What a pleasure this album is. This is a good old-fashioned score, reminiscent
of Steiner and Korngold, with a gorgeous, heart-warming main theme -- a
broad-spanned, memorable melody, the sort that is cherished by all incurable
romantics. Furthermore, all 21 tracks on this CD are interesting. One gets
to, say track 14 - a meltingly beautiful Debussy-like piano solo Nocturne
with moon, and one thinks, surely there cant be anything more
as good as this, and all the music that has gone before, but the album continues
to enchant. Of how many film music CDs, can one honestly make such a
commendation?
I have not seen the film but the blurb from Sonys publicity department,
suggests that it is "a film about music, and an extraordinary tale of a virtuoso
musician born at sea." Taking into account the cover artwork showing a liner
at sea, and the song, Lost Boys Calling which is the final track,
one might assume some sort of nautical tragedy à la Titanic
happens at some point in the story. I must say, though, that the song, when
it comes, delivered by Pink Floyds Roger Waters with guitar solos by
Eddie Van Halen is, to my mind, more appealing than Ms Dions My
Heart Will Go On.
The score opens with a statement of the 1900s Theme which
is soon interlaced with some Gershwin-style jazz to, presumably, connect
the Old World with The New? This lasts just 1½ minutes but it
is followed by an 8-minute cue, featuring Fausto Anzelmo (viola) and Gianni
Oddi (soprano saxophone), The Legend of the Pianist, in which
this main theme is declared in full sweeping, passionate mode. The cue also
contains seascape music that would not have shamed Debussy or Atterberg,
together with more jazz material.
Jazz is an important element in this score. There are source music cues like
Scott Joplins Peacherine Rag and Jelly Roll Mortons
The Crave. But there are also many more original jazz cues written
by Morricone and Amedeo Tommasi whose breath-takingly nimble fingers impress
in renderings of them all. Another pianist, Gilda Buttà is used for
the more classical tracks. She makes her first appearance on The
Crisis which must be a crisis of confidence for the student virtuoso
pianist because he keeps hitting a wrong note that persists through this
cue and throughout Child an engaging little piece with
flute solo and orchestra. But it is in her beguiling and poignant solo,
Playing Love that she really impresses. Playing Love
is also an earlier highlight of the album this time given, in effulgent
splendour, to the orchestra.
I cannot praise this album too highly. It is my film music CD of 1999.
Reviewer
Ian Lace