Michael Giacchino is a talented young
composer with a distinct musical identity, one whose star is always rising and
with projects like Mission Impossible 3 will likely play a major role in
the near future of film music. Mostly it has come down to his relationship with
JJ Abrams. The Alias creator was impressed enough with the composer’s
work on that show to offer him the chance to score LOST. A mixture of
action, science fiction and drama, the show focuses on forty-eight plane crash
survivors stranded on a mysterious island. It became a worldwide television
event with audiences surpassing seventeen millions per week during the latest
season, many reviewers of the series remarking on the consistently strong music
by Giacchino.
The short opening cue to the album is the
main theme, composed by J.J. Abrams. It is essentially an electronic chord
cluster of more dramatic than musical value. The same goes for a recurring
electronic loop that appears in the opening of the ‘The Eyeland’. (The titles
of the tracks are all a collection of witty puns towards the show’s plot.)
Giacchino quickly brings us close to the dark and ominous events unfolding
before our eyes, aided by the cue’s creepy texture of low electronics and
ghastly violin harmonics. Aggressive percussion and string writing lead into
another of the score’s recognizable trademarks: an abrupt trombone glissando.
The unsettling atmosphere deepens with
‘World’s worst beach party’, where constant tribal percussion rhythms, spiteful
brass clusters and piercing dissonance wreak havoc. The action music is a
strong point throughout, the cues in style including ‘Run like, um…help’, ‘Me
and my big mouth’, ‘Proper motivation’, ‘Run away! Run away!’, ‘Getting Ethan’
and ‘Charlie Hans Around’. All are basically built upon dense string ostinati,
Herrmannesque percussion, harsh brass clusters, always underlined by a firm
rhythm. Similar techniques were used by John Frizzell in his score for Stay
Alive, but Giacchino goes even further, employing a dirty and dated sound
for the trombones, noticeable especially at their trademarked glissando, or
when performed with the mute. It all adds a very specific identity to his
action writing for Lost, something like what Revell, Rodriguez and Debney did for
their Sin City, only again a step forward. The highlights of the action
material are ‘Kate’s Motel’ and ‘Monsters are such Innnteresting people’.
Giacchino’s singular instrumentation adds a
distinct and personal sound to the whole. Cello, guitar and piano are used
effectively as solo instruments throughout. Something evident from the first
pieces is the total absence of any kind of woodwinds, Giacchino’s ensemble
focusing on a large string section, xylophones, piano, trombone-dominated harsh
brass section, and a large, varied percussion ensemble. It’s arguable that this
limits the material, causing a dry sound. But it also adds a unique character
to the score very suited to the hostile island.
While the dark action material is
interesting, the more melodic, celli-driven side of the score is what’s
crucial. The six note main theme is introduced in ‘Credit where credit
is due’, performed by strings. Various renditions and restatements can be found
throughout the album, notably in the melancholic ‘Just die already’, ‘Departing
Sun’ (celli with the full orchestra), and the celli-led adagio for strings
‘Booneral’. The second main theme initially appears in ‘Win one for the
Reaper’, and it’s an optimistic nine-note melody in the spirit of Thomas
Newman’s melodies, always performed by the piano and accompanied by either
acoustic guitar, cello, or soft string orchestra. ‘Thinking Clairely’ and ‘Life
and Death’ (where the theme makes its strongest appearance) are two pieces
where the above-mentioned elements are clearly displayed.
Giacchino also introduces a third idea,
built upon major-to-minor chord interchanges, using a four-note ascending motif
as the basis. This motif often appears in eight-note developments, notably in
‘Locke’d out again’ where it is interchanged between the piano and celli,
backed by string orchestra. This excellent cue is topped off with a
particularly emotional orchestral outburst at its peak. The last two cues are
very powerful and passionate, accompanying the first season’s climactic episodes.
‘Parting Words’ is the strongest piece of the score, circling around a grand,
uplifting and triumphant eight-note theme that appears in this cue only.
Finally, ‘Oceanic 815’ comes to concludes with a slow string adagio which leads
to interchanges between the main theme and the secondary theme. The uplifting
climax soon wears off though, the electronic loops from ‘The Eye-land’ and the
trademarked trombone glissandos re-asserting themselves at the end.
Michael Giacchino has written music here
that supports both the show it was written for, and a wonderful album from
Varese Sarabande. What better proof is there of its supportive role in the show
than the fact that this was the most-requested release in Varese Sarabande’s
history? The score for LOST is finally here. Don’t miss it.
Demetris Christodoulides
Rating: 4.5
Michael McLennan adds:-
I find my response to this album slightly
more tempered than my colleague. If this is indeed the most requested release
in the history of Varese Sarabande, then I can only assume that this is a
tribute to the effectiveness of Michael Giacchino’s music in the context of the
show. The power of synchresis – the bonding of sound and image – is such that
the strength and emotion of music can inform our view of the image, but the
reverse is also true. A good film can make music more interesting than it would
be on its own. Not having seen the show beyond a cursory look here and there,
this plays a little coldly on me.
What I do like is the thematic structure to
the work. Giacchino has set things up carefully, with leitmotifs interacting
subtly to give the sense that this music is following a dramatic arc over the
course of the series and its album. And in this sense, this album is superior
to the recent collection of Sean Callery’s music for 24, music that
lacked any sense of integration when placed on CD. The ideas themselves are a
bit hard to get a grasp on at first, but they are certainly developed well over
the hour-long album.
The themes themselves are subtle enough to
work as non-intrusive scoring in the show, but this means they’re not truly
arresting as music, except the theme introduced in ‘Don’t Fear the Reaper’ –
which time and again injects the album with true feeling. Many have pointed to
‘Parting Words’ as one of the most incredible cues ever written for TV, but I
come away from that a bit cold too. I’m far more moved by the slow emergence of
the ‘Reaper’ theme in the true closing track, ‘Oceanic 815’, a truly arresting
work from Michael Giacchino. Only my second Giacchino album after The
Incredibles, I feel like I have a much richer sense of his musical gifts on
hearing this score.
The action music is harder to approach,
though I concede that these less melody-driven cues are a dramatic choice. I
also miss the woodwinds – not so much the trumpets, but definitely the clear
dulcet tones of reeds – filling in that space between the abrasive trombones
and strings/percussion. It’s a budgetary choice – this much I’m certain of –
but perhaps sacrificing four string players for the sake of some woodwinds
would have given the score both more richly orchestrated action music and a
larger palette of solo instruments for the quieter moments.
Still, I’m amazed that so much ululation
accompanies this release, when I can think of twenty more CDs I’ve bought this
year I would sooner praise. It’s good, just… this is music that probably plays
best when you know what it corresponds to. Those who haven’t seen the show
might want to think twice before buying into the hype. It’s also a bit long at
an hour (forty-five should have been a maximum), but that seems to be par for
the course at the moment. While it’s certainly good music for TV, and light
years ahead of the type of filler that’s written for most of the medium (I
reflect with horror on the synthetic brass moanings of many a modern Star
Trek episode!), I’ve heard better both in TV movies (most of Trevor Jones
and Christopher Gordon’s recent work) and even TV shows (Beal’s Carnivale).
Michael McLennan
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