Seeing Quentin Tarantinoโs Once Upon A Time Inโฆ Hollywood the other night reminded me to dust down this interview I did with the director many moons ago. It first ran in Melody Maker -Iโm guessing it was done around the time of Pulp Fiction, so 1994 โ and then again in the first issue of Uncut.
Anyway, here you go: Quentin Tarantino on his 10 favourite records.
Follow me on Twitter @MichaelBonner
Bob Dylan
Blood On The Tracks
โThis is my favourite album ever. I spent the end of my teenage years and my early twenties listening to old music โ rockabilly music, stuff like that. Then I discovered folk music when I was 25, and that led me to Dylan. He totally blew me away with this. Itโs like the great album from the second period, yโknow? He did that first run of albums in the Sixties, then he started doing his less troublesome albums โ and out of that comes Blood On The Tracks. Itโs his masterpiece.
Bob Dylan
โTangled Up In Blueโ
โOK, maybe Iโm cheating here. I know this is off Blood On The Tracks, but itโs my all-time favourite song. Itโs one of those songs where the lyrics are ambiguous you can actually write the song yourself. Thatโs a lot of fun โ itโs like Dylan fooling around with the listener, playing on the way he or she interprets the lyrics. โItโs very hard to take individual songs off Blood On the Tracks, because itworks so well as an entire album. I used to think โIf You See Her, Say Helloโ was a more powerful song than โTangled Up In Blueโ but, over the years Iโve kinda realized โTangledโฆโ has the edge, just for the fun you can have with it.โ
Freda Payne
โBand Of Goldโ
โIโm a gigantic music fan. I love fifties rockโnโroll, Chess, Sun, Motown. All the Merseybeat bands, Sixties girl groups, folk. This is just so cool: itโs a combination of the way itโs produced, the cool pop/R&B sound, and Fredaโs voice. Its kinda kitschy in a way โ yโknow, itโs got a really up-tempo tune โ and, the first few times I heard it, I was, like, totally into the coolness of the song. It was only on the third or fourth listen I realised the lyrics were so fucking heartbreaking.โ
Elvis Presley
The Sun Sessions
โThis has been a hugely important album to me. I was always a big rockability fan and a big Elvis fan, and to me this album is the purest expression of Elvis there was. Sure, there are better individual songs โ but no one collection ever touched the album. When I was young, I used to think Elvis was the voice of truth. I donโt know what that means, but his voiceโฆ shit man, it sounded so fucking pure. If you grew up loving Elvis, this is it. Forget the Vegas period: if you really love Elvis, youโre ashamed of that man in Vegas. You feel like he let you down. The hillbilly cat never let you down.โ
Phil Ochs
โI Ainโt Marching Anymoreโ
โOK, from now on these arenโt in any order. Itโs the same with movies: I have my three favourite โ Taxi Driver, Blow Out and Rio Bravo โ and after that it depends on my mood. This is one of my favourite protest/folk albums. While Dylan was a poet Ochs was a musical journalist: He was a chronicler of his time, filled with humour and compassion. Heโd write songs which would seem very black and white, and then , in the last verse, heโd say something which, like, completely shattered you. A song I love very much on this album is โHereโs To The State of Mississippiโ โ Basically, itโs everything the movie Mississippi Burning should have been.โ
Phil Ochs
โThe Highwaymanโ
โIโm cheating again. This is an Alfred Noyes poem, which Ochs arranged for music. The vocal has made me burst into tears more times than I care to remember.โ
Elmer Bernstein
The Great Escape
โI used to have a huge collection of film soundtracks. I donโt get enthusiastic about them any more, though, because now most soundtracks are just a collection of rock songs, half of which donโt even appear in the movie. This is a real classic. It has a great min theme which brings the movie right into your head. All the tracks hold up โ itโs so damn effective. It took me ages to get hold of a copy, and, Jeez, I almost wept when I finally did.โ
Bernard Herrmann
Sisters
โThis is from a Brian De Palma movie. Itโs a pretty scary film, and the soundtrackโฆ ok if you want to freak yourself out, turn out all the lights and sit in the middle of the room and listen to this. You wonโt last a minute. When Iโm first thinking about a movie Iโll start looking for songs that reflect the personality of the movie, Iโll start looking for songs which can reflect the personality of the movie. The record I think most about is the one which plays during the opening credits, because thatโs the one which sets the tone of the movie. Like in Reservoir Dogs, when you see the guys all walking out of the diner, and that bass line from โLittle Green Bagโ kicks in โ you just know thereโs gonna be trouble.โ
Jerry Goldsmith
Under Fire
โโThe Main Themeโ is one of the greatest pieces of music written for a movie. Itโs so haunting, so beautiful, โ full of pan flutes and stuff. Itโs shattering yโknow โ like a Morricone theme. Oddly enough, โThe Main Themeโ works really well, but they never play it over the opening credits. They play it over the middle and during the closing credits, which is very strange.โ
Jack Nitzsche
Revenge
โOut of all the soundtracks, this is the best. Itโs from a Tony Scott movie โ he directed True Romance โ and itโs a very lush, elegant score. You donโt need to know the film to enjoy the soundtrack: It works in its own right.โ