David Mermelstein is an AwardsLine contributor.
It’s not unusual to have big names in popular music perform end-title songs for major movies. Opera singers, though, don’t generally roll that way. But nobody ever said they can’t. Which is why Alexandre Desplat,
who composed the music for Rise Of The Guardians, decided to approach soprano Renée Fleming about singing “Still Dream,” which uses the melody he wrote for the picture’s main theme and lyrics by the film’s screenwriter, David Lindsay-Abaire.
“It covers two octaves,” Desplat says of the song. “The music is very orchestral; the melody, very lyrical. So it really made sense to ask Renée Fleming, who is the greatest soprano alive. And she said yes right away. It was a suggestion that could have been rejected, but it was right — though I can’t remember the last time a soprano sang an end-title song.”
Related: OSCARS: Alexandre Desplat
“It’s really an aria he composed,” Fleming says. “It’s got a huge range and is quite demanding melodically — very instrumental. So it was a challenge for me, but it’s so beautiful. Alexandre has an extraordinary melodic gift. I’d never met him before this, but I was familiar with his work, because he’s done so many wonderful scores.” Their collaboration went smoothly despite the lack of prior history, although they didn’t actually meet until a specially arranged recording session in New York that followed the full score’s recording in London. “We went back and forth about key and range on the phone and email,” Fleming recalls. “He did several rewrites, but I wasn’t the only one making requests. This all came together in a very short period of time. I couldn’t be there in London, but he was with me in New York.”
Fleming got the lyrics only after Desplat had already sent the music. “I was under a mountain of deadlines when they called,” Lindsay-Abaire says. “But I couldn’t say no. Alexandre was very set that he wanted the song to revisit and rearticulate the score’s themes. He didn’t want to just tack something onto the end. And in that way, it felt very organic to the movie that was already there. We took the ‘believe theme’ — where the little boy believes in Jack Frost for the first time — and it was like, ‘Oh, our work is halfway done.’ He wanted the song to have the same sweep and epic quality the film has. It’s not the standard ‘stick a pop song at the end of a movie.’ It embraces the wonder of childhood and boils it down.”
Related: OSCARS: 75 Tunes Eligible For Original Song Category


The song doesn’t work. It’s horrible. It’s a pop song with an operatic soprano singing it. Bad call on the composers part.
Since when is Rene Fleming the greatest soprano alive ?
Does Dawn Upshaw know that ? Do they know that in Italy ???
Kathleen Battle sang the end title song for “House of Flying Daggers”.
I thought the song was beautiful. The fit with Working in the yard. Yesterday today and into the week. You can no longer say our house is the one with the dead tree. I will not know where i live. O well. At least i will be able to meet some more neighbors. Or not so good as at least i will think i am on the wrong neighborhood and spend a few days until someone hears my phone ring which i would have had no ides as to where the noise was coming. O. You can now park a motorcycle or two in the garage. storyline was perfect. As for Fleming being the best soprano, that’s his opinion to which he is entitled. Now the guy who thinks this sounds like a pop song needs to listen to more top 40. Definition of pop music (n)
pop mu·sic
commercial music:modern commercial music, usually tuneful, up-tempo and repetitive, that is aimed at the general public and the youth market in particular
Still Dream doesn’t fit the definition of pop song.