Composer and musician Ilan Eshkeri is an expert on capturing the right sound. His work in the studio is a constant quest for the authenticity of sound. That could mean putting a microphone inches from a violinists bow for intimacy or against a Marshall stack to catch the power of his beloved heavy metal, as he recently did in Shaun the Sheep. Eshkeri sat for an exclusive talk with Den of Geek. He was an interviewer’s dream. He is enthusiastic about his work and clearly enjoys talking about it. He comes across as a guy who really enjoys getting up in the morning and going to work. Whether his job is happily recreating a Beatles recording session with the original instruments and mics, or sadly searching for the lost chord that will encapsulate the experience of Alzheimer’s disease, as he did in the film Still Alice. I wanted to start with Shaun the Sheep. How could you do a film about sheep and not musically reference Pink Floyd? For example, in Shaun there’s a bit where we pantomime a whole chase. And the bad guys are in the back of a horse. And he puts a little ski behind the horse and I put a little quote off this E-program that we were watching when we were growing up called Ski Sunday. So I’m upset I didn’t think of that. When you were studying music in school and getting into bands, did you expect that one day you’d be recording heavy metal one day and full orchestras the next? Have you electrified your violin yet? I have not but I have played the electric violin before. I’ve never gotten round to buying one, I borrowed one for a little time from a friend of mine that was in the electric string quartet called Bond. Some of the technique is quite different. I keep hoping that one day I’ll start practicing the violin again so I can get back to doing what I was doing. I loved Alice- Still Alice? Thank you, I really appreciate that. It’s amazing because I wrote that in the middle of writing Shaun the Sheep. Very difficult, I’ve never had such a difficult time. I’m definitely a shut-up-and-get-on-with-it kind of a guy. I don’t have a lot of pretension about my work. I don’t have a lot of artistic pretensions about my work. I’m just grateful that I get to do what I do. But actually, it really was, emotionally, the most jarring and difficult shift to get from Shaun the Sheep to Still Alice. How do you get the emotional impact of Alzheimer’s across with nothing but notes, rests and time signatures? The way I like to work is I like to find concepts and build my music around the concepts. The same way as when you try and find something funny and put it in the music so the musicians are laughing when they play it. So I try to find some idea to build the score around. In Still Alice, it started with instrumentation. What is the most intimate instrumentation, because it is a very upfront, very personal film. The piano is an obvious one because Alice is a homemaker and the piano is an instrument of the home. People are very familiar with pianos. Most people have been around a piano or touched a piano or played a piano before. It’s not like an electric guitar which is an instrument of rock gods. It’s a very informal thing that we’re used to being around. On the other side of the spectrum, you were writing the Baa Baa Black Sheep Choir. We recorded the Baa Baa Black Sheep Quartet. I had to write that song, which I wrote with Tim Wheeler. We did the song, I played it live on the piano and we mapped out about where it was going to be in the animation. We each were a character and we sang a song and we mapped it all out and they videoed it. Then I wrote the thing that was going to be in the video and gave them that to animate. The animators using the video reference, animated the whole thing. I was always going to replace some the voices, because I’m singing in it and you don’t really want me singing on a record. Maybe I’m alright on backing vocals, but not up front, and I’m the second sheep that sings. But they said keep it. Now every time I hear it, and when I see it on the cinema, it’s my voice coming out of this sheep’s mouth and it’s very bizarre. Who is your engineer? I’ve heard you used more overdubs on Shaun the Sheep than you had ever used in recording. I think I would just say, in general in Shaun the Sheep, it’s not that there was a lot of overdubbing in each individual piece, but the list of credits, the musicians were so varied. We have every kind of guitar or ukulele or banjo or harmonica. We had harmonium. We had upright bass. We had electric bass. We had every kind of instrument you could ever imagine. We had heavy metal, giant symphonic music, you name it we had it. We wrote a pop song. We wrote a rock and roll song. We had a rap song in the end. Every conceivable style of music and musician and the talent that was brought together to create the music for Shaun the Sheep, it was on a scale larger than anything I’ve done. I tend not to use onboard, in-the-box sounds. The reason is I like to, how do I put this? It’s about authenticity for me. I think if you want to make something sound like a Stones record and you got the Stones in the room do you think they’d be cool with the amp sounds inside Pro-Tools? No, they’d have an amplifier and they would have a microphone and they would play really fucking loud, right? For me, if you want to create that, that’s what you’ve got to do. The authenticity comes from how we interact with these different kinds of players. It’s about what are they going to bring to the table. I’m not trying to make them fit into my world, I want to make my world open into whatever they bring to the table. If I’m doing a rock and roll thing, I don’t want a session guitarist who can play anything. I want a rock and roll guy who is used to being on stage in front of thousands of people. Maybe he can’t play that funky chord but he’ll that thing that’s a bit more rock and roll. If you have a guy who plays the ethnic flute and you write this thing and that flute doesn’t have that note, I use what’s natural. What’s idiomatic for that instrument? For me, idiomatic for a rock and roll electric guitar is a Marshall stack with a mic right up against it. For me, that’s doing it for real, the authenticity of interacting. The little weird sounds in the dial, now that’s real. That’s something special. I heard your arrangement of “I Get By With a Little Help From My Friends” for the Dementia Friends. Tell me about your relationship with the Beatles and what you learned from George Martin. So where does the music fan end and the composer begin in a situation like that? I don’t know. There’s no real gap between the two. I love it. I’m excited all the time by what I’m doing. I guess a fan’s a fan, but the composer in me feels like, hey am I really a bit of a fraud? Maybe I’ve just been lucky until now and someone’s going to found me out. That’s your composer there. What I love is variety. I’ll go one direction to the pub, but when I come back from the pub I’ll walk back round the other way. I love changing things. I don’t like routine. A lot of composers have a template that comes up. But I change my template all the time. I love working with somebody in a new way. It feeds creativity because if you do the same thing the same way all the time that diminishes creativity. If I pick up a guitar I tend to, automatically my hand goes to a G major chord. If I’m not thinking about it. I don’t know why. That’s just my sort of habit. If I sit at a piano I tend to go into E major. I don’t know why. There’s no reason for it. It just happens, right? So if I change things up. If I have a new tuning on my guitar, if I’m working with a new director who is going to ask me to think in a way that I haven’t before, ask me to write music to a script or saying we’ve got two weeks to get the whole thing scored, it creates a different inspiring environment. So I love a challenge. The only thing I can’t change is that I’ve got synesthesia, when I hear music I see colors. Certain timbres of equal colors and I color code all my sequences. For me, the violin is green and the horns are red. It’s so obvious to me because it’s that way. If it’s colored in a different way, it’s like fingernails on a blackboard. I can’t handle it. So your music comes pre-animated. When you’re writing for characters, do you imagine yourself composing and recording in the celluloid universe you’re writing about? What I try to do is try to imagine what it’s like to be that character. If I’m trying to write music for a character I ask what music would this person listen to? What emotion is this person going through? And I try to take those things and express them. Which is why I really don’t like to do horror movies, very rarely, because I’d just sit around thinking: What does it feel like to be a serial killer? And try to express that emotionally. To take it to a dark place. I think it was definitely that much fun in London. The industry’s changed. I grew up with rock and roll bands, a lot of British bands, I’m their friends. Without mentioning any names- Oh go on and mention them. These friends of yours, do you jam? I think they’d fall about laughing if I picked up a guitar and tried to jam with some of them.