IN CONTENTION
They write the songs
These contenders keep making music, despite how the movie music awards campaign with their tunes.
By Tom O'Neil, The Envelope
December 5, 2007
Recent changes in the voting process and campaigning for music
Oscars may be altering old patterns of who wins. Starting this
year, contenders are no longer permitted to send audio CDs of songs
and scores to members of the academy's music branch; voters now
must experience tunes within the visual context of a film. In 2005,
voters began determining song nominees by judging three-minute
video clips from each film that are strung together at screenings
held in Los Angeles and New York. Immediately after the screenings,
PricewaterhouseCoopers accountants collect voters' ballots.
ORIGINAL SONG
FAVORITES
"Come So Far (Got So Far to Go)"
("Hairspray"), written by Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman,
performed by Queen Latifah, Nikki Blonsky, Zac Efron and Elijah
Kelley
"Despedida" ("Love in the Time of
Cholera"), written by Shakira and Antonio Pinto, performed by
Shakira
"Do You Feel Me" ("American
Gangster"), written by Diane Warren, performed by Anthony
Hamilton
"Falling Slowly" ("Once"), written and
performed by Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová
"Grace Is Gone" ("Grace Is Gone"),
written by Clint Eastwood and Carole Bayer Sager, performed by
Jamie Cullum
"Guaranteed" ("Into the Wild"),
written and performed by Eddie Vedder
"Happy Working Song" ("Enchanted"),
written by Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz, performed by Amy
Adams
"A Hero Comes Home" ("Beowulf"),
written by Glen Ballard and Alan Silvestri, performed by Idina
Menzel
"Le Festin" ("Ratatouille"), written
by Michael Giacchino, performed by Camille
"Little Wonders" ("Meet the
Robinsons"), written and performed by Rob Thomas
"Lullaby for Wyatt" ("Grace Is Gone"),
written and performed by Sheryl Crow
"Lyra" ("The Golden Compass"), written
and performed by Kate Bush
"Society" ("Into the Wild"), written
by Jerry Hannan, performed by Eddie Vedder
"That's How You Know" ("Enchanted"),
written by Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz, performed by Amy
Adams
"To Be Surprised" ("Dan in Real
Life"), written and performed by Sondre Lerche
"Walk Hard" ("Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox
Story"), written by Marshall Crenshaw, John C. Reilly, Judd Apatow
and Jake Kasdan, performed by John C. Reilly
SPOTLIGHT: Songs from "Enchanted" might have the edge since
six Disney films have won this category over the last 20 years
("Tarzan," "Pocahontas," "The Lion King," "Aladdin," "Beauty and
the Beast," "The Little Mermaid"), but there's a hubbub over which
three tunes the studio submitted.
Missing is the one getting the most radio airplay, "Ever, Ever
After," not because it's crooned by Carrie Underwood instead of
star Amy Adams, but probably due to a debate over best Oscar
strategy. Since voters now judge songs featured in three-minute
video clips, some contenders believe it's best to showcase the tune
within dramatic action rather than a movie's finale scene or
closing credits. "Ever, Ever After" plays over a
they-all-lived-happily-ever-after montage just before "Enchanted's"
credits roll.
Still, an end-credit song won last year (Melissa Etheridge's "I
Need to Wake Up" in "An Inconvenient Truth") and another had been
nominated under the new voting procedure (Dolly Parton's "Travelin'
Thru" in "Transamerica"). But if dramatic context will really help
one song in "Enchanted," the favorite should be "That's How You
Know," thanks to its spectacular staging in New York's Central
Park.
POSSIBLE
"Baby Don't Cry (The Pie Song)" ("Waitress"), written by
Andrew Hollander and Adrienne Shelly, performed by Quincy Coleman
and Keri Russell
"The Ballad of Jimmy Carter" ("Jimmy
Carter, Man From Plains"), written and performed by Dan Bern
"Beautiful Ride" ("Walk Hard: The
Dewey Cox Story"), written by Dan Bern and Mike Viola, performed by
John C. Reilly
"Gravity" ("Nanking"), written and
performed by Lou Reed
"Hello (I Love You)"</</b>em> ("The
Last Mimzy"), written by Howard Shore and Roger Waters, performed
by Rogers Waters
"Huck's Tune" ("Lucky You"), written
and performed by Bob Dylan
"If You Want Me" ("Once"), written
and performed by Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová
"King of the Earth" ("August Rush"),
written by Mark Mancina and John Ondrasik, performed by Five
for Fighting
"Let's Duet" ("Walk Hard: The Dewey
Cox Story"), written by Charlie Wadhams and Benji Hughes, performed
by John C. Reilly
"My Hands Are Shaking" ("Dan in Real
Life"), written and performed by Sondre Lerche
"Pocket Full of Stars" ("Surf's Up"),
written by Sam Forrest and Hayley Hutchinson, performed by Nine
Black Alps
"Royal Pain" ("Shrek the Third"),
written by Mark Oliver Everett, performed by Eels
"So Close" ("Enchanted"), written by
Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz, performed by Amy Adams
"Someday" ("August Rush"), written
and performed by John Legend
SPOTLIGHT:
Over the last decade, voters have been getting more edgy in this
category, nominating rap songs (by Eminem, Three 6 Mafia) and
spoofs ("South Park's" "Blame Canada"). Now they might actually
hail tunes from a movie that lampoons Oscar-winner "Walk the Line."
"Walk Hard" offers a comedic take on a music artist not unlike
Johnny Cash, who is also a tomcat (portrayed by John C. Reilly)
destined for prison and rehab. The satiric "Walk Hard" is
considered the favorite among the film's three contenders because
it's the title track, but don't write off "Beautiful Ride" or
"Let's Duet." Two years ago "Hustle & Flow's" title song was
considered to be that film's best shot at a nomination, but voters
preferred "It's Hard Out Here for a Pimp," which won.
LONG SHOTS
"Another Believer" ("Meet the Robinsons"),
written by Rufus Wainwright and Marius de Vries, performed by Rufus
Wainwright
"Back Where You Belong" ("The Water
Horse: Legend of the Deep"), written and performed by Sinead
O'Connor
"China Doll" ("Honeydripper"), written
by John Sayles and Mason Daring, performed by Gary Clark Jr.
"A Dream" ("Freedom Writers"), written
by Lonnie Lynn and will.i.am, performed by will.i.am
"First Amendment Blues" ("Larry Flynt:
The Right to Be Left Alone"), written by Darius de Haas and Walter
Marks, performed by Darius de Haas
"Get You Goin'" ("Alvin and the
Chipmunks"), written by the DeeTown Syndicate, performed by Alvin
and the Chipmunks
"How We Roll" ("Alvin and the
Chipmunks"), written by the DeeTown Syndicate, performed by Alvin
and the Chipmunks
"I'll Be OK" ("Dan in Real Life"),
written and performed by Sondre Lerche
"No More" ("Body of War"), written and
performed by Eddie Vedder