Tuesday, December 18, 2018
The
Oscars’ music committee have put
Dolly Parton,
Mark Ronson,
Kendrick Lamar and, of course,
Lady Gaga, onto the Original Song short list with 11 others. And once again, longtime song observers are asking the question...can
Diane Warren finally win an Academy Award?
Warren’s “I’ll Fight” is sung by
Jennifer Hudson in the documentary
RBG and if she secures a nomination on 1/22, it will be her 10th nom without a win.
Parton, who has been working the campaign trail for the
Netflix film
Dumplin’ this month, made the short list with “Girl in the Movies.” Were Ronson nominated, it would be for “Keep Reachin’” from
Rashida Jones’ doc on her father,
Quincy. Chaka Khan sang the song that she and Ronson wrote with
Andrew Wyatt and
Jeff Bhasker.
The front-runners at this point are Lamar &
SZA’s “All The Stars” from
Black Panther and Gaga’s “Shallow” from
A Star is Born. Both are nominated for
Golden Globes as are two other songs that made the Oscars’ short list, Parton’s “Girl in the Movies” and
Troye Sivan and
Jonsi’s “Revelation” from
Boy Erased.
As the Academy often does, they find an indie rocker dabbling in film music and if that trend holds true this year, they have
Thom Yorke to fill it with “Suspirium” from
Suspiria.
The committee has put two of
Marc Shaiman and
Scott Wittman’s songs from
Mary Poppins Returns on the shortlist: the
Emily Blunt sung “The Place Where Lost Things Go” and the
Lin Manuel Miranda-led “Trip A Little Light Fantastic.”
And since the Academy can’t resist a good song in an animated film,
Alan Menken’s “A Place Called Slaughter Race” from
Ralph Breaks the Internet, sung by
Sarah Silverman and
Gal Gadot, makes the cut.
Also included in the list of nine are
Sade’s end credits song for
Widows’ “The Big Unknown,”
Willie Watson and
Tim Blake Nelson’s “When a Cowboy Trades His Spurs for Wings” from the Coen brothers’
The Ballad of Buster Scruggs,
Sampha’s “Treasure” from
Beautiful Boy,
Arlissa’s “We Won’t Move” from
The Hate U Give, and
The Coup’s
Sorry to Bother You track “OYAHYTT.” (That stands for OhYeahAlrightHellYeahThatsTight).