logo
When he was 16 this musician met Elmer Bernstein. It changed everything

When he was 16 this musician met Elmer Bernstein. It changed everything

The Age27-05-2025
Enthralled by the work of film composers such as James Horner, Alan Silvestri and Danny Elfman ('my north star'), going to the movies became an obsession, although his motives were different to those of his friends.
'They would go, 'Wow, that chick was so hot' or, 'Did you see that scene where the guy exploded?'
'And I would go, 'Did you guys hear what Jerry Goldsmith did with the French horns? I think that was the bad guys' theme, but he turned it upside down. I'm going to see it again tomorrow to find out.'
'They thought I was a weirdo,' he laughs.
In high school, McCreary met an elderly gentleman named Joe, who ran the Bellingham Yacht Club and told him legendary composer Elmer Bernstein, who wrote McCreary's favourite score of all time in To Kill a Mockingbird, moored his yacht there.
Joe offered to give Bernstein a tape of the then 16-year-old's work. Bernstein then took McCreary under his wing as a protege until his death in 2004.
'The reason I wanted to work with her is because of who she is, not just her voice. The rebel that she was. Between that recording and her untimely death we became friends. We were texting all the time. She was so funny.'
Bear McCreary on Sinead O'Connor
'I didn't know what a life in film music could be,' McCreary reflects. 'And then I met Elmer, who was the sweetest, most thoughtful man I'd ever met. He had a great relationship with his wife and kids, people respected him immensely, and yet he took no shit.
'Getting to know him gave me something to point to. It wasn't even about the music, it was personal. You could have a life. That's where I want to be when I'm pushing 80.'
McCreary's big break was scoring the 2004 TV reboot of the Battlestar Galactica franchise. But just as significant was working with Irish singer Sinead O'Connor, who sang the main title for season seven of Outlander, her final ever recording.
'The reason I wanted to work with her is because of who she is, not just her voice,' McCreary says. 'The rebel that she was. Between that recording and her untimely death we became friends. We were texting all the time. She was so funny.'
Another life-changing moment came with Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019), for which McCreary recorded a hard rock cover of Blue Öyster Cult's Godzilla featuring System of a Down vocalist Serj Tankian and legendary heavy metal drummer Gene Hoglan.
'It was one of the best days of my life,' he beams. 'And I got in the car and I was driving home and I was totally buzzed. But by the time I got into my driveway I was really sad.'
Over the space of that short car ride, it dawned on McCreary that this was likely a one-off experience. Then he was struck by a revelation.
'What if I just started writing some music for the people I want to work with, and it's not for a film?' he says.
The result was McCreary's 2024 album The Singularity, a two-LP set that merges the grandeur of his scoring work with the bombast of hard rock and heavy metal. It features guests such as Tankian, Hoglan, Kim Thayil from Soundgarden, Slipknot's Corey Taylor and guitar heroes Joe Satriani and Slash from Guns N' Roses.
McCreary will perform songs from The Singularity and his scoring career in Australia in July on his Themes & Variations tour.
'It's a celebration of everything I've written in my life. And it's a chance to hear all these pieces from The Singularity, from The Walking Dead, from Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, Godzilla. I'm re-envisioning it all in a format that fits the stage we're on.'
Loading
For someone experiencing his first taste of touring, adjusting to life on the road has taken some work. Luckily, McCreary has some experienced pals to call on.
'I got fantastic touring laundry advice from [Guns N' Roses bassist] Duff McKagan,' he says. 'I find myself texting a picture of my laundry to Slash and Duff and I'm like, I think I've got this figured out!'
Given the contrast between his orchestral film scores and the guitar-fuelled tracks from The Singularity, one wonders what kind of audience he's been attracting on the tour.
He reflects on a recent show in Europe.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Love-sick ‘Jennifer Aniston' sucking life out of victims
Love-sick ‘Jennifer Aniston' sucking life out of victims

Perth Now

time6 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Love-sick ‘Jennifer Aniston' sucking life out of victims

It's Jennifer Aniston. But it's not THE Jennifer Aniston. This Jennifer Aniston is a crook — and she's an expert at convincing you to part with your hard-earned money. But take a long, hard, closer look. She's not even real. She's a deepfake. One of a tricky new wave of frauds taking place across the world. And the sweet talker has suckered in victims around the globe — including red-faced Paul Davis. The 43-year-old handed over $415 to the AI scammer after falling for her charms. He admits to being sceptical at first but when she sent him her driving licence and told him that she 'loved him', he was sucked in. 'Jennifer Aniston' send a series of messages as part of the elaborate scam. Credit: Daily Echo/Solent News & Photo Agency / Daily Echo/Solent News 'I've had fake videos from Jennifer Aniston saying she loves me and asking for £200 ($415). I believed it — and I paid,' he said. Mr Davis sent the fraudster Apple gift cards to the value, saying: 'I got bitten. Once bitten, twice shy.' He said he finally fell victim after months of being hounded. 'It's been going on for about five months,' Mr Davis, who battles depression, said. 'I thought people would get into trouble for this but these people seem to be having a laugh and getting away with it. 'I can't keep taking that sort of hit.' The deepfake even tugged at the heart strings. Credit: Daily Echo/Solent News & Photo Agency / Daily Echo/Solent News Mr Davis, from Southampton in England, said he knew others who had been scammed out of $1000 in Apple gift vouchers. Scammers often request victims buy gift cards and send them to them. Mr Davis is not the only soul feeling sorry for himself. A French woman lost her marriage, fortune and mental health to 'Brad Pitt', who was unmasked in Nigeria. She was scammed into funding a fake cancer treatment for the star after receiving AI-generated selfies and sweet-talking texts. Paul Davis was sucked in by a deepfake 'Jennifer Aniston'. Credit: Daily Echo/Solent News & Photo Agency / Daily Echo/Solent News

‘Jennifer Aniston' deepfake suckers in victims across world including Paul Davis - and there's ‘Brad Pitt' too
‘Jennifer Aniston' deepfake suckers in victims across world including Paul Davis - and there's ‘Brad Pitt' too

West Australian

time6 hours ago

  • West Australian

‘Jennifer Aniston' deepfake suckers in victims across world including Paul Davis - and there's ‘Brad Pitt' too

It's Jennifer Aniston. But it's not THE Jennifer Aniston. This Jennifer Aniston is a crook — and she's an expert at convincing you to part with your hard-earned money. But take a long, hard, closer look. She's not even real. She's a deepfake. One of a tricky new wave of frauds taking place across the world. And the sweet talker has suckered in victims around the globe — including red-faced Paul Davis. The 43-year-old handed over $415 to the AI scammer after falling for her charms. He admits to being sceptical at first but when she sent him her driving licence and told him that she 'loved him', he was sucked in. 'I've had fake videos from Jennifer Aniston saying she loves me and asking for £200 ($415). I believed it — and I paid,' he said. Mr Davis sent the fraudster Apple gift cards to the value, saying: 'I got bitten. Once bitten, twice shy.' He said he finally fell victim after months of being hounded. 'It's been going on for about five months,' Mr Davis, who battles depression, said. 'I thought people would get into trouble for this but these people seem to be having a laugh and getting away with it. 'I can't keep taking that sort of hit.' Mr Davis, from Southampton in England, said he knew others who had been scammed out of $1000 in Apple gift vouchers. Scammers often request victims buy gift cards and send them to them. Mr Davis is not the only soul feeling sorry for himself. A French woman lost her marriage, fortune and mental health to 'Brad Pitt', who was unmasked in Nigeria. She was scammed into funding a fake cancer treatment for the star after receiving AI-generated selfies and sweet-talking texts.

In what might be his final film, David Cronenberg keeps it perverse
In what might be his final film, David Cronenberg keeps it perverse

The Age

time6 hours ago

  • The Age

In what might be his final film, David Cronenberg keeps it perverse

THE SHROUDS ★★★★ MA, 120 mins Going by recent reports, The Shrouds may be the last film from 82-year-old David Cronenberg, Canada's onetime king of 'body horror'. If so, it's an apt farewell – typically morbid, perverse and self-mocking, but also emotionally direct in the manner of some of his most durable classics, such as The Dead Zone and The Fly. Vincent Cassel, who stars as an eccentric tech entrepreneur named Karsh, is a generation younger than Cronenberg but here bears an unmistakable resemblance to his director, with slicked-back white hair, a long bony face that lends itself to dramatic lighting, and the detached verve of a scientist who enjoys the process of dissection. He also recalls some of Cronenberg's earlier eccentric leading men, such as Christopher Walken as a troubled psychic in The Dead Zone, especially when he's flashing a disconcerting grin. Like Walken, Cassel has a knack for throwing us off-balance through his speech rhythms, though in Cassel's case this is partly the consequence of being a native French speaker acting in English. Loading Karsh, like Cronenberg, has 'made a career out of bodies,' in a very literal way. His ventures include a cemetery where the tombstones come equipped with screens, allowing you to log in and watch the corpse of your loved one rotting in real time. Naturally, there's an app for this, known as GraveTech (there's also a restaurant adjacent to the cemetery, encouraging visitors to make a day of it). How many takers there would be for the scheme in real life is hard to say. But this is Cronenberg world, although we're nominally in something resembling present-day Toronto. In any case Karsh is his own most enthusiastic client, maintaining an ongoing relationship with the body of his wife Becca (Diane Kruger) years after her early death from cancer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store