio, going
about his average day -- any and all of this inspires in him the original
music that has shown up recently in such movies as “Panic,” which stars
William H. Macy and Neve Campbell, “Undead,” “The Fast and Furious” and
“Plan B.”
“I think, as Alfred Hitchcock said, it’s 50% of the movie,” said
Tyler, who is just finishing up composing for “Frailty,” a movie starring
Bill Paxton and Matthew McConaughey due out in September. “The heart of
the emotion is in the music.”
Tyler learned this early on.
Growing up, he spent entire days at his grandparents’ house in Newport
Beach. Ruth Tyler would give him piano lessons and Walter Tyler, an
Academy-Award winning art director for “Samson and Delilah,” would show
him designs for sets and other models he had built.
By the age of eight, Brian Tyler was composing music, playing the
drums and learning to play the piano. He attended many a concert at the
Orange County Performing Arts Center -- he remembers Dvorjak and
Rachmaninoff, though there were many, many more -- and the first record
he ever bought was the soundtrack to “Jaws.”
At Corona del Mar High School, Tyler led several rock bands. One of
them -- Synesthesia -- played on the campus quad.
“We’d get up there and rock the house for lunch period and go back to
class deaf,” he laughed.
Tyler also played gigs at the Four Seasons Hotel and clubs on Balboa
Peninsula. All the while, his love for film never dwindled.
“When I was five, I remember telling everyone on the block that they’d
have a part in the movie I was gonna direct,” he said.
And when Tyler and his friends weren’t hanging out by watchtower No. 5
at Newport Beach, they’d catch flicks at Edwards Big Newport in Fashion
Island.
“But after all of that kind of duality, it became one thing,” Tyler
said of blending films and music.
And he’s limitless in his range of musical genres and instruments.
Jazz, Big Band, classical, techno, rock -- he composes it all. He plays
the drums, piano, acoustic guitar, banjo, electric guitar, bass, timpani,
orchestral percussion, the marimba and he sings.
As a conductor, he plays one primary instrument.
“The orchestra becomes my instrument,” he said. “It becomes the sound
of the score, and I’m basically playing the orchestra.”
Director Greg Yaitanes, who worked with Tyler on “Plan B,” starring
Diane Keaton, Paul Sorvino and Natasha Lyonne, noticed Tyler’s schooling
in yesterday’s musicians.
“Brian was really respectful of the old-school way of doing things,”
Yaitanes said. “I think the great jazz musicians of their day would be
proud to work with him.”
As was he.
The director calls Tyler’s score for “Plan B” the real “star” of the
movie, alongside talents like Keaton. He doubted he’d ever find a
composer who would meet his expectations. Then he did.
“I could only describe it as genius, what he does, his attention to
detail. And he’s got a great way of seamlessly blending [the music] in
with the film,” Yaitanes said. “It’s hard to find someone with as much
heart and dedication as you have.”
Tyler has a little something that keeps him going. His grandfather’s
Oscar -- a reminder of all the stories that inspired him to do what he
does -- looks over him at his West Los Angeles studio.
“Definitely something to aim for,” Tyler said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.