Sound Bites: Rachel Portman
The Duchess
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"For a period film, I avoid using certain, more modern-sounding instruments, like marimba or acoustic guitar," says Portman, the first female composer to win an Oscar, for 1996's "Emma." "I also naturally avoid certain harmonies, which I might use freely in a contemporary film. However, I would never feel constrained to use only the musical language of the time period, or the score might feel more like source music."
Portman says she listens to classical music, much of it from the era of the "The Duchess," all the time. "It's part of the musical fabric that I draw on in all my writing," she says. Portman incorporated pieces by Bach and Hadyn into live scenes, but she didn't want the music to be of the period. "The score needed to play deeper into the emotions of the characters than the music of the period could do effectively."







