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Soundtracks, Satire And A Sense Of Place: A Conversation With Randy Newman

Randy Newman stopped by NPR for a performance and interview with Steve Inskeep.
Liam James Doyle
/
NPR
Randy Newman stopped by NPR for a performance and interview with Steve Inskeep.

For the last few decades, Randy Newman has perhaps been best known for composing beloved children's film scores. He even won an Oscar for Toy Story 3. But his solo albums are unmistakable; take, for example, his 1977 hit "Short People," a biting satire about prejudice. His latest album, Dark Matter, is a return to acerbic, venomous form.

Newman was born in Los Angeles, while his father was away serving in World War II. His mother took him to New Orleans for the duration of the war, connecting him to the South in a way he's felt ever since.

After returning to LA, Newman met three uncles who all wrote Hollywood film scores. As a child, he'd often visit them at sound stages. His uncles would ask him to stay quiet on the set – a tough task for a six-year-old

"I don't think I heard the music," he says. "I was concentrating on not making a sound!"

But the experience inevitably influenced Newman's ability to write songs that feel tied to a specific location. And on Dark Matter, Newman again mixes current events with this sense of place. In one song, the place is Moscow, as he sings of Russian leader Vladimir Putin.

Newman started writing the song before Russia interfered in the U.S. election. He says he was inspired to write it when he saw pictures of the Russian president with his shirt off.

"I wondered — I mean, he's the richest man in the world, the most powerful man in the world. What did he want?" he says. "It dawned on me that he wants to be like a matinee idol, to use the old expression — you know, he wants to be Tom Cruise, too."

Newman settled in at a grand piano in an NPR studio to talk with Steve Inskeep and perform some original songs. You can hear the radio version of their conversation at the audio link, and hear the full conversation below.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Steve Inskeep is a host of NPR's Morning Edition, as well as NPR's morning news podcast Up First.