“The music is a key to the personality of the movie”
Tarantino went on to discuss how important music can be in the early stages of writing a film: “The music is a key to the personality of the movie. And also, the beat of the movie, the rhythm that the movie’s supposed to play at. So, if I come up with an idea that I think is a good idea for a movie, usually I sit on it for a while and just kind of let it grow and grow and grow. And then when I start and actually think, This is actually something that I could spend the next two years of my life doing, my first stop is I go into my vinyl room – I have a little room right off of my bedroom, it used to be a nursery, I turned it into a used record store. And so, first things first, I just start going through my records and start pulling records that… have really interesting pieces of music that could be what I’m looking for…. And then, usually once I find three or four songs that I can imagine really being in the movie, especially something that could be the opening credit sequence – well, that goes a long way to actually helping me discover the story and thinking, OK, let’s take this to the next step. Which is sitting down and writing it.”
As Ramos says of Tarantino: He’s not the kind of director who’s gonna pick something that he’s heard on the radio… He’s the kind of guy who’s gonna hand me a homemade video cassette tape of a 70s Japanese television show and say, ‘This little piece of music, not the main title – I want that.’”
On ‘Jackie Brown’:
“I knew I was I doing this movie that was gonna be jumping off from Blaxploitation movies. And the thing that I think a lot of people think of when they think of Blaxploitation movies is the really groovy soundtracks that went along with them. I have a whole Blaxploitation section [in my record room], so I just started digging through there, digging through my soul collection, and then came up with four or five, six songs already. Not all of them made it into the movie, but it was like, Oh, this is the beat that Jackie Brown needs to play at.”
“I think the best mixtape I ever made was for Bridget Fonda. I literally made just a tape of the stuff Melanie [Fonda’s character in Jackie Brown] would listen to. Midnight Confessions [by The Grass Roots] was definitely on it.”
“There was something really special about Jackie Brown, like I had my own Blaxploitation soundtrack. And actually, I had the soundtracks to all the Pam Grier movies, so I had the soundtracks to Coffee, Foxy Brown, Sheba Baby, Bucktown… So to actually be able to put them on my wall and then put my Pam Grier Blaxploitation soundtrack right next to it was really cool.”