Music on Battlestar Galactica: Is Bob Dylan a Cylon?
James Callis as Gaius Baltar and Jamie Bamber as Lee Adama in the season finale(episode 320 - Crossroads Pt2) in Sci-Fi's "Battlestar Galactica" -
SciFi
Last night's highly anticipated Battlestar Galactica season finale mindfrack has certainly elicited much discussion at the net water cooler, much of which has been about the use of a cover of Bob Dylan's "All Along the Watchtower." The song was recorded by BSG composer Bear McCreary and sung by his brother Brendan, who performs under the name BT4. In the episode, the song was used as a vehicle for the reveal of four of the five remaining cylons, as the four crew members aboard Galactica rendezvous in a workout room on the ship, hearing the same mysterious song. Each member mouths the words to the song Bob Dylan wrote: Chief Tyril: There must be some way out of here So does the inclusion of this song mean that Bob Dylan exists in the BSG world? (And if so, could he be the final cylon?) McCreary answers the question on his blog: ... The idea was not that Bob Dylan necessarily exists in the characters' universe, but that an artist on one of the colonies may have recorded a song with the exact same melody and lyrics. Perhaps this unknown performer and Dylan pulled inspiration from a common, ethereal source. Therefore, I was told to make no musical references to any 'Earthly' versions, Hendrix, Dylan or any others. The arrangement needed to sound like a pop song that belonged in the Galactica universe, not our own. Sounds like Dylan might need a good trans-universe copyright lawyer. That arrangement, by the way, also featured former members of Oingo Boingo (guitarist Steve Bartek and bassist John Avila) following in the footseps of their frontman Danny Elfman's film and tv work. It's a funky arrangement of the song, but not nearly as crazy as the one XTC did in 1978 ("All Along the Watchtower" by XTC). But back to the show and the song as a vehicle for the cylon reveal. An interview today with show creator Ron Moore revealed that the song in fact acts as a catalyst, and puts to rest any thoughts that they might not in fact be cylons: It's more that they arrived at a certain point in space and they were made aware of who they are. The music manifests a dawning awareness. These are four of the final five, which puts them in a separate category from everybody else. There are reasons for that I can't really get into. We'll be playing out those plot lines for quite a while. So what about Starbuck? Moore's mum on that one, but assures us that Katie Sackoff is signed on for season four (which, with 22 episodes ordered, must be the last). Knowing this, one has to assume then that she's either the fifth cylon, a figment of Apollo's imagination (or both!) or she pulled a Meredith Grey miracle and somehow didn't die a few episodes back ("Maelstrom"). We'll have lots of time to ponder the possiblities since there's going to be a gestational nine months until we see the birth of season 4 (due date, January 2008). drake lelanemother of the music/soundtrack blog thus spake drake Most Popular Stories
Popular Photo Galleries
Sexy AliensIf all space invaders looked like this, we'd be in trouble.
Joanna KrupaModel and Dancing with the Stars contestant Joanna Krupa
Twilight Saga: New MoonTeam Edward or Team Jacob?
FREE Movie of the Week
Nosferatu: A Symphony of HorrorFilm.com's FREE movie of the week is "Nosferatu: A Symphony of Horror." This 1922 classic of cinema based on Bram Stoker's "Dracula" (but with names changed) directed by F.W. Murnau and starring Max Schrek in one of films most famous and frightening make-up jobs.
Terms of Use |
Privacy Policy |
RealNetworks |
| FAQ |
RSS |
Mobile |
SiteMap |
Blog
|
Partners
Browse All: Movies | TV | Celebrities
Visit other RealNetworks sites: Rhapsody | Rolling Stone | RealGuide | RealArcade | LillyLikes | Ringback Tones | Advertise
© 2006-2009 RealNetworks. All Rights Reserved.
|