The Later Morricone (Part 1/2)
It’s time you made that pot of coffee you’ve been thinking about.
This is
something of a strange editor’s choice – a collection of six discs that must be
bought separately. In a given month though, any one of these could have been an
Editor’s Choice. It seems we feature so many compilations of Ennio Morricone’s
work in our reviews – a major compilation in our last update, a minor
compilation and a concert DVD in this one – that we never really get a chance
to hear the latest from Morricone. At seventy-eight, the Maestro is as active
as ever, writing music in a voice so strong not even Hollywood could kill it.
Four scores a year is about his minimum annual effort in the last ten years, and
since very few of them (in the last five years especially) are English-language
film, you could say a buyer’s guide is essential.
This is
barely a beginning – a survey of four scores from 2005 (a watershed year), and
two scores from 2002-2003 – but hopefully it’s useful. We weren’t send these
titles for review, but the Maestro’s work is a passion of mine, so I thought
I’d try and put a collection of reviews online while most of these are still in
print and/or reasonably price. Potential vendors are indicated in each review,
only the first (and best) of these being available from amazon.com. If you are
interested in these titles, look into getting them sooner rather than later.
The
surprising thing of all of these scores is that you never sense Morricone
coasting on his previous success. All of them are unquestionably his work, but
because the composer has nearly five hundred scores’ experience in writing
music for film, his idea base in incredibly broad, and even works of similar
subject matter attract vastly different scores. In brief, Fateless is
the highlight score of this bunch – the kind of score with a beauty and
lyricism that is almost religious, intensely emotional. Cefalonia is
more optimistic – resting on beautiful themes for orchestra and choir, the main
theme reminiscent of some the composer’s 1970s ballads. Il Cuore nel Pozzo, for
orchestra with harmonica soloist, is a richly nostalgic collection of themes
that evoke childhood experiences of beauty and horror. Karol is another
highlight - a stern but moving portrait of a man that merged the divine and the
humane. Ripley’s Game is the mischievous score of the bunch – featuring
saxophone, harpsichord and flicorno soloists – a more intellectual than
emotional score. And La Luz Prodigiosa is different again, focused on a
reduced ensemble of soloists – piano, string quartet, bassoon and vocalist. All
of them are highly recommended for reasons I elaborate on below.
[Review]: Fateless
[Review]: Cefalonia
[Review]: Il Cuore nel Pozzo
[Review]: Karol un uomo diventato Papa
[Review]: Ripley’s Game
[Review]: La Luz Prodigiosa
The Later Morricone: Go to Conclusion
Fateless (aka Sorstalansag, 2005)
Music composed, orchestrated, and conducted by
Ennio Morricone
Performed by Hungarian Radio Orchestra and
Choir with Lisa Gerrard (vocals), Ulrich Herkenhoff (pan flute), Agnes Szakaly
(dulcimer) and Ludovico Fulci (synthesizers)
Available on EMI Music (EMI 7243 860331 2 3)
Running Time: 42:30
Amazon US
As a film, Fateless (2005) was
highly anticipated for three reasons. Firstly, it was based on a Nobel Prize
winning novel by Imre Kertesz, who scripted the adaptation of the story of a
Hungarian boy who endures the horrors of the Buchenwald concentration camp.
Secondly, the film is directed by Lajos Koltai, a marvellous Hungarian
cinematographer (many of the films of Giuseppe Tornatore and Istvan Szabo), and
the prospect of such wonderful visualist translating a work so literary was
tantalising. And thirdly, it was to be scored by Ennio Morricone, who announced
early on that he would be writing for Lisa Gerrard’s distinctive voice. That
last announcement was not so welcomed by some Morricone fans, some
prognosticators anticipating New Age aesthetics might corrupt even the
Maestro’s indomitable sound.
I’ve still to see the film, which was not
the foreign language Oscar certainty its investors must have hoped. But I have
heard the score, and it’s probably one of the strongest works of Morricone’s
career. (Alas, I only speak with knowledge of about seventy of the composer’s
works, not all five hundred.) It begins with ‘Fateless’, a melody of
folk-simplicity in the spirit of Days of Heaven, Ulrich Herkenhoff’s pan
flute lending a sense of innocence for the film’s childlike protagonist. That
opening track dextrously weaves it into both major and minor key settings
without a sense of altered mood. Its simple melodic hook, five notes, is
readily summoned by the composer for a variety of moods – the melancholy minor
key pan flute rendition over dulcimer and tremolo strings in ‘The Beginning of
the Tragedy’; the serene oboe of ‘At the Table’ over harp and stern string
accompaniment; and the flute-clarinet duet of the major key form of the melody
in the second half of the same cue.
As for those who shuddered at the thought
of Lisa Gerrard standing in for Morricone’s more classically voiced muse – Ella
Dell’Orso – they needn’t have worried. This isn’t the improvisations-in-search-of-ideas
composition that the vocalist is often accused of pursuing (why does all film
music have to be on-the-page anyway?), but a variation on Morricone’s familiar
use of the female soprano. It’s amazing just how much difference another voice
can make, Gerrard’s rich, almost classical rendition of one of Morricone’s
themes – ‘A Voice from the Inside’ – a hymnal experience amidst pipe organ and
swirling strings. That theme is the dominant idea of the score, so it’s just as
well that it’s one of the composer’s greatest themes. It’s hard to imagine Ella
Dell’Orso working so well here, Gerrard’s vocalisations possessing a more
defined spectrum of sorrow and elation that works a treat dramatically – and
Morricone’s orchestrations shaped to her range. In ‘Song’, Gerrard’s beautiful
wordless vocals are accompanied by the Hungarian Radio Choir, the orchestra
creeping in towards the end. ‘About Solitude’ and ‘About Solitude II’ develop
this theme solely for orchestra with oboe lead, equally beautiful.
There are other ideas coming between the
two main themes. The stern face of war presents itself in ‘The Field’, with
stabbing string chords, dulcimer, percussion and brass support; violins and dulcimer
emerging from the horror to render the epic texture intimate. These ideas
return in ‘Voiceless’ and ‘Psychological Destruction’, the latter opening with
rolls of snare drums and timpani before a reprise of the ‘Field’ theme with
emphasis on tremolo strings, dulcimer and a subdued horn reading of the
‘Fateless’ theme in counterpoint.
There are also some lighter moments
unrelated to the main themes – the delicate dulcimer theme that opens ‘Home
Again’, carried by piano, oboe and flute over the yearning strings the Maestro
is so known for. There’s also an allegro passage in ‘To Return and To
Remember’, a dextrous piece for dulcimer well-performed by Agnes Szakaly.
But the album highlight – nay, one of the
highlights of Morricone’s career – is ‘Return to Life’, the second cue. Organ
opens the cue, soft minor chords accompanied by an oboe melody. Strings wash in
as the melody from ‘Voice from the Inside’ comes to the fore, the whole
orchestra joining in an epiphanic reading of the material. But it’s not over –
choir counterpoint woodwinds in a reading of the ‘Fateless’ theme – and
Gerrard’s wordless vocals from ‘A Song’ enter over gorgeous string and choral
harmonies. A minor key pan flute reading of the ‘Fateless’ theme closes the
piece.
It’s unquestionably the Maestro’s best
since Nostromo, and possibly The Mission (1986), Once Upon a
Time in America (1984) and Marco Polo (1982) before that. It’s just
about that good. Fortunately, it’s also the easiest of his recent releases to
find, distributed by EMI and available from Amazon. The spare liner notes are
thankfully in English, a rare luxury for language-constrained collectors of the
composer’s works. But even if they weren’t, this is a work with the religious
aura of The Mission, What Dreams May Come. If the hairs haven’t stood on
your neck in a while, it’s time you gave them a chance. An essential work. I
can’t wait to see the film.
Rating: 5
Cefalonia (2005)
Music composed, orchestrated, and conducted by
Ennio Morricone
Performed by Roma Sinfonietta with Lirico
Sinfonico Roma
Available on Rai Trade (FRT-408)
Running Time: 55:24
The cover of RAI Trade’s release of the
soundtrack to the miniseries Cefalonia (2005) features glamorous
portraits of its Italian stars carefully made-up to appear credibly beaten in
wartime fashion. Below them, a still from the film of four ragged looking
soldiers – coats unbuttoned, collars wrinkled, faces unshaved, posture unsoldierlike
– as they stand before a firing squad of fascist soldiers. Grit, the horrors of
war, rebellion against oppression (by Greek inhabitants against their Captain
Corelli-like fascist oppressors), and Italian soldiers finding their place in
an occupied country on learning that they have lost a war are impressions I get
from these images. The expectation is that Ennio Morricone’s score for this
2005 miniseries will be suitably dour.
Which makes it surprising that this is
probably the most exhuberant among the scores reviewed here. If you’d told me
the main theme, ‘Dammi La Mano’, was written for the induction mass of the
newly-appointed Pope Benedict XVI, I’d have believed you. An Italian folk
anthem with solo passages for organ, flute, oboe, stately rhythm, and, of
course, the unison voices of Lirico Sinfonico Roma – it’s easy to imagine
people lining up for the Eucharist, partaking of it, and respectfully genuflecting
in their seats over the theme’s seven minute development. It’s kind of halfway
between Morricone’s Jubilee for the Roman Catholic Church – ‘Cantico del
Giubileo’ – and the Joan Baez ballad ‘Here’s to You’ from Sacco and Vanzeti.
With foundations so diverse it can’t help but not really sound like either, and
it’s a fantastic cue to bookend the album.
In the film itself, I suppose it’s a theme
for the one good Italian soldier who will somehow resolve the differences
between the Cefalonians and their former occupiers. My primitive translation of
‘Dammi La Mano’ – ‘Give me a hand’ – is of no real help here. The subtitle –
‘Testo di Maria Travia’ – is also curious, Maria Travia being the maiden name
of Morricone’s wife of many years. Whatever it represents dramatically, it’s an
incredibly inspiring theme – appearing for harpsichord and string orchestra in
‘Piccola Marcia’, and for Morricone’s beloved viola in ‘Marcia del Gueramento’.
What’s especially nice about Cefalonia though
is the rich amount of thematic ideas Morricone presents here between reprisals
of his main theme. ‘Quella Sera’ (‘That Night’) is a lilting melody in the oboe
for what is probably a love scene, the theme also appearing in ‘Ancora vivi per
L’Amore’ (‘You live for love’). ‘Sulla Sponda’ is similarly lyrical, with yet
another theme carried in a gentle string motion, choir and trumpet soloist both
appearing throughout the piece. ‘Nelli’isola, Soli’ impresses especially – it’s
bright trumpet melody adorned with that gorgeous choral writing Morricone used
to such great effect in Mission to Mars (2000) and his rejected What
Dreams May Come (1998) scores. ‘I Fratelli d’Italia’ (‘Brothers of Italy’)
develops this melody further in the harpsichord. Consistently, the music
represents the high ideals of the true story and the idyllic location.
Despite the overall positive tone of the
score, there are still some concessions to the wartime setting and abject faces
of the characters seen in the sleeve notes. While beautiful in its own
unassuming way, ‘Riflessivo , Meditativo’ is more ambiguous than anything that
precedes it – those unsettling string harmonies Morricone writes so well
balancing the simple-phrased melody for woodwind and string soloists.
Unassuming is a word that could never be applied to the next cue – ‘Via
Dall’Inferno’ (‘The Way from Hell’) – the composer’s In the Line of Fire
action music making an unlikely appearance, with organ, energetic piano, and
stabbing violins. As with so many of Morricone’s scores of late, there are not
many suspense cues but one really big one – the fourteen minute ‘Composizione
sulla Resistenza’ – the title (no translation needed!) indicating it’s probably
a suite comprised of many cues rather than a single one. As with much of his
suspense writing of late (see Ripley’s Game and Il Cuore nel Pozzo
below), this is actually really listenable, if less accessible than the melodic
splendor heard elsewhere in the album.
The liner notes of Rai Trade’s release are
something of a frustration even for the Italian reader, as there’s no
discussion from director or composer of their ideas in English or Italian, only
a basic list of cast and crew. Both peoples will have to be content with the
stills, which interest me in the film, even though there’s something staged and
slightly-silly about it all. Whatever language you speak, this release is an
essential work for orchestra and choir for those who like their music beautiful
and inspiring. The album can be purchased from Intrada, Screen Archives
Entertainment and other speciality soundtrack outlets.
Rating: 4.5
Il Cuore nel Pozzo (aka The Hearth in the Pit, 2005)
Music composed, orchestrated, and conducted by
Ennio Morricone
Performed by Roma Sinfonietta with
harmonica solos by Gianlucca Littera
Available on Rai Trade (FRT-407)
Running Time: 55:25
Those keeping track of the subjects of
these films will note that this is the third review of 2005 film set in World
War II and scored by Morricone. (Though the first chronologically speaking.) Whereas
Fateless looked at a Hungarian child’s experience of the Holocaust, and Cefalonia
observed the Italian occupation of a Greek island, Il Cuore nel Pozzo (2005)
looks at an episode relatively unfamiliar to western records of twentieth
century atrocities – the ethnic cleansing of Italians from Dalmatia and Istria by Tito’s partisans towards the end of the war. The television movie was produced by
the same company behind Cefalonia, RAI, and proved to be the source of
much contention among the liberal press of Italy and just about everyone in
Slovenia for it’s unabashed fascist perspective. The film takes the perspective
of a group of Italian children fleeing the monstrous communist partisans,
encountering a cowardly Jew who tries to sell them to the partisans along the
way, a dog the primitive partisans kill for having a soul, and some beneficent
Blackshirts. (Hard to imagine what all the fuss was about!) Those interested
can learn more from the wisdom of Wikipedia.
Perhaps music should be above controversy. (Just
ask Richard Wagner’s fans.) All I can say is that those who miss out on this
score for whatever reason are indeed missing out. It seems at times like this
score barely scratches the surface of the amount of music in the actual show,
because practically every new track presents a new and gorgeous theme in
Morricone’s classic romantic style. The title track, repeated in a more
positive rendition at the end, features a dreamy harmonica over echoing string
harmonies – the sound of a child’s fascist innocence lost perhaps. (It’s
nothing like the composer’s use of that instrument in a certain Sergio Leone
film.) The second track ‘Marcia Balcania’ is a sprightly march for the
partisans, with Morricone’s highly distinctive orchestrations and melodic style
making it sound unlike any march partisans have made before. ‘Lei con lui’ is
one of the composer’s more typical love themes – passionate and affirming.
Though perhaps we’ve heard this type of cue a hundred times before from the
composer, it never ceases to charm.
One gets strong sense that this is music
for child characters – there is a disarming innocence to the melodies, as in
the theme carried by harmonica, oboe and flute in ‘Suona l’armonica’, or
harmonica-piano opening of ‘Suona un bambino’. (The snare drums of the latter
summons the bizarre image of child Blackshirts marching – you’d swear it was
meant to be a parody.) Not that there isn’t also music for adults here, both
passionate and brutal – ‘Un Giorno Sara’ features a to-die-for viola solo that
returns to the material of ‘Lei con lui’. Also featuring strong viola is the
‘Una viola in fiore’, a darker romantic theme heavy with tragedy. On the brutal
side, it all comes to a head in the lengthy ‘Orrori’, one of the most
interesting cues on album, though for some listeners probably an unbearable
eleven minutes of Morricone’s trademark avante-garde style.
‘Sperduti’ is one of the darker highlights,
presenting a simple three note motif in a call-and-answer pattern between
strings and woodwinds, suggesting a psychological depth that this music otherwise
seems a little light on for Morricone. More bombastic is the weighty slow tempo
march of ‘Abbandono delle case’. My personal favourite of the themes here is
the vibrant folk dance ‘Passaggio a sud’, a slightly-rustic dance that again
gives prominence to the viola. It’s one of the few themes that recurs
throughout the album – ‘Balcani per fuggire’ (the first cue of that name) turns
it into an epic theme for escape with prominence to the horns; while ‘Balcani
per fuggire’ (the second cue of that name) presents more intimate variations
for flute, clarinet, cor anglais and oboe over gentle harp rhythm.
Given how similar some of the ideas of this
story are to Fateless – children fleeing their extermination – it’s a
credit to Morricone that the scores are so different, this more folklike and
down-to-earth than the religious aura of the score for the Lajos Koltai film. I
rate this one a little bit lower than the others discussed here as a listening
experience. Partly it’s because I find the ideas here not quite as arresting as
elsewhere in the Maestro’s recent titles, and it’s also partly because it makes
for a less cohesive experience than Fateless or Cefalonia. Even
as I make that remark I realise that I’m quibbling – the themes and their
cohesion or lack of it here still embody more character than a lot of film
music I’ve heard. No – those who want a gorgeous collection of themes from the
Maestro with a slightly more innocent slant to them will find this a most
pleasing work.
I recently purchased it from Intrada
Records, and I note that at time of writing it is also available at Footlight
Records and Screen Archives Entertainment for purchase at prices reasonable for
such unreasonably good music. The spare sleeve notes from Rai Trade contain a
couple of black and white stills, and little more.
Rating: 4
Go to Part 2 of "The Later Morricone".
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