Terence Blanchard Finishes Score For ‘Cadillac Records’

GRAMMY-WINNING COMPOSER/TRUMPET PLAYER TERENCE BLANCHARD COMPLETES SCORE FOR ‘CADILLAC RECORDS’

                                                  

Film starring Beyoncé Knowles and Adrien Brody to be released Dec. 5 by Tristar Pictures

World-renowned film composer and trumpet player Terence Blanchard has completed the score for Cadillac Records,
the feature film about the story of Chess Records, the label in the
1950s that was home to Chuck Berry, Etta James, Muddy Waters and
Howlin’ Wolf. To be released Dec. 5th by Sony’s Tristar Pictures, the film stars Beyoncé Knowles, Oscar® winner Adrien Brody, Jeffrey Wright and Mos Def.

Blanchard, whose composing talents were most recently seen on the big screen in Spike Lee’s Miracle at St. Anna, created the score of Cadillac Records. The score was recorded in New York with Blanchard performing along with his celebrated quintet band.

The film is set in Chicago
in the 1950s when a new record label emerged as the preferred home to
the greatest blues, R&B and early rock & roll artists of the
day. The “Chess Records” sound would go on to heavily influence the
next generation of rock artists including the Rolling Stones, the
Beatles and countless other American and British rockers. (The Rolling
Stones paid tribute to the label in their song “2120 S. Michigan” –
which was the Chicago address of Chess. In fact, the song was recorded there during their first U.S. tour in 1964.)

Says Blanchard of Cadillac Records,
“This is really the story of the beginning of rock & roll and the
artists who laid its musical foundation. It was a time when blues,
R&B and even jazz and Gospel rock were very fluid genres with
musicians frequently switching back and forth between styles. However,
they all shared one thing – they were the ‘alternative’ to the popular
commercial music of the day.”

As
an artist himself, Blanchard is best known for his work as a composer
and a “jazz musician,” and explains the challenges in composing in the
“early rock & roll” idiom. “Growing up in New Orleans, I saw perform many of the artists who recorded on Chess – Muddy Water, Etta James, Bo Diddley…. And you know, New Orleans
itself is one big musical gumbo, where musical styles often mix it up.
So while this was my first bona fide ‘rock & roll’ musical score, I
already was well-versed in the music that defined Chess Records.”

Written and directed by Darnell Martin, Cadillac Records marks the 44th feature film that Blanchard has scored. His work includes film scores for Spike Lee’s Mo Better Blues, Malcolm X and Inside Man, along with HBO’s critically lauded Emmy-winning series, When the Levees Broke:  A Requiem In Four Acts. Blanchard’s CD, A Tale Of God’s Will (A Requiem For Katrina),
is based on the music that he wrote for the series and included new
music written by his band members. A beautifully haunting and
impassioned song-cycle about Hurricane Katrina and the ravages incurred
by it upon the city of New Orleans and its residents, A Tale Of God’s Will (A Requiem For Katrina) was the recipient of a 2008 Grammy Award.

Other films scored by Blanchard include Kasi Lemmons’ films Eve’s Bayou and Talk To Me, Oprah Winfrey’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, Tim Story’s Barbershop and Ron Shelton’s Dark Blue. 

The
recipient of two Grammy Awards and multiple Grammy and Golden Globe
nominations, this past year has been an incredibly prolific one for
Blanchard on a number of other levels. In addition to touring
worldwide, he also played a pivotal role in the moving of The Thelonious Monk Institute of Jazz
from Los Angeles to New Orleans, a move that as Artistic Director he
feels will benefit not only the city of New Orleans, but the students
themselves who will be surrounded by the ever-present rich diversity of
music in the Crescent City.  

Muse Media PR