I mentioned this marvellous disc in a
recent review of another Touch release (Jóhann Jóhannsson's Englabörn)
and here it is in a repackaged reissue. The music was written for Fridrik Thor
Fridriksson's Oscar winning 1991 film Children of Nature and the score
itself won the Felix Music Award that year. The film tells the story of an elderly
couple escaping the confines(?) of Reykjavik to make an epic journey back to
their old home in the stunning but often savage Icelandic rural landscape; the
beautifully produced booklet features several stills from the visually stunning
movie but do see it if you ever get the chance. Suffice to say that Hilmar Örn
Hilmarsson's soundtrack lives up to its task admirably.
Hilmarsson is more recently known for
his production work with Icelandic "avant electro-folk" group Sigur Rós
and on Rímur (a new release on the Naxos World label) featuring
Steindór Andersen's interpretations of a traditional form of narrative
Icelandic epic song. However, on Children of Nature, he makes full use
of keyboards, electronics and samplers, supplemented highly effectively by strings
and percussion. The result, which he dedicated as a "commemoration of those
I have loved and lost", is an accessible but profoundly moving set of short
pieces which have a melancholic yet often uplifting feel to them. For those
who insist on labels, this is superior soundtrack music rather than classical
music per se and remains a firm favourite for me, seven years on from
its first release.
The opening Ars Moriendi, with
its violin and cello driven themes, later reprised in Titles, sets the
scene for rest of the album perfectly. The keyboards and electronic effects
are never used excessively and this music feels much more organic than synthetic,
especially as there are plenty of sampled natural sounds, e.g. choirs. Sudurgata
may be the best known track here as it has also appeared on one of the Touch
samplers and it is a gorgeous fusion of yearning Bachian (or Pärtian?)
violin melody and Nordic folk music - I never tire of hearing it and look forward
to many more people hearing it through this timely reissue.
On Farm, Hilmarsson introduces
some oriental instrumentation alongside the violin, providing a slightly different,
more dissonant take on the overall mood, followed by the brief Snatis's Death
and the heavier more substantial Journey, in which a cavernous, echoing
sound picture predominates. After the rhythmic interlude that is Escape,
Coffin is less grim than its title suggests, some rather resigned organ
sounds being kept afloat by bells and a gorgeous violin melody. Gregorian chant
can be heard in parts of Ascension but it is interpolated so skilfully
and unobtrusively that the crassness we often associate with this sort of melding
of disparate musical elements is totally avoided. In Titles, the violin
tune from the very opening of the disc makes its reappearance, and quite rightly
so, given its sheer simple beauty. Aerophilia, as the title suggests,
is the lightest piece on the disc and puts me in mind of Eric Serra's music
to The Big Blue. The latter is meant as a complement and the score as
a whole can stand against the very best film music anywhere as far as I am concerned.
Here percussion underpins chiming, upwardly spiralling keyboard melodies leading
us (relatively) light-heartedly into the climax of the record, the valedictory
Pretty Angels which, in contrast to the preceding track, is rather more
severe than we might have expected. It starts off like an orchestrated version
of Joy Division (New Dawn Fades or The Eternal, something like
that!) then develops into a tuneful, elegiac procession culminating in a glorious
conclusion featuring organ and harpsichord.
So who should like and therefore buy this
album? For starters, anyone who likes tuneful, melodic but serious modern music,
e.g. ECM aficionados - Touch's production values echo that special label's and
this music is not a million miles removed from the most recent inspirations
of, say, Garbarek or Rypdal. Also, fans of superior soundtrack music (Blade
Runner? Kitaro's Silk Road? Lord of the Rings?) are
sure to respond positively to a significant voice in the genre. However, anybody
who has any interest in any of the other artists, groups or composers mentioned
above is bound to find something here for them too. In short, a record of wide
appeal and hopefully, second time around, equivalent success. Of its kind, this
is a truly great achievement, a stunning document I urge you to investigate
immediately. It is one of my favourite records, of any genre, released in the
last decade, and an absolute classic film soundtrack.
Neil Horner
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