Let Me Go OST
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Let Me Go OST

Original price was: £22.00.Current price is: £6.60.

SKU: 1355428 Category:

Description

Radiohead drummer PHILIP SELWAYs new album is a departure from its two preceding albums (Familial and Weatherhouse). Its the soundtrack to the film drama Let Me Go, a story about mothers and daughters; about loss and mistrust; about the ramifications of a World War II crime; about secrets, trauma and lingering ghosts. The album will released physically on 27th October via Bella Union and available digitally from 15th September to coincide with the films release.

Mirroring the films haunted and intimate nature, Selways score is grounded in strings and piano, plus guitar, electronics, musical saw, glockenspiel and bowed vibraphone, and the occasional use of bass and drums, creating a paradoxical sense of beauty and unease. The albums title track is streaming HERE.

Let Me Go is based on Austrian-born Helga Schneiders memoir of the same name. She was just four years old when her mother Traudi walked out, never to return, in order to train as a guard in Germanys concentration camps. Helga never knew the truth until, as an adult, she decided to track her mother down in Vienna, to discover not only the horror of the past, but also of Traudis unashamedly proud memories of the most notorious camp of all, Auschwitz-Birkenau. Helga wouldnt return to Vienna until thirty years later, when news arrived: Traudi was dying. Helga returned, for the sake of closure, and hoping her mother had finally repented.

In 2014, Selway had written a score for the Rambert Dance Company, so he had form. Id also held the ambition to write a full film score too, he says. Selway already knew the films director/co-producer/writer Polly Steele and co-producer Lizzie Pickering (the latter from the hospice-related fundraiser Childish Things) when they sent him the screenplay in 2015. I read it, and then Helgas memoir, and I was completely hooked, he recalls. The script had so much depth, and tackled very powerful subjects. Polly and Lizzy wanted their film to stay true to Helgas past, and to allow me the creative freedom to realise the emotional complexity of her story.

The soundtrack was recorded with Nick Moorbath at his Oxford studio Evolution, with string arrangements by Laura Moody. Alongside eleven instrumentals are three ballads, with words by Selway. Walk features the fabulous Lou Rhodes (Lamb), who also appears in the films nightclub scene, singing over an acoustic rendition of the track. Selway sings Wide Open and Let Me Go himself, with an air of quiet desperation.

In the film, Helga has kept the truth from her own daughter and grand-daughter, and subsequently kept her own emotions tightly bound in silence, so Selways words revolve around the core theme of abandonment and the ties that bind. You can apply the words of Walk to any of the female characters, Selway says; namely Traudi, Helga, her daughter Beth and her granddaughter Emily, who joins Helga in Vienna to meet the great-grandmother she hadnt even realised was alive. The four women in the script were the starting point, so I wrote for a string quartet, especially since their sound is so warm. The interplay between the instruments was a nice metaphor for the different generations.

The musical saw on tracks such as Helga Saw and Let Me Go (Rhodes) also serves a purpose: Its an otherworldly sound, and a very jagged instrument, which is appropriate for the films drama and the music mushroomed from there. Michael Woods stunning cinematography, which captured all the beautiful light in Vienna, also fed into the instrumentation and arrangements. And each actress as she was cast also shaped my approach. Such as Juliet Stevenson, who plays Helga I immediately thought of Juliet in Truly Madly Deeply, and Barrington Pheloungs music for the film, which also led me down the string-quartet route. I feel the soundtrack is in tune with the emotional range and overall aesthetic of the film.

Let Me Go OST will be available 27th October on CD and vinyl via Bella Union and digitally from 15th September. Album tracklisting and Philip Selway photo by Alex Lake below:

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