Dreilide Thrace
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Slick redirects to this article. For the pilot with that same callsign, see: Jacob Calabos.
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Dreilide Thrace | ||||
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| Nickname | Slick | ||||
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| Portrayed by | Roark Critchlow | ||||
| Dreilide Thrace is a Human/Cylon Hybrid | |||||
| Dreilide Thrace is an Original Series Cylon | |||||
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Dreilide "Slick" Thrace was a concert pianist and composer, and the father of Kara "Starbuck" Thrace. Kara seems to have had a closer relationship with him than with her mother. When she and Karl "Helo" Agathon arrive at her former apartment in Delphi she plays a recording of one of her father's works (TRS: "Valley of Darkness").
Later, Kara meets Slick, a man composing a song at the piano in Joe's Bar and works on it with him. She explains that until her father left she loved piano herself and played it with him all the time. He apparently loved piano so much that when her mother told him to choose between them and it, he chose the piano. She played one of the songs that always made her happy with Slick and it turned out to be The Music. Slick disappeared afterwards, which, in conjunction with his resemblance to her father, implies that he was a vision of him[1] (TRS: "Someone to Watch Over Me").
Musical Collaboration and Composition Process
editThe scenes involving Slick's piano composition in "Someone to Watch Over Me" represent a unique collaboration between the character development and the actual music creation process. Composer Bear McCreary wrote the music for Slick's composition in stages, literally creating sections the night before filming each piano scene, which created a genuine depiction of his own creative process.[2] As McCreary explained, "on camera, Slick is playing the pieces as I wrote them," making the character's compositional struggles mirror the composer's actual creative process.[2]
When writers David Weddle and Bradley Thompson needed dialogue for Slick discussing his creative frustrations, they called McCreary for help. The resulting dialogue essentially quoted McCreary as he was venting about his own attempts to write "Diaspora Oratorio," one of the most emotionally challenging pieces in the series.[2] This created an authentic portrayal of the artistic process, with Slick's struggles directly reflecting those of a professional composer.
McCreary later completed the work as "Dreilide Thrace Sonata No. 1" for the Season 4 soundtrack, incorporating all the various piano cues heard throughout the episode into one cohesive composition.[2] The finished sonata was recorded on a concert grand at the Warner Bros. Scoring Stage, representing the complete realization of the musical journey depicted in the episode.[2]
The opening performance of "Elegy" in the episode was created using samples McCreary made of the actual piano on the Galactica hangar deck set, ensuring that the sound matched exactly what it would have sounded like when McCreary sat with the actors and played the song during filming.[2]
Notes
edit- The name 'Dreilide' seems to be inspired by the German words "drei" and "Lider" (pl. of "Lid") meaning "three eyelids".[3] Scientifically this refers to the nictitating membrane that is part of the eyes of several reptiles and birds, sharks and even cats.[4] On a mystical level it refers to the third (inner) eye, regarded as the gateway to the soul.[5]
- The analog for Dreilide Thrace in the Original Series is Chameleon. Some reptiles (but not chameleons) have a photoreceptor sometimes referred to as a third eye, the parietal eye.
- Slick first appears at the piano in Joe's Bar in "Deadlock," when Kara Thrace and Galen Tyrol discuss Tyrol's romantic relationships. He is not referred to by name until "Someone to Watch Over Me."
- The completed "Dreilide Thrace Sonata No. 1" represents both a character's musical legacy and the collaborative creative process between the show's writing, performance, and musical composition teams.
References
edit- ↑ This is confirmed by the podcast for Someone to Watch Over Me.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 Bear McCreary (2009). Battlestar Galactica: Season 4 Soundtrack Is Out! (backup available on Archive.org) (in English).
- ↑ E-mail communication with German speaker who clarified the English translation.
- ↑ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nictitating_membrane
- ↑ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_eye