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• An automated piano plays modern songs on "Westworld."
• Creator Jonathan Nolan says it's a parallel to the robotic hosts.
• The music serves as an emotional trigger and reminder we're in the future.
• Also, he just loves Radiohead.
"Westworld" fans with a keen ear have probably noticed the use of anachronistic music in the late 1800s setting of the show's theme park. Inside the Marisposa Saloon where Maeve (Thandie Newton) works, a player piano has been heard giving renditions of modern music.
The premiere episode featured Soundgarden's "Black Hole Sun," plus a kick-butt take on the Rolling Stones' "Paint it Black." The second episode included Radiohead's "No Surprises."
During the "Westworld" panel at New York Comic Con Sunday, co-creator Jonathan Nolan was asked about his use of Radiohead and other bands inside the show's fictional Wild West universe.
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The album in question is actually called "OK Computer," but it's still fitting. "Paranoid Android" is a known single from the album, so we forgive Mr. Nolan's memory lapse.
"One of the first things Lisa and I talked about when we sat down to write the pilot were the sort of touchstone images that you would come back to," Nolan continued, gesturing at his wife and co-creator Lisa Joy. "The player piano was - and shout out to Kurt Vonnegat for the idea - sort of the first, primordial version of our hosts: A Rube Goldberg machine that is created to evoke human emotion."
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"[The player piano] was also just a great excuse to be able to use contemporary music in the show," Nolan continued. "Obviously it's a period Western, or as we call it a synthetic Western. But contemporary music is very powerful because everyone comes in with a pre-existing relationship to the song. So it allows you to short-circuit or shorthand an idea or a feeling."
The quiet melancholy of Radiohead, or build-up of energy from "Paint it Black" are two excellent examples we have of this so far. Future episodes will almost certainly feature new songs, as well.
John P. Johsnon/HBO
"It's also there to remind you that this isn't a Western, that this isn't taking place in the 19th century. It's taking place somewhere else - some time else," Nolan concluded. "And I just love Radiohead."