The Music in Licorice Pizza(SPOILERS)
Licorice Pizza seems to be set in 1972 and 1973. "1973" is announced at the end when the two leads meet beneath a marquee for "Live and Let Die." They watch President Nixon give his one (but not only?) speech about the Arab oil embargo, which leads to the long gas lines in the movie -- that happened in late 1973 and early 1974, so maybe the movie is playing with time a bit to fit things together.
In any event, director Paul Thomas Anderson(PTA) had a whole lotta Top Ten tunes to choose from in 1972-1974. In an interview, he even noted that he looked over radio music charts to pick his songs for the movie.
Bottom line: PTA elected NOT to use a lot of the most famous material from those years. He didn't go for such obvious items as Take It Easy, Tumbling Dice, Maggie May, Tie a Yellow Ribbon Round the Old Oak Tree, You're So Vain, etc.
Now Maggie May was from 1971...but that's OK in a movie set in 1973 in the main. No, the 1971 song that PTA used was the soulful and yearning love song "Lisa Listen To Me." By Blood Sweat and Tears -- who had much BIGGER hits in Spinning Wheel, And When I Die, and You've Made Me So Very Happy.
That's how it goes with PTA's music choices -- lesser known hits from well known artists. There's a Sonny and Cher song...but not their most famous. There's a Doors song...but not THEIR most famous.
There's one "wrong gaffe song" -- Stumblin' In (on the jet ride back east.) Which is from 1978 and long after the events of the movie. But I suppose PTA knew that and either just wanted to test us or felt the song "fit."
Chuck Berry's 1972 live novelty hit "My Ding A Ling" plays on the car radio as our kids discuss waterbeds as a place to have sex...but only for an awkward embarrassing moment. Near the end at the pinball parlor, a pretty big hit (James Gang's Walk Away/Seems to Me) had that "Golden Oldies feeling."
And "Lisa Listen To Me" reprises at the end and proves quite right for the cilmactic decisions made by our two friend/lovers.
But I think at the end of the day, its one song at the beginning of Licorice Pizza , and one song at the end(over the end credits) that "get the emotional job done" in making Licorice Pizza a meaningful movie and a potential classic.
At the beginning: "July Tree" , by Nina Simone. A lilting and beautiful song that opens with "true love seed in the autumn ground" and details how over time, a tree of love grows to fruition. The song is DEEPLY about love, and so as Gary and Alana begin their bantering courtship , we KNOW something more meaningful is beginning here.
And all the way at the END, when the final decision is made and the end credits come on , we get a song from Taj Mahal called "Tomorrow May Not Be Your Day" -- very exhilarating and upbeat, with the title basically saying "seize your love today, tomorrow may not be your day."
Those two songs -- neither of which are familiar to me, and I was around back then -- start Licorice Pizza perfectly and end Licorice Pizza perfectly and I can only wonder...
...just how many damn songs did PTA have to sample before choosing THOSE two perfect wonders?
His decision making here on the songs is the mark of a very good, maybe great, director.