The Exploring The Jungle Between My Wife’s CrotchFalcon and the Winter Soldierwas the story of its heroes inheriting the mantle of Captain America, and its musical journey is no different. Composer Henry Jackman wrote the show's music after his work on Captain America: The Winter Soldier and Captain America: Civil War, in which he took up the musical mantle originated by Alan Silvestri. Jackman has been with the MCU for almost as long as Sam and Bucky, and it only made sense for him to mirror their journey as they continue Steve Rogers' legacy.
"It was a sort of combination of musical heritage and musical exploration and musical transformation, which is all inherent in the characters," Jackman told Mashable in a Zoom interview, about his experience scoring The Falcon and the Winter Soldier. "It has all these musical repercussions that are really cool, some of which are revisiting, some of which are expanding, and some of which are changing."
Since Jackman knew the characters already, he rarely faced moments when none of his musical options worked. His primary task was growing an established world, such as by adapting a minor musical phrase for Falcon from Captain America: The Winter Soldierinto a larger theme for this show.
"He would always disappear and the action would move on," Jackman recalls of previous movies. "So I only ever got to do this one phrase, but I always thought it was the beginning of something that could last longer and actually be a fully developed superhero theme. You can imagine my delight when I got to put together 'Louisiana Hero.' When the brass comes in halfway through that track, it's using that initial Falcon motif, but then it expands and finishes the whole thing, which is a really satisfying musical experience because you're revisiting something you started ages ago."
The same approach wouldn't quitework for the artist formerly known as the Winter Soldier, Bucky Barnes. "The Winter Soldier" from its eponymous Captain America movie is "a deeply unpleasant listen full of screaming" ("If you want to relax, don't listen to the Winter Soldier track") that wouldn't work for the civilian Bucky in TFATWS.
"It's barbaric and metallic and completely disturbed," Jackman elaborates. "It's supposed to represent a tortured soul trapped in a metal body. [On this show,] there are occasional outbursts, when he goes back into Winter Soldier mode, but then there was this other musical identity for him that was a lot more sympathetic, with guitar, piano and strings."
Jackman is less traditional than Silvestri (whom he admires greatly); the guitar riffs in "Louisiana Hero" and similar tracks recall his work on X-Men: First Classa decade ago. Like the Winter Soldier scream (which he kindly demonstrates over Zoom), Jackman's existing MCU work is less about longer melodies than distinct, transportive phrases. The main theme of Civil War appears multiple times with slight alterations, invoking the film's character dynamics while simultaneously indicating how they've shifted.
"There's a more developed string theme for Zemo that takes 30 seconds or a minute to use and that gets used a lot," he says. "But every now and then in film score, you need something shorter, something like a motif... That's why I also had the dadadaDAacause you only need about three seconds for that, and it's like an identifier."
Another fun part of Jackman's "musical heritage" was Alan Menken's "The Star-Spangled Man," Captain America's war bonds theme song that gets a bumpin' marching band rendition in TFATWS.
"You've got a track, it works," Jackman says. "Then it's... jazzy brass layers, it's how to get some extra zhuzhin there without compromising what already works. You mustn't fill it up with so many extra elements, you lose the essence of what was good about it in the first place — there's a delicate balance, like cooking a dish that already works, but we want to kind of make it sparkle a bit more."
Jackman isn't the first to describe a live-action Marvel show as feeling like a movie split in many parts, and he too appreciated a chance to explore backstory more freely. Scoring the show was "a combination of rummaging around in the musical heritage, adjusting, adapting, developing and coming up with completely new stuff," like Flag Smashers motifs that explored the group's equally dystopian and idealistic views.
As a composer, Jackman hardly has input on which characters and storylines make it into the Marvel Cinematic Universe. He's been with Sam and Bucky for almost their entire MCU tenure, but the future is still up to Kevin Feige.
"Depending on the circumstances, it's just there's plenty of musical opportunity," Jackman says, whether it's more of the show or a new Captain America movie. "But half the fun is... you have no idea what's at hand. It could be anything from completely new material to slightly unexpected story twists that require different ways of looking at material that you already have."
The Falcon and the Winter Soldieris now streaming on Disney+.
Topics Music
Twitter reveals its employees have equitable pay on #EqualPayDay'Star Trek: Picard' brought back Hugh in Episode 3. Who is he?Nevada will no longer use app from Iowa caucus meltdown (UPDATE)Disney+ crosses 26 million subscribers in less than three months. Thanks, Baby Yoda.Forget graphing calculator hacks, real cheaters use a tortoiseGoogle finally discloses YouTube ad revenue and it's mind bogglingFacebook sends ceaseHBO's 'McMillions' premiere will leave you hungry for more: ReviewThe Melania Trump, 'Muppet Babies' conspiracy theory every '90s kid will getHBO's 'McMillions' premiere will leave you hungry for more: ReviewHere's the 'Back to the Future' Cybertruck mashup you never knew you neededGmail's dark mode goes missing, forcing our eyes to endure unbearable whitenessMan says he caused fake traffic jams on Google Maps with 99 phonesSamsung Galaxy S20 leaks again, this time on Samsung's own website'The Mandalorian' Season 2 will premiere October 2020Jennifer Lopez's daughter Emme sang at the Super Bowl halftime showGoogle finally discloses YouTube ad revenue and it's mind bogglingMartin Luther King Jr.'s daughter takes down Pepsi in one heartbreaking tweetTwitter launches text descriptions for GIFsThe Melania Trump, 'Muppet Babies' conspiracy theory every '90s kid will get AOL Instant Messenger is being laid to rest and the internet is mourning very loudly Skies around Disneyland turn orange as Anaheim Hills fire rages 'Game of Thrones' Season 8 filming dates give us a premiere date clue Walmart tries to undercut Amazon with 30 The cult of pumpkin spice is so strong that it brought down an entire school in the US Season 8 of 'Game of Thrones' will begin production on Sunday DC's Young Animal — the strangest comics ever — just got even weirder Facebook reportedly omitted Russia references from a public report on the election Tesla delays semi truck debut to focus on Puerto Rico aid and Model 3 Friends don't let friends go apple picking Why understanding the political influence of social media extends beyond Russia Someone's already has the iPhone X out in the wild Premium esports shows are heading to Hulu Woman reports same dick pic 3 times, gets 3 different responses from Twitter 'Phantom labeller' causes mischief at New Zealand museum More iPhone 8 Pluses have reportedly burst open after battery swelling After little more than a week, hackers cracked the SNES Classic Donald Trump Jr. tried to come for Jimmy Kimmel this weekend—and it didn't work out too well Download this: Apple Music's Facebook bot suggests songs based on emoji Facebook execs (somewhat) embrace transparency, via Twitter
1.5798s , 10134.6875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Exploring The Jungle Between My Wife’s Crotch】,Fresh Information Network