Music Webmaster Len Mullenger

FILM MUSIC RECORDINGS REVIEWS

DECEMBER 1998


The CD covers are not shown in this file for ease of printing

COMPETITION WIN a CD of your Choice from Crotchet

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EDITOR'S CHOICE - FILM MUSIC CDsOF THE MONTH December 1998

Philip SAINTON Moby Dick

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Philip SAINTON (1891-1967) Moby Dick William T. Stromberg conducts the Moscow Symphony Orchestra Marco Polo 8.225050   

 

Crotchet (UK)


Philip Sainton is a name that is little known even to lovers of British music. His output was small; the total number of his titles would easily cover one A4 sheet of paper leaving plenty of white space. It is therefore remarkable that John Huston, the great American film director should choose to use Sainton for he had all Hollywood's compositional resources to select from: Max Steiner, Alfred Newman, Dimitri Tiomkin, Franz Waxman, and Victor Young etc were all at work in the major studios; so too was Bernard Herrmann who had actually composed a cantata called Moby Dick - that, actually, did not impress Huston. Then there was his frequent collaborator Alex North. But Huston insisted that he needed a composer who had a strong empathy with the sea and its ever-changing moods and perplexing mysteries. He knew that many British composers had written such music. There was Arnold Bax, Vaughan Williams, Benjamin Britten to name but three composers who might have been induced to score his film. Yet Huston chose Sainton on the slight evidence of his orchestration and arrangement of a Jack Gerber piece Fiesta that Huston happened to hear, confirmed by Sainton's seafaring hymn "Ribs and Terrors in the Whale" which is cue 4 on this CD. (It has generally been assumed that Huston's choice was made on the evidence of Sainton's seascape writing in his moody seventeen-minute symphonic poem, The Island [available with Patrick Hadley's masterpiece The Trees So High, on Chandos CHAN 9181]). There was, of course, another more mundane factor that must have influenced the choice, in that the production of the film took place in and off the coast of Ireland (also Wales, Portugal and the Canary Islands), far away from the U.S.A., so there was probably a logistical expediency to consider; yet Huston's faith and confidence in a composer who was so little known and who was habitually plagued by self-doubt paid off handsomely for this is undoubtedly one of the best film scores to have been written by an English composer. In passing it is worth noting that, for this score, Sainton recycled material from some of his earlier works including The Dream of the Marionette and Nadir both of which can be heard on Chandos CHAN 9539.

Special arrangements were made for Sainton to see the film being shot, so that he could absorb the atmosphere and, more importantly, gain extra time for composition because inspiration came painfully and slowly. (The usual time for the film scoring process is about six weeks after filming has been completed.)

The music for the Main Title, which shows more than a passing influence of Vaughan Williams, is strong and virile. (RVW's influence is apparent in many cues in this score.) It presents Sainton's themes for the obsessive Captain Ahab (Gregory Peck), for Moby Dick the huge white whale and warmer, more humane music to represent the friendship between the Polynesian headhunter- turned-harpooner Queequeg and the young whaler Ishmael (Richard Basehart). It is also a graphic portrait of turbulent, heaving, cross-waved seas whipped by gales.

The following cue, "Sea Music", is in direct contrast for here is the sea in calmer friendlier mood and Sainton's lovely evocation displays influences of Ravel and especially Delius, using flutes, clarinets, harp and celeste in gentle glittering arpeggios. Comedy writing that includes a droll bassoon commentary informs the first meeting between Queequeg and Ishmael when through a mixup at a New Bedford hotel the former finds the latter in his bed. The hymn mentioned above, sung by the whalers, is reverent in the best tradition of church hymns and is worthy to be included in the English Hymnal. The hymn tune is reprised in full orchestral dress before the "Dock Scene" which is jolly and optimistic and full of high-spirited rhythmic vitality as the sailors look forward to their adventure and freedom from domestic cares at sea. There follows an alternative take on this scene which has a memorable tune that could have been a British light music classic. This music is developed in "Going Aboard".

Now the music darkens as the "Stranger" Elijah foretells that all save one aboard the Pequod will perish. "Preparing for Departure" and "Pequod's Departure" contrasts optimistic muscular seafaring music as Ahab's ship music leaves the shore with anxious figures representing the fears of the women left behind on the quayside. The music plunges deeper into the abyss with the introduction of Captain Ahab and we are left in no doubt about the man's compulsive obsession with hunting down Moby Dick; the music positively exudes malice. More than any other cue in the score, "Ahab's Introduction", lasting some six minutes, reflects Huston's request to Sainton to score much of the film as though he were writing an opera.

"There She Blows" is an exuberant, cantering-paced musical sea chase when whales are first sighted. Huston asked for some high-spirited "Carnival" music to depict the crew's joy and exultation and Sainton responded accordingly with this jubilant cue but it is shadowed in its closing bars by a remembrance of the stranger's dockside prophesy. From now on the music is practically all doom and gloom. "Meeting at Sea" in which Ahab learns from those aboard a passing ship that Moby Dick is close by prompts more dark brooding and hammering psychological maelstroms in the orchestra. "Waiting" is a fine shimmering evocation of the Pequod caught in the doldrums as she lies becalmed in a pressing heatwave. The sudden appearance of Moby Dick in the next cue sees the orchestra whipped into thunder although the doldrums continue forbidding a chase. Then, in "The Search Continues", the darker realms of Arnold Bax are recalled as Ahab becomes more and more possessed with his blood lust. It is also a portrait of a storm tossed sea at night. In "St Elmo's fire", Sainton offers a variation of Debussy's Sirènes, though the women's wordless voices, here, are sounding not a lure but more of a warning against Ahab's profanity. Unnerving tension is created at the beginning of the ten minute cue "Eerie Calm/He Rises" by massed violins playing harmonics with two violins and two flutes quietly commenting. But when Moby Dick appears all hell is let loose. The only pause in the thundering rage in the orchestra comes when Ahab, now dead and lashed forever to Moby Dick, beckons his whalers on, drawing from Sainton a magnificent dirge with the brass leading the orchestra to divide so that, simultaneously, the music reaches defiantly to the heights and plunges to the depths foreboding the obsession, now tainting the crew, that will lead to the deaths of all of them save Ishmael who lives to tell the tale.

Sadly the only other film scoring opportunity that came Sainton's way was from Charlie Chaplin for King in New York but Sainton quickly left the project after an artistic disagreement.

The CD booklet is well up to the very complete and lavish standards set by other releases in Marco Polo's classic film score series. It includes an essay on the adaptation of Herman Melville's formidable book and the making of the film by Ann Howard Whitaker, another informative essay on how Philip Sainton composed the music and a detailed track-by-track analysis of the score by Bill Whitaker from which I have quoted or paraphrased above; plus a reproduction of a radio talk by Sainton himself on scoring for Moby Dick; a note about the restoration of the music by John Morgan and an Afterward from Barbara Clark, the composer's daughter.

I end this review with the apposite words of renowned Sci-fi and fantasy writer, Ray Bradbury who wrote the screenplay for Moby Dick and who contributes a message in this CD's booklet. It summarises exactly what I feel about this marvellous recording: "...When the film was finished and, for the first time, I heard this score by Philip Sainton, [I] was delighted to discover that it struck all the right notes and chords to play out the drama...Moby Dick, the film is Melville and Sainton is both Melville and Moby Dick."

Reviewer

Ian Lace


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EDITOR'S CHOICE - FILM MUSIC CD OF THE MONTH December 1998

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John WILLIAMS Close Encounters of the Third Kind The Collector's Edition Soundtrack ARISTA 07822-19004-2 [77:23]   

 

Crotchet (UK)


Some years ago I listed my favourite all-time film scores for the UK produced magazine, Classic CD. I included John Williams's score for Steven Spielberg's Close Encounters of the Third Kind in that list. This music is still my favourite of all of Williams's brilliant scores. The original Arista soundtrack recording LP has had a special place in my collection since its release in 1978; it was stunningly recorded with the best musical selections from the film. [Charles Gerhardt's suite from the film recorded with the National Philharmonic Orchestra was also a treasured album. (It was issued with a suite from Star Wars; since available on an RCA CD.)]. Now my old LP has been superseded by this new collector's edition which not only brings the original soundtrack music back in CD format but also boasts an extra 37 minutes of additional music which was either previously unreleased or not used in the film.

The producers of this new album went back to the original recording sessions of the score and selected a generous 78 minutes of music. The cues, given in their entirety (even those that were shortened in the film), are presented in the order they appear in the film to recreate the progression of the narrative structure. Thus we hear the music that gives a sense of awe an mystery and vivid evocation of the opening scene shrouded in a swirling desert sandstorm as the lost planes form the 1940s are discovered in a condition as though they had left their base only an hour before.

Later in "Roy's First Encounter" we hear the ambiguous shifting out-of-this-world tonality that we associate with the aliens. These alien sonorities are developed in the substantial and very impressive 6½-minute cue "Barry's Kidnapping" the music takes on a menacing dimension for we are seeing their threat through the young mother's eyes; she instinctively knows the little aliens are after her son and the threat comes from every corner of the house; the chimney, the ventilation grilles and at length through the cat flap. The music shimmers, shifts, slithers, screeches; voices and instruments twist, turn and rise swiftly away... It is also good to have the music which accompanies the young mother and hero Richard Dreyfuss to the tower shaped mountain rendezvous. Williams's music with its driving rhythms splendidly and sympathetically conveys their rising excitement and anxiety. In "The Mountain" cue containing previously unreleased material, their overwhelming sense of wonder as they first see the Devil's Tower is palpable as the music reaches (with the addition of women's wordless chorus) an ecstatic climax but the elation is mixed to with a sense of tragedy and regret as the pair pass animals struck down dead (or drugged). In "The Cover Up" Williams uses snare drums, timpani and bass drums up front to underscore the ruthless efficiency of the military machine in deterring public interest in the alien's impending visit.

But it is of course, the music for the climactic meeting with the aliens which everybody anticipates starting form the point when Dreyfuss reaches the rendezvous point on the other side of the mountain and the smaller space craft swoop down. Here we have 30 minutes of Williams's remarkable music which brilliantly captures and makes credible the amazing series of events. Starting with the swooping down of the advance guard of smaller space craft Williams conjures music that underscores the vivid colour and brilliant lights of the space vehicles and parallels their breathlessly swift trajectories. The arrival of the giant "Mothership" begins as something of a concerto for the orchestras bass instruments the music rising through the orchestra as it descends through the clouds passes majestically over the mountain and reverses itself for touchdown. Then we have the almost comical interchange of data between the mothership and the base's electronic console commencing with that famous five-note figure. It is interesting to note that Williams achieved this dialogue using acoustic instruments only ( probably double bassoon, bass trombone and tuba for the mother ship's contribution). The last sequence "The Visitors/Bye/End Titles, represented her with 12 minutes of material includes material not used in the film. It covers of course those last very affecting scenes as the tall stick-like alien waves goodbye and the mothership leaves. Williams responds with really inspired music which truly uplifts the soul and spirit. All is perfect, the allusion to When You Wish Upon a Star is kept subtle and oblique. Unhappily the music that was not included in the film and very wisely was an overt reference to the song which brings you crashing back to earth with a bang. My advice is to slowly drop the volume when you get to about 10:20 in this last cue and switch off.

Nevertheless a wonderful souvenir of what must be for many a treasured cinematic experience.

It is very attractively presented in chrome etched packaging with a sumptuously produced well illustrated, full colour booklet with notes about John Williams's work on the score and an interview with the composer.

And a review of the associated video:-

CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND - THE COLLECTOR'S EDITION


This video is presented in the same design and chrome etched packaging as the CD so that they are effectively a matched pair. But the rub is that who wants it except the Close Encounters fanatics (all right I will admit to being numbered among them). We have had Close Encounters videos in normal ratio then wide screen editions then digitally enhanced editions and now this special edition. So what's really special about it? Well the main thing is that you gain the 15 minute documentary about the making of the film tacked onto the end. But you also loose the scenes in the mother ship which has distinguished most other editions. So has Spielberg now decided that his definitive edition should be sans these scenes? He is interviewed for this documentary on the set of Saving Private Ryan. He first of all talks about his childhood experience of being taken out in the middle of the night by his father to see the spectacle of a meteor shower. It was this experience he says that prompted his desire to make sci-fi pictures like Close Encounters and E.T. Later in the interview he talks about his youthful naivety and idealism of twenty years ago when he made the film. Now that he is older and maturer he would make the film quite differently, he claims. He says that he would never allow the Dreyfuss character to become so obsessed with his encounter and cause his family so much distress and allow them to leave home so that he could pursue his dream and go off in an alien spaceship. He chose to make the Dreyfuss a very ordinary guy so that the majority could identify with him. In my opinion that was the main weakness of the film; he was too much of a nerd and his family were pretty obnoxious too. I would like to respectfully suggest to Mr Spielberg that he should have another go at Close Encounters but that he might consider starting from the premise that there were other mothership's making other rendezvous at the same time so that he could invent another set of main characters and use today's computer-based technology to enhance the same basic story (maybe taking it a little further to hint at the aliens short/long term purpose) but, please, giving the equivalent Dreyfuss character more dignity, sensitivity and intelligence. Interestingly the documentary includes comment by Richard Dreyfuss who was attracted to the film because of its noble theme and its idea of suggesting that we are not alone but that we probably have nothing to fear and that the aliens could be friendly. This concept broke new ground. The two female leads also contribute thoughts; Melinda Dillon noting the extreme heat when they were filming Garry's abduction scenes. The actor who played Garry, now a young man, is also seen. Douglas Trumball talks about the visual effects for which he was responsible. He says that Spielberg wisely wanted to get away from the conventional flat saucer-like images to make the space-craft seem more credible. When Spielberg saw the lights of a huge oil refinery he hit on the idea of making the mother ship look like a huge city in the sky. John Williams appears briefly just to explain how the five note theme was developed.

Think twice about spending money on this special edition if you already have the digitally enhanced wide screen version of the film. This edition is not all that special

Reviewer

Ian Lace


Philip GLASS Koyaanisqatsi OST [73:23] Jukebox (bonus CD - selections from Glass's Nonesuch recordings) [73:46] NONESUCH 7559-79519-2  

 

Crotchet (UK)

(Please note that we have used some artistic license showing the above illustrations. The actual CD comes in a cardboard slip cover with just the picture of the car in the desert and nothing more. Sliding this aside, the purchaser discovers the CD with a very stark booklet front page design showing only the words Philip Glass and Koyaanisqatsi printed in blue on a yellow background)

Made in 1983,by filmmaker,Godfrey Reggio, Koyaanisqatsi (pronounced Ko-YAWN-is-SCOTS-ee), was a film completely without narrative, without any identifiable character and without dialogue. It was simply a cavalcade of awesome visions - clouds rushing across a New Mexico desert, the dynamiting of a failed housing project in St Louis, people swarming out of Grand Central Station, and crowded traffic on a Los Angeles freeway. As Tim Page says in his very helpful notes, "Although Koyaanisqatsi was intended at least in part as an indictment of late-20th century Western society (the title is Hopi for "life out of balance"), it is one of the paradoxes that the images of a supposedly crazy, hard-driven over-the-top America are so vibrant and captivating - probably the most exhilarating (and curiously affirmative) passages in the film.

The original recording of Koyaanisqatsi was issued on LP now with the advent of CD it has been possible to include about half an hour's more music - material that hitherto has been available only with the film. Furthermore as Glass, himself, admits in the 1970s and 1980s his ensemble was in the process of creating a musical language - "now we're fluent in it."

The opening, title, movement begins with a deep pedal droning on the organ followed by a gloomy meditation on the word Koyaanisqatsi by deep male voice(s). Throughout there is the usual Glass tendency to compose material using simple music cells with repetition relieved from monotony by subtly shifting modulations and harmonies and the introduction of new instrumentation. The second movement is a slow moving and introspective piece with long-held sighing notes for cellos with staccato one note then increasingly complex flute punctuations; the movement lives up to its name "Organic" for it might be seen to imply the slow steady growth of a plant. "Cloudscape" is a shimmering vehicle for muted brass as if one is viewing a landscape fudged by heat haze - a very colourful evocation and there is some very inventive writing for brass including bass trombone and tuba. "Resource" sounds like fairground roundabout music before the saxophone comments and you suddenly have the impression that you are listening to a steam train labouring up a gradient then speeding along the track (that is the most appealing thing about Glass's music it really fires one's imagination). The idyllic a capella lyricism of "Vessels" demonstrates Glass's equal facility for writing very effectively and imaginatively for voices. The multi-part voices move against each other with impressive inventiveness and great clarity and transparency. "Pruit Igoe" has an ecclesiastical feel like Vessels but it becomes increasingly agitated and in turmoil as all Glass's instrumental and choral forces smash the serenity of the opening string meditation. "The Grid" is longest and most impressive section for full chorus and ensemble. Quoting Page again, "It begins simply enough in a rather old-fashioned manner, the brass puttering along with near-Elgarian[?] pomp. A few minutes on, however, one of Glass's trademark bright, rapid arpeggiated passages for keyboard and woodwinds cuts fiercely into the action, and the music is transformed. For the rest of its twenty-one minutes and twenty-three sections, The Grid might as well have been titled The Dervish as it whirls furiously and exhaustively through hundreds of reiterations all varied just enough to sustain the listener's interest." The final "Prophesies" is another substantial 14 minute piece with a nice solo organ introduction with added voices and predominantly gentle Fauré-like sonorities before the return of the mournful Koyaanisqatsi chant that opened the work.

There is also a very considerable bonus CD, "Glass Jukebox" supplied with Koyaanisqatsi. It is considerable not only in playing time but also in the quality of the music selections from earlier Nonesuch recordings. These are:-

 

"Secret Agent and Roast Beef" plus "Trust" from Joseph Conrad's The Secret Agent

"Interlude" from Orphée Act II, Scene 5

"Living Waters" from Anima Mundi

"Runaway Horses"; and "Osamu's Theme: Kyoko's House" from Mishima

"Knee 3" and "Dance 2" from Einstein on the Beach

"New Cities in Ancient Lands, Africa and New Cities in Ancient Lands, India"; and "The Unutterable" from Powaqqatsi

"Mishima/Closing" from String Quartet No. 3 "Mishima

"Promenade dans le Jardin" from La Belle et la Bête

"Part 2" from Music in 12 Parts

"Movement 5" from String Quartet No. 5

"Song No 15, Father Death Blues (from Don't Grow Old)" from Hydrogen Jukebox


Reviewer

Ian Lace


Nino ROTA Symphonies Nos. 1 and 2. Norrköping Symphony Orchestra conducted by Ole Kristian Ruud. BIS CD-970 [63:18]  

 

Crotchet (UK)


Following on from the recent release, by Chandos, of the Nino Rota Piano Concertos, reviewed on this site recently, these are world premiere performances of two more considerable concert works by this renowned composer of film music. While there is very, very little music here that we know from the film scores, the symphonies, No. 2 in particular, show recognisable traits that would develop into Rota's successful film scores.

Rota's First Symphony, written over the years 1935-39, has considerable charm and appeal. It speaks directly in the late Romantic tradition, there's no hint of the avante garde writing that was beginning to occupy the attention of so many other composers at this time. The opening movement has an open-air freshness, its feet seem to be firmly rooted in the Italian soil. It opens calmly but grows increasingly animated and dramatic with colour and melody. The Andante has a cloistered serenity, strings ascending heavenwards while tuba and trombones give some underpinning devotional gravity. One is reminded of the religious epic film music of Miklós Rózsa. The Scherzo is light and frothy, skipping gaily along in childlike innocence; indeed, one is reminded of childhood games and loud boisterous horseplay. The Finale is dramatic and full of conflict: dark vs light; sinister vs heroic. Any film director would be delighted to consider such material.

The Second Symphony was written mainly between 1937 and 1941, when he was teaching in Taranto in the remote, extreme south of Italy; and completed in 1975. The work's opening movement has a similar beginning to the First Symphony, tranquil and speaking of a simple Italian rural life dominated by the church. It soon intensifies, however, and is full of action and emotion. The second is a merry, but strongly accented Tarantella with a lovely trio section. There is some nice intertwining string writing. The stream of the music mood broadens out into a more deeply felt peroration and sometimes it gave me mental pictures of some medieval pageantry as that at Sienna. At one point there is a faint pre-echo of the love music from Il Gattopardo (The Leopard). The Andante has its roots in plainchant, the Respighi of Concerto Gregoriano is not far away. The Final Allegro vivace is all gaiety. You feel there is a party in the village street; bells summon all to the feasting and dancing first under the hot sun and then under the stars. Much of this symphony is of the stuff that film scores are made.

Rota wrote two further symphonies (it is to be hoped that BIS will record them). The Fourth Symphony (Sinfonia sopra una canzona d'amore) was sketched in 1947 and was drawn on several times for film sound tracks such as The Glass Mountain and Il Gattopardo.

Ruud and the Norrköping SO give strong performances of these works. Highly recommended to Rota fans.

Reviewer

Ian Lace



Erich Wolfgang KORNGOLD Die Kathrin Melanie Diener; David Rendall; Robert Hayward; Lillian Watson; Della Jones; BBC Singers; BBC Concert Orchestra conducted by Martyn Brabbins CPO 999 602-2 3CDs [162:22]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

Grand opera and a tumultuous passion meet operetta in Die Kathrin. This is Korngold's fifth and final opera. It runs 18 mins short of three hours. It is here recorded without scene 3 which comprises spoken dialogue only. The words are printed in the booklet.

Here we have a late grand opera not as late as Walton's Troilus and Cressida but late enough. It was written between 1932 and 1937, being completed very close to his very fortunate departure for the USA to score the film, The Adventures of Robin Hood. Listening now to so much of his concert music we realise that rather than his concert music sounding like his film music his swooningly effective style was well established in his concert works first. You notice it all the more in this full-strength opera complete with grand orchestra including orchestral piano, three saxes and a spot-on vibraphone.

Korngold subtitled the work 'a folk-opera' and you can see or hear why, especially in the final Act. It charts an extremely sentimental story with music to match.

CPO have, in short, done the work proud. Their cast, though not without weakness, is very good and the eponymous lead is wonderful. David Rendall (a name suddenly known because of a recent incident in which after a stage dagger retractor mechanism failed he inadvertently stabbed a fellow singer) as the romantic soldier-chansonnier, François is in good voice though he shows some strain. I cannot swear to the faithfulness of the accents but they sound authentic.

The story (apologies for brutal compression here) is one of Kathrin falling in love with a garrison soldier (François) whose heart is in music, the lute and singing rather than soldiering. He seduces her to the backdrop of glorious music and the two fall in love. A child (a boy - inevitably called François) is born. The garrison leaves the town and with it goes François. Kathrin (in early pregnancy) goes to Marseille in search of her love. She is almost seduced by a night club owner who, by typically operatic coincidence, has hired François as a chansonnier. François believes the owner has seduced Kathrin and is shot by Monique (an associate of the owner) though everyone believes it was either Kathrin or Francois. François goes to prison. Kathrin goes to Switzerland and there has the child. The couple are reunited five years later and live blissfully ever after.

From the first track of Scene 1 we are treated to Korngold in confident resplendently bright music (pre-echoing his film music). There is a Mahlerian female chorus and the music rushes and surges in romantic waves like a Viennese Nutcracker (The Snowflakes). The singing has a heady Puccinian urbanity and an elated ecstasy. The first hints of operetta are heard in a brightness mixed with Elgarian audacity. In 'Es ist ja wahr' vigorous and noble trumpets erupt in silvery flamboyant fanfare. Sliding and mildly discordant washes of string sound evoke the Franz Schmidt of the second symphony. The caressing and trembling tenderness of the love duet is pointed up by the vibraphone which instantly recalls the fine use of this instrument in the film scores. Truly sumptuous.

The second scene opens with a (Richard) Straussian duet for two sopranos, Kathrin and Margot, and leads into Kathrin's aria as she writes her farewell letter to the delightfully-named lover, François Lorand. François comes to her room in the moonlit night and the 'Dear John' letter, Kathrin's letter, is never sent. You can hear her ecstatic despair and joy melt and flow together in the lava flow of Korngold's melody. Ardent romance smokes and fumes on François's words 'Kathrin ich habe dich gern'. Echoes of Robin Hood and Elizabeth and Essex resonate around the embrace which ends the scene in gossamer sensuality. A master-stroke is the almost tangible picture of the 'Dear John' letter blowing off the table as the warm night air fills the room.

Track 7 opens with several minutes of orchestral entr'acte: a thunderous and clangorous prelude which reminded me of one of Arnold Bax's stentorian Irish marches - just a tad bombastic. It slips into an eldritch processional - kitsch but effective. The next scene can be envisioned as a slow motion wave of passion frozen then haltingly moving forward. From this develops a heroic trio with François's music utterly wonderful despite being delivered with a faintly steely edge The drinking song scene rather lets the track record down. It is a blowsy carouse to the prominent words: "Valleri! Vallera!" For me it is a miscalculation, superficial and weak with a skittering and tramping chorus of students and girls. It is punctuated by a prominent xylophone. This has the worst overtones of Verdi at his most tawdry. Appalling cheap brummagem stuff. This however is lightened by the touchingly tender 'Mein mann hat mich vermieden', predicting music from Tomorrow and The Sea Wolf film.

Act II depicts Kathrin's fate while wandering to find her François, armed with expired passport and a love letter. Vulnerable and lonely she is gulled by Malignac (the night club owner) who gets her a fake passport. In the fourth scene operetta raises its head again with jerkily romantic and winningly bright-eyed music. The ladies choir sings with silvery tone. This music might almost be by Stephen Sondheim as in A Little Night Music. The luxuriantly floated high notes from Lillian Watson, as Chou Chou, are a treasurable moment amongst many. A softly seductive trio of saxes permeate the music. At 2:47 in track 5 (Disc 2) we get a truly lovely Viennese impression (yes I know the locale is meant to be Marseille) breathing coffee and cream.

Malignac muses satyr-like on the pleasures of enjoying Kathrin, his plan all along. Korngold allows him some fine music in one of those steady mountain-climbing, stepped melodies of which Korngold is a master-craftsman. There is a mildly distressing wobble in the voice of Robert Hayward (Malignac) but nothing too distracting. The seduction proceeds but in front of François who interrupts only when he realises that it is Kathrin before him. This episode slips intothe next scene with the orchestra's wild caterwauling, howling and shouting of death. The music then begins to toll and shudder after the death of Malignac. Kathrin is left musing on her fate as Francois is dragged away to trial and prison.

The third Act is the shortest of the three, at 43:32. It is in four scenes and all have a folk-opera feel. The music may well have been influenced by Delius's 'A Walk To the Paradise Garden'. The setting is the Swiss mountains. The melodies and airs have around them a halo of innocence and a lightness which suggests Canteloube's orchestrations of the Songs of Auvergne. A devastatingly poetic moment comes at the opening of scene 2 when the orchestra vividly pictures clouds piercing the mountain heights just as François arrives singing. Surely Korngold wrote this music to be sung along to - a Viennese karaoke. François, the journeyman singer, serenades Kathrin for a lovelorn tailor - a Cyrano de Bergerac moment. The lute song is sweetly sung and in the middle of it François recognises Kathrin and recognition is marked by a Schrecker-like crisis in the orchestra.

We are then treated to more bright Sondheim-like eagerness as they reproach and then forgive themselves and fall into each others arms to meltingly swooping strings and burnished eloquent brass crying out to heaven. The strings subtly touch in the moonlight as the lovers go to the house, borne along on the glimmering glow of the strings. A happy ending with very little sourness but just enough grit and steel to sustain this major structure.

Now, opera managements forget your fly-on-the-wall stardoms and let's have an operatic season with Die Kathrin included. Come the day! Audiences glowing with this experience will walk out into the night after the performance onto wet streets. The recording, which is remarkably rich, delivers a great frisson. Just listen to 'Bin dir weib (man) das sich selbst durch dich gewann.' Utterly wonderful. I confess to being moved to tears by this exuberantly emotive music.

Brendan G Carroll author of THE Korngold biography (The Last Prodigy) is the author of the 116 page notes. Everything is thoroughly well documented. I noted many fine little touches showing a discriminating judgement: e.g. the brave and successful decision to keep any printing off the covers of the CD insert - just a great photo of a 40 year old Korngold. The libretto is in German and English. There is a synopsis. The notes - though not the libretto - are in English, French and German.

This is a superb production: music of your most romantic dreams and packing a grand emotional punch with smouldering and flaming fervour. Hotly recommended.

If you liked Die Kathrin let me also recommend the Chandos CDs of

Walton's Troilus and Cressida; Othmar Schoeck's two operas Massimila

Doni (Koch) and Venus (MGB) and, as an off-beat link-in, Stephen

Sondheim's Sweeney Todd (BMG) and A Little Night Music (Sony-CBS).

Reviewer

Rob Barnett

Another contribution from Ian Lace

Rather than repeat the detail of Rob Barnett's fine review I would like to contribute some broader thoughts.

I write after listening to this 3 CD set for the third time. Each successive hearing has revealed more and more delights. So many highlights from this sumptuously scored opera are imprinted upon my memory. There is the fine singing throughout of Melanie Diener as Kathrin, but I felt that she was particularly memorable and poignant in her Act I letter song and in the closing aria of Act II, "War ist geschehn" - in which she agonises over her lover's (wrongful) arrest for murder and then summons up her courage to rise above it all and live for their still unborn child. Equally splendid is Lilian Watson, outstanding in the demanding high-voiced role of Chou-Chou in her Act II aria as she tries to win François's affection (there is a lovely passage in this aria as François, in response, tells her that he cannot forget Kathrin). The only sympathetic aria for Malignac, "In einer Viertelstund", strongly sung by Robert Hayward, is another highlight of Act II. The sumptuous romantic orchestral scoring as François and Kathrin discover and sublimate their love through Act I is delectable and then there is the lovely pastoral-evocative orchestral opening to Act III; and the simple charm of François's Act III song "Wo ist mein Heim", (Where is My Home..?) Rendall is at his best in this little gem. Alas mention of Rendall brings me to the debit side of the recording; I have to say that I was generally disappointed with his singing; I did not care too much for the timbre of his voice which is marred by an excessive vibrato. I am told, too, by friends in Europe that, generally, language pronunciation is not too secure either.

I understand that Decca was originally going to produce Die Kathrin but cancelled out. We owe it to Brendan Carroll that he came to the rescue and persuaded the BBC and CPO to proceed with the project. It should be stressed that this is a live performance/broadcast after limited rehearsal time and produced on a small budget. Under such circumstances, Brabbins and his performers have achieved a small miracle.

Film fans will recognise echoes of much material that Korngold used in his film scores and there is an added fascination - the opera's opening scene is set outside a cinema - it is used as a device to introduce François to Kathrin for the latter cannot go inside without being escorted by the former.

To broader issues. Die Kathrin was Korngold's fifth and last opera. Before it came Das Wunder der Heliane (The Miracle of Heliane) a magnificent epic drama which failed because of the backlash against Korngold's works due to the immense interest in Krenek's jazz-opera Jonny Spielt Auf and Korngold's father's ill-advised critical pillorying of the work. Heliane's failure shook Korngold's confidence and he turned to adapting arranging and conducting a series of operettas.Alas fate was also to rob him of public acceptance of Die Kathrin which was about to be staged in Vienna when the Nazis entered the City and the premier was cancelled. When it was eventually premiered in Stockholm, in October 1939, it met with hostile anti-Semitic reviews. Furthermore, when it was given its belated Vienna premier in 1950 it was derided as being hopelessly outdated.

Working against the emergent tide of serialism, Die Kathrin is resolutely tonal - even of the ripest most effulgent late Romanticism one could imagine. The libretto is weak and the concept follows a well worn path. The story echoes too closely, perhaps, those used by Puccini in La Rondine and Lehar in Giuditta. So it is no little wonder that the 1950 Vienna war-weary and cynical audience was in no mood for it. Having said all that, one must recognise the unique differences in Die Kathrin, from preceding works of that nature even though these were clearly insufficiently strong to have made an impact on audiences and critics. Die Kathrin might be regarded as three operas/operettas in one. (As Rob Barnett rightly infers it is something of a hybrid and hybrids are notoriously difficult to accept - Puccini, for instance, was heart-broken at the failure of his La Rondine.) You have a traditional lush late Romantic first act followed by a more modern second act with a significant jazz content and an orchestrally pared down third act which resembles something of a folk opera (Rob's allusion to the Delius of A Village Romeo and Juliet is pertinent). What probably also went unnoticed was the unusual scoring of Die Kathrin - a large orchestra is used with many additional instruments including three jazz saxophones, guitar, accordion and vibraphone.

Korngold's fate was not unusual - how often has a composer experienced adulation, followed by rejection and then by years of derision and abandonment before he is rediscovered as times and tastes change? Personally, I think that as much as this fickleness might be abhorred, in a way, it is a necessary process for it permits the natural progression of musical ideas. As much as many of us abhorred atonality and other modern music it was necessary that it should have its day. Hopefully the best of it will inform the best of the music of tomorrow together with the best of Korngold, and the late Romantics in general and the classical composers before them. You will get my drift... Now if I can take this point and parallel it with the history of film music, we can see a similar rebellion against the traditional forms of Korngold, Steiner and Alfred Newman etc. in the early 1950s with the emergence of the jazz-based scores of Alex North, the dissonances of Leonard Rosenman and the sparer more economical scores of Elmer Bernstein. These and other changes have informed the scores being written today which do not hesitate to embrace many styles in one score to the benefit, and closer understanding of the screenplay.

In conclusion I would add that I hope Decca might be shamed into reconsidering a further recording of Die Kathrin employing a first class cast and orchestra. After all, EMI employed Gheorghiu and Alagna spectacularly successfully in their Award-winning recording of Puccini's La Rondine an opera that was thought by too many people who ought to have known better to have been little more than a disaster.

Ian Lace


Collection: ART HOUSE CLASSICS: Gabriel YARED The English Patient; Michael NYMAN The Piano;David HIRSCHFELDER Shine; Wojciech KILAR The Portrait of a Lady Lynda Cochrane (piano); John Debney conducts the Royal Scottish National Orchestra VARÈSE SARABANDE VSD2-5982  

 

Crotchet (UK)


The majority of the tracks on this double CD album are for solo piano. Debney and the Scottish Orchestra are featured on none of the Nyman tracks, on two out of five Hirschfelder tracks, one of the Yared and two of the four Kilar tracks. Not that this fact should deter buyers for this is a most attractive collection.

Lynda Cochrane is the resident pianist with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra. Keen readers will have noticed that Varèse Sarabande have been using the orchestra very much over recent years and Lynda impressed producer Robert Townson with her playing in the opening solo for John Williams's Sabrina in VS's collection 'Hollywood '96'. The idea to feature her playing in this anthology sprang from that experience. To judge from the evidence on these two CDs, it was an inspired notion for she plays with considerable technical powess, intuitive sensitivity and delicacy

The first CD opens with seven cues from Michael Nyman's The Piano. Now I have often taken a hard line against this composer, siding with those critics who stood out against the general public acclaim for Nyman and who have regarded his work as something akin to the way the little boy looked upon the Emperor's new clothes. However in Ms Cochrane's hands the music began to have a real appeal for me. She gets beyond Nyman's meandering tinklings, especially in the second impressionistic and romantic "Big My Secret" and "The Attraction of the Pedaling Ankle." As Michael McDonagh in his CD notes says, "...they are certainly more affecting than they were in the full-blown orchestrations in the film and in the concerto which Nyman made from this material."

As much as I admired David Helfgott's struggle against his adversity, I, and a number of other critics, could not admire his interpretation of Rachmaninov's magnificent Third Piano Concerto. I thought David Hirschfelder's score for Shine was also over-rated. The two orchestral OST pieces here, including "Scales to America" with pianist and orchestra are pleasant and evocative enough and nicely put together but the ear is inevitably seduced away by the two Chopin pieces (the famous Polonaise in A flat major, op 53 and the lovely, gentle Prelude No. 15, op. 28) plus Liszt's enchanting Sospiro.

The second CD begins with the Royal National Scottish playing, in a rather subdued fashion, the lovely haunting music from The English Patient which was associated with those vivid opening images of the doomed plane flying over the desert. Although the Scottish orchesta's playing is immaculate, this arrangement by Mark McGurty drains too much emotional intensity from this early part of the score although things improve when the love theme, for violins in their high register, is reached. Lynda Cochrane plays the Bach Aria from the Goldberg Variations and the heavily Bach-informed and baroque-decorated cue "Convento Di Sant Anna" plus another introspective piece summing up the main themes, that has the film's title as its cue designation.

Wojciech Kilar's considerable five minute end title music for The Portrait of a Lady (the film was based on the famous novel by Henry James) begins with unison recorders over a quietly pulsating piano and string ostinato. As it progresses, the music becomes more impassioned but for the most part it is tinged with plaintive nostalgia, and speaks of loss and regret. Again it is supported by piano music from the clasical repertoire - this time by Schubert: first the beguilling Impromptu in G flat, D 899, No.3 and then the Impromptu in A flat, D 899 No. 4, both very well suited to the atmosphere of the screenplay. The CD ends with another Kilar cue, "Love Remains" with an extended part for reflective solo piano before the orchestra steals quiety in, in support. Both of the Kilar cues are enchanting.

Reviewer

Ian Lace


Jerry GOLDSMITH Mulan (with songs by Matthew Wilder and David Zippel) Vanessa-Mae (violin); orchestra conducted by Jerry Goldsmith WALT DISNEY Records 606312  [50:44]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

Goldsmith has done it again! Another winning, rich-textured score full of colour, thrills and romance, forged with a consumate feel for Chinese/oriental musical styles with richly coloured orchestrations. I was continually amazed, amused and delighted with Goldsmith's imaginative and, perhaps, innovative use of an amazing array of percussive instruments together with unusual figurations for other instruments especially the harp. Occasionally he imports some electronic figures - but sparingly like the "dragon's breath" sort of material in the opening part of "Attack on the Wall". There is always something to captivate the ear in this score.

This album is truly one for the family; there is something for everybody here. The first seven tracks are more pop-based to appeal to the youngsters (with the songs' lyrics printed in the folder). Many critics have panned these songs; I would say that they are no better or no worse than those in many modern Disney films. Track 2 is an instrumental version of "Reflections" played in saccharine-sweet high tones by Vanessa-Mae (credited in very small type at the back of the booklet). But the good news is that much of the running time of this CD is devoted to Goldsmith's fine music. His segment commences with a seven minute suite which encapsulates the heroic, tenderly romantic, tragic and comic elements of the score and goes on to include five more substantial cues. Goldsmith leads a virtuoso orchestra (no doubt pick-of-the-crop contract players) and is served with stunning recorded sound with often floor-board cracking bass figures. I leave Rob Barnett to cover the disc in more depth but I enjoyed it very much

Reviewer

Ian Lace

[for the Goldsmith contribution]

A further view from Rob Barnett:-

The latest Disney animation epic has a mix of original songs by Matthew Wilder with lyrics by David Zippel. The disco single with which the disc opens is so abysmal you are almost put off listening to the rest; which, as it turns out, would be rather a pity.

Track 2 takes us to Jerry Goldsmith’s Reflection which is a rhapsody for violin and orchestra with prominent solo piano. The soloist is Vanessa-Mae. This Reflection takes as its core the rather good hit song from the film and thankfully not the ‘single’ version on Track 1 but instead the touchingly sung version on Track 3. The music sounds like a cross between The Lark Ascending (Vaughan Williams) and Saint-Saens Havanaise with a sprinkling of Chinese instruments or a recreation of their sound. The accomplished singer in Track 4 is Lea Salonga whose voice and singing is beyond criticism - a voice to watch out for. The pop version in track 14 is sung by Christina Aguilera but it is sung by her in everyone’s idea of a commercial soul style. It is however a pliable and resilient song and succeeds even in this gratingly clichéed treatment. The sound of the song in track 4 has echoes with the earlier (and still wonderful) Beauty and the Beast score.

Honor To Us All - this is an archetypal Disney song with several shakings of orientalism over the top. It is distinguished by the fact that one of the voices is that of Marnie Nixon! Donny Osmond sings I’ll Make a Man Out of You [5]. This is a so-so song well sung with determination. A Girl Worth Fighting For is a jokey soldiery song which falls flat though the occasional wordplay is worth catching (as it was in Hunchback). The beat and suppleness of the words rather unfortunately reminds me of those naff Seventh Cavalry male chorus songs which adorned some US films in the fifties and sixties.

Haircut has a rather good long-striding French Horn motif and the suite that follows it, is suitably heroic. The relief comes in a nudging and smilingly ardent recall of Reflection. Great music-making and a superb melody. The exotic pastoralism is well portrayed. The suite ends in heights-intoxicated splendour. There is yet more imaginative stuff in Attack at the Wall - black and clashing. Mulan’s Decision [track 10] returns to that beguiling never-never land between the Chinese countryside and deepest Gloucestershire. Blossoms is another very fine Goldsmith creation akin to Track 10 but adding the darker elements found in track 9. Track 12 evokes wind chimes atmospherically amidst the Attack by the Huns and in its muscular headlong music sounds often rather like an oriental Vaughan Williams. The last orchestral track is The Burned-Out Village - music of trance-like sadness.

The booklet prints all the words in a well-illustrated book. The sound is excellent. Recommended for the song Reflection and some first class orchestral inspiration from Jerry Goldsmith and instrumentation from veteran Alexander Courage. High star marking for the song Reflection and the resourceful and lovely Goldsmith score.

Reviewer

Robert Barnett


Bill WHELAN Dancing at Lughnasa The Irish Film Orchestra coducted by Prionnsías O'Duinn SONY SK60585  

 

Crotchet (UK)


The film Dancing at Lughnasa stars Meryl Streep, Catherine McCormack, Michael Gambon and Kathy Burke. Bill Whelan’s Celtic music for the film is presented in nineteen tracks - all quite short.

There is little or no fast music. The music speaks of a continuum of reflection, soft-curving landscape and a sense of sadness of past generations all presented with simple and unspoilt beauty. The music deploys the oboe and cor anglais prominently and effectively. It is all rather static with solo wind instruments seemingly giving a voice to the serenade of the dreaming landscape. Influences include Dvorák and perhaps a little Vaughan Williams. Strangely the main theme reminded me of Basil Poledouris’s headline theme for Lonesome Dove! (tracks 6 and 8 for example). There is a great deal of reflective music and very little variation. This is a weakness of the score. It is concentrated in mood and quite lovely three or four tracks at a time. It does not wear well however as sustained solo listening material.

In the last track [19] Dolores Keane self-absorbedly and touchingly sings Bill Whelan’s arrangement of Yeats’ famous (and oft set) poem Down By The Salley Gardens.

As with so much film music this will delight those looking for the gentlest of relaxing background. It will also please those who wish a reminder of the film. This disc is also for the followers of the impressive Nollaig Casey (fiddle - Track 15 - 3:34 duration - the title track), the ubiquitous Davey Spillane (pipes and low whistle - Track 15) and Bill Whelan (Track 13) himself on drums and percussion. The dedicated follower of Irishry and Celtic fringe will want this disc although its folk roots are none too obvious.

I hope to hear more from Bill Whelan. The craftsmanship and concentration of this beautiful music is strongly in evidence. The problem is that alone this shapely music is too much of a good thing. The total playing time is quite brief.

Reviewer

Robert Barnett


David HIRSCHFELDER Elizabeth OST LONDON 460 796-2  

 

Crotchet (UK)


The film is a visual tapestry of colour-filtered photography and shadow, high-angled camerawork, suitable period embellishments to modern architecture, and lavish costume. It's quite an assault on the senses, and opening on the burning of some Protestant heretics it demands your attention immediately. Propelling the momentum of the shock start is the music of Australian composer David Hirschfelder. Here is a charging fusion of choral highs and percussive lows. Horns blare over the top of cyclic string motifs, and the breathless pace comes to a sudden halt. Through the course of the film it is used a handful of times and takes on the role of dramatic entrance accompaniment. Horse riders cresting a hilltop bearing news of great import. It features twice in the album's 'Overture', and with increasingly appealing arrangements as the score progresses.

About halfway through the picture there is a comedic musical moment. The French court's would-be suitor arrives with a jolly flute and tambourine preceding him. The musicians are drowned out by a regal fanfare from the Queen's entourage. The one tradition is pooled with, yet separated by the other. This stands as a perfect analogy of Hirschfelder's score, which blends classical with period with modern. To look at each of these in turn, requires some thought into the successful integration of source music; classical or otherwise.

There are 4 source cues in all. Tielman Susato's 'Rondes I and VII' from 'Dansereye' are direct re-uses from an existing recording. Essentially they are court room jigs. With William Byrd's 'Domine Secundum Actum Meum' the bittersweet boy soprano and tenor lines contrast with (yet complement) a violent event in history from which the cue takes its name - 'Night of the Long Knives'. Interestingly this was a creative choice of the director, but one which the composer fully supported.

It is with the film's finale that the question of appropriate use comes in. As Elizabeth makes her peace with both her enemies and herself, Elgar's 'Nimrod' from 'Enigma Variations' segues into Mozart's 'Requiem'. Both pieces have been re-arranged by Hirschfelder and are a technical marvel, as well as an aural treat. The use of Kim Wheeler's soprano voice over 'Nimrod' is frankly inspired. This is a continued proof of his abilities as an arranger, following the success of his work with Rachmaninov for 'Shine'.

The fact that a piece is chosen for film or television is an acknowledgement that it has a public recognition. As a viewer this will therefore make an associative connection that is arguably too much of a distraction from the film's events. Considering the events in question are the emotional denouement to such an important chronicle of a life, their combined distraction is potentially disastrous. What must be stressed here however is that the composer openly admits (*see below) they came about through the lack of time. Some experimentation led to the director settling quite happily on them knowing Hirschfelder would embellish them uniquely.

If you can ignore the grossly disparate historical realities (music from the turn of this century followed by a piece from the 18th to conclude a film set in the 16th), then you will deem the picture a complete success. As far as this review is concerned however, the disc's stand-alone representation of the music is superb. The only minor niggle of the packaging being that the CD's back cover manages to neglect to credit anything other than 'Original Music'...

The period touches are nowhere more prominent than in the courtroom's confines. Like the 'Rondes' pieces, 'Coronation Banquet' is a succession of woven together dances and general entertainment pieces. At the request of "play a Volta" from the Queen, 2 very fine toe-tapping segments are strummed up by an assortment of pipes and shakers.

It is with the main body of the score that the composer's own voice becomes apparent. 'Shine' never really offered much opportunity for anything but "The Rach" to impress, and the more recent 'Sliding Doors' was a romantic comedy largely swamped in pop song. So this really is a major work for Hirschfelder, and if the 'Overture's charge is representative of the fullest most determined swipes of the conductor's baton, it is with the 'Love Theme' that a most intimate nature is acknowledged. A very delicate harp is bridged by sustained high strings before evolving into a flute line of remarkable sensitivity. It is a recognisably modern style of film scoring, but made appropriate by the modernistic portrayal of the Queen's love affair with Lord Robert.

There are other 90's flourishes with synthesised rumblings and sharp crashes. These underscore the brooding tone of the film, and are nicely incorporated into 'Conspiracy' for example. As a benchmark for the album's sound quality, they indicate an overall high standard. In all, this is a quite surprising cohesive whole given the range of styles. Most certainly it justifies to other parts of the globe just what Australia has been shouting about for so many years.

Reviewer

Paul Tonks

* Read this reviewer's conversation with the composer.

and Rob Barnett adds:-

Hirschfelder’s last major success was for the film Shine which from the musical point of view centred on Rachmaninov’s Piano Concerto No. 3. In this film the music has more of a chance to assert the foreground. The tracks mix twentieth century romanticism with dance and liturgical music of the first and glorious Elizabethan era.

Elizabeth stars the feline, Cate Blanchett in the title role with many celebrated 'names': Richard Attenborough, Christopher Eccleston, Kathy Burke, Eric Cantona, Joseph Fiennes and John Gielgud.

I have now heard this disc four times and the review I am writing now is very different to the review I was poised to write after hearing it first. The first hearing caused me irritation with what appeared to be yet another bit of fakery. I was all ready to deride it for not being the score to Derek Jarman’s Prospero’s Books. Repeat hearings have revealed subtleties and depths.

I am not going to go in for a track by track appraisal. The disc has been thoroughly and perceptively reviewed by Paul Tonks. The fusion achieved between the disparate elements is not always apparent and in some tracks no fusion is attempted at all: the style stands unalloyed. Unlike Paul I found little to enjoy in the marriage of voice and orchestra over Elgar’s Enigma. This however is not the first time it has been done. Elgar himself did something similar, I thought, in his choral piece The Music Makers.

Overwhelmingly the tracks inhabit the John Barry land of the psychological vista - comfort and threat, beauty and horror. Time and again the music invoked visions of the human physiognomy laid open and veins and arteries, organs and musculature exhibited to view - a mixture of wonder and repugnance. The second track has luxuriant strings escaped from some wondrous performance of Elgar’s Introduction and Allegro underpinned by darker surges and currents by drums and deep brass. The love theme (a good one - on track 7) is powerful, littered with references to sorrow. This perhaps picks up the fact that Elizabeth feels the responsibility of the Crown and cannot surrender herself to passion. There is a Shostakovichian scorching severity about track 11 (Conspiracy) which resurfaces, chugging and urgent, in track 13: One Mistress, no Master.

Track 6 is an example of a fusion track. Stomping Court dance music alive with the sound of pipes and drums dims the lights in one room and turns them up in another rife with Warlock and Sibelius. Vaughan Williams is another voice I heard in many of the tracks.

This is a worthy and rewarding album which deserves to be listened to several times before you allow impressions to take root. I shall be listening out for more by Hirschfelder but I do hope he will give more prominence to his original music rather than fusion and arrangement work around existing music. The insert has lots of pretty pictures but tells you pretty well nothing about the music or the composer.

Reviewer

Rob Barnett


Philip GLASS and Burkhard DALLWITZ The Truman Show OST MILAN MLADV35850-2 [56:44]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

Extraordinary music for an extraordinary film. The Truman Show certainly deserves its popularity a thought provoking and biting satire on the insidious effect that television has on our lives. A round the clock soap; the ultimate in voyeurism.

This new CD sets the scene, in cue 1, with the narration that is included after Dallwitz's portentous cavernously-deep fanfare, "1.7 billion were there for his birth; 220 countries tuned in for his first step, the world stood still for that stolen first kiss... and as he grew so did the technology ...an entire human life recorded on an intricate network of hidden cameras and broadcast live and unedited 24 hours a day, seven days a week to an audience around the globe...from Seahaven Island, in the largest studio ever constructed - and, along with the Great Wall of China, only one of two man made structures visible from space. Now in its 30th great year - It's the Truman Show!"

It seems extraordinary that Philip Glass's music was not used entirely for this film. But it has to be said that the music of Burkhard Dallwitz fits in seamlessly with Glass's material. Dallwitz was born near Frankfurt Germany in 1959. He travelled to Australia when he was twenty and studied at Melbourne's Latrobe University studying advanced composition. He then went on to score for Australian films and television. His contribution to The Truman Show is music of striking originality and potency quite unlike most film scores. He catches the awe of the world-wide interest in The Truman Show but he also suggests the monotony in its round the clock absorbtion in music that is almost primitive for in more than one track there is an emphasis on African or aboriginal drums and rhythmic hand clapping. But the listener is constantly captivated by Dallwitz's colourful, kaleidoscopic sonorities

Philip Glass's contribution is a mix of a two or three cues of original music and material which he had previously composed such as "Living Waters" and "The Beginning" from Anima Mundi and Anthem - Part 2 from Powaqqatsi. Of his original music, "Truman Sleeps" is a soothing lyrical piece for solo piano, "Raising the Sail" is a rather sad yet haunting (that is, when the piano enters) Glass inspiration for keyboards and electronically muffled strings; and "Dreaming of Fiji" is very much in the same mode but with a rather catchy, slightly Celtic-sounding melody.

The CD also includes the second movement from Chopin's Piano Concerto No. 1 played by Artur Rubinstein.

Reviewer

Ian Lace


Stephen ENDELMAN The Proposition OST PHILIPS 462 504-2 [41:54]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

Endelman here mobilises a cool and strong lyricism with softly Celtic curves. As the theme unfolds you will be forgiven for thinking of the music for The Last of the Mohicans and of some pastel-shaded landscape. A husky violin adds point and contrast to the sound-picture and reappears in track 11. The approach is repeated in later tracks (try 7 for example) with touches of George Butterworth, Ilona Sekacz (Mrs Dalloway), John Barry’s Swept From The Sea and

Sarde’s music for Polanski’s Tess. Contrast is to be found in tracks 6 (jazz age flapper music) and 12 (Grapelli café-style violin music). Track 10 returns to the soft-focus countryside where we get a (very appealing) cross between Michael Nyman and Mahler’s Adagietto. The film stars William Hurt, Kenneth Branagh and the delectable Madeleine Stowe. Track 16 in my copy was defective with juddering and gaps throughout the track from 0:49 to 1:09. Test that track before

buying. A nice score but too unvaried for focused listening.

Reviewer

Ian Lace


Anne DUDLEY American History X OST ANGEL 7243 5 56781 2 6 [48:09]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

Score composed, produced, orchestrated, and conducted by Anne Dudley. Just look at those credits! It may seem egregious since it is not usually the case that composers do all the jobs, yet even when they do, many forget or waive the right to have them acknowledged. What occurred to me is that since the success of The Full Monty roused a little controversy over whether it was the songs or the music being congratulated, perhaps here an attempt has been made to make it abundantly clear. The scores are light years apart however.

Before ... Monty only The Crying Game could claim enough international success to have brought Dudley's name to people's attention. Adding the recently released More Monty album, only a very minor portrait of the composer's range is given (each disc featuring scarcely minutes worth of score proper). Here then is the film and score to change that.

Her notes in the booklet state that director Tony Kaye requested a "big and elegiac" soundtrack. The idea being to lift the contemporary tale of a man coming to terms with the shape of events contributing to his life. The result is an enormous sound that often seems to be on a religious epic's scale (cue titles such as "The Path To Redemption" and "Benedictus" reinforce the idea). The drama must be huge - or if not, thanks to Dudley it will be now.

The title cue which assaults the senses immediately is representative of most of what follows. A mysterious low key build-up adds a choir to echoing drum rolls. Already there is an undercurrent of menace before any of the dynamics come to the fore. When they do, the drum rolls peal out a dramatic tattoo to finish on a huge crescendo. Five minutes into the disc, and the listener has already been demanded to sit on edge.

Thematic material from the first cue appears again in the second - "The Assignment", but here the effect is far more melancholy. A lone horn calls out the long line melody of the theme. Some finale flourishes on drum separate this from "Venice Beach". With the sort of shuddering strings associated with creeping about, plus some of the slow pace of the elegy which closes the CD, this is about as subdued or restrained as the album gets. To highlight the contrast. "Playing To Win" follows with a massively dramatic (almost heroic) action fanfare; something that would seem quite appropriate for a superhero or two.

An uncredited orchestra makes for a mostly symphonic sound. Some rather effective electronic samples find their way into the mix occasionally though. "People Look At Me & See My Brother" and "Raiders" both feature an echoing effect as of struck metal. It can also be heard in the Goldsmith Senior portions of bad guy Borg cues in Star Trek: First Contact. Another interesting effect comes in "The Path To Redemption" - a chattering, scurrying sound. The brooding danger of these when coupled with some low end brass is most unsettling.

Amongst the aurally accessible material, there is also time for some crashing atonality. Essentially shock chords one might more regularly associate with the horror genre's need to over emphasise a 'surprise'. An example is the cue "If I Had Testified", which still opens and closes by way of theme and choir. What this all builds towards, is the pay off for the director's request. Dudley describes the last cue thus: "the choir and orchestra finally become one as the words of the 'Benedictus' are sung". This final elegy really is quite marvellous, and rounds off what will be a major discovery to those only familiar with the earlier scores mentioned above.

If taken by it, this reviewer recommends her 1994 score the German animated film Felidae.

Reviewer

Paul Tonks


Harry GREGSON-WILLIAMS and John POWELL Antz OST ANGEL 7243 5 56782 2 5 [49:35]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

It has always seemed amazing that there weren't a flood of cash-in sequels to the success of Toy Story. The fact that they take so long to make obviously accounts for some of that. Yet it is odd that no rival studio to Pixar picked up on what they were doing and rushed something out. Instead, some 4 years later sees 3 headed our way almost all at once. This is the 'rival' effectively, hailing from Spielberg's Dreamworks. Impending are Pixar's A Bug's Life, and the inevitable Toy Story 2 (which was actually intended to be Direct To Video, but is considered good enough for cinema). Both these will feature scores by Randy Newman, who must have kick-started a pigeon-holing in his career with the stop-motion animation of James & The Giant Peach.

Originally only John Powell's name was credited on Antz. That now follows fellow Media Ventures colleague Harry Gregson-Williams. If you look at most of MV's releases (almost exclusively connected to Dreamworks so far) it is interesting to see just how often this crops up. Powell's own Face/Off credits additional music to Gavin Greenaway. Both Gregson-Williams' The Replacement Killers and The Borrowers credit Steve Jablonsky, and Greenaway again on the latter. Media Ventures is of course the brainchild of Hans Zimmer. Taking a peek at some of his recent efforts, the team can again be seen acknowledged. The Peacemaker was conducted by Greenaway & Gregson-Williams, with a whole cue by Greenaway. Just to finish my pattern, Antz credits additional music to Greenaway, Jablonsky, and Geoff Zanelli. So what's the deal ?

The reason I make mention in this case is because for this album, the double credit blends two creative influences together and we cannot tell who did what (although "Mandible and Cutter Plot" bears strong resemblance to Powell's Face/Off style). I just wanted to get the one downside out the way.

What makes the film so fun is in the whole concept of a CGI Woody Allen flick - which is about the only way you'd ever see a buddy-buddy relationship with Sylvester Stallone perhaps. Being a kids movie there are plenty of heavy or under-handed morality messages. Above all else it concerns individuality and that it is OK to be different. Allen's character goes from a neurotic outsider to colony saviour. which cues a composer to think quirky and heroic. So whichever of the two hooked into that first certainly delivered.

"Opening Titles - Z's Theme"' is wistful and searching on a simple piano line. A harmonica chips in every so often, and a gentle mix of triangle and light percussion is all about a humble simplicity. Pass on to solos for flute, and strings and you've got the picture. The establishment of Z's plight out the way, we next go into large scale mambo style for the sight of millions of ants hard at work."The Colony" is quite a showstopper and introduces a very catchy theme which with a rhythmic breakdown partway through is easily recognisable in subtler guises later on.

One of the very nicest touches of the whole score is Jonathan Snowden's flute solo for "General Mandible". Gene Hackman's has much of that other well known General about him (Patton), and accordingly his theme plays off the militaristic clichés after the subtler opening. A mixed choir (conducted by Rupert Gregson-Williams - a brother ?) actually recalls Zimmer's score to Crimson Tide in which Hackman was a submarine captain. There are less versions of the theme on album than to film, which is small shame.

The only source cue featured here is one of the best integrated this reviewer has come across in some time. As Z is bemoaning his existence at a regular bar, Sharon Stone's Princess Bala walks in. She too is tired if the mundanity of (a royal) existence. At 6:15 every day we learn that the colony joins in some meticulously co-ordinated dance aerobics. The cheesiest sample ensemble imaginable strikes up a version of "Guantanamera", and all the ants stomp in perfect synchronisation. The comment is on conformity of society, and in a subtler way it pokes fun at

the night-club scene. The song therefore sits perfectly, and is redeemed from its painful introduction by a big band version once the 2 malcontents are thrown together.

Interestingly "The Antz Go Marching To War" isn't given an original credit, yet it is an instantly recognisable ditty (also to be heard in Goldsmith's Small Soldiers). Here the comedy angle is played up with lyrics such as "we slaughter termites just for fun - hurrah hurrah", and "we'll all be dead before we're through - hurrah hurrah". The quick song break then segues into some synthesiser crashing (an MV staple), before a fantastic percussive rhythm and horn trills underline the army's determined storm onto the battlefield.

Sadly, "The Magnifying Glass" doesn't open with the play on the Close Encounters 'welcome' theme as it does on film. It does contain a superb mini action cue however. With the main battle already over, this is something that doesn't get developed. "Ant Revolution" alludes to the start of some action by building suspense, but the only pay-off for the expectation of further heroics comes in "Z To The Rescue" which is a generous near 8 minutes of dramatic detonation.

The variety continues through a lounge music version of the Colony Theme ("Weaver and Azteca Flirt"), some traditional brass band music ("The Antz Marching Band"), and some welcome romantic respite in "Romance In Insectopia". In all, it makes for a terrifically tongue-in-cheek album, and goes to show that synthespians are in for as much musical diversity as we live ones have enjoyed so far.

Reviewer

Paul Tonks


Emil CMIRAL Ronin OST Varese Sarabande VSD-5977 [66:02]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

While you attempt to pronounce it, the name behind this remarkable score is nonetheless going to stick. Cmiral is of Czech-Swedish origin, and previously impressed with Apartment Zero. In replacing Jerry Goldsmith on this latest thriller from John Frankenheimer, his independent's days are over.

The name 'Ronin' alludes to a breed of fallen Samurai warriors, and the film attempts to imbue some of that disgraced nobility in a rag-tag collection of international mercenaries. So with a tragedian quality to the characters, some of this score follows a predictable mood. It is how that is achieved that warrants attention.

"Ronin Theme" opens the album with the wash and rumble of an electronic soundscape, but progresses to layer in parts from a session orchestra. Over five very full minutes, the thematic basis for most of the score is introduced. The theme itself appears in its most regular and effective guise on an Armenian duduk (a gloriously soulful reed instrument). The successive merge into emotive strings works beautifully, however the album's closing orchestral rendition ("Good Knowing You") does not convey as much emotion after the repeated solos.

What then follows defies description without cross-comparison of sounds you might be more familiar with. If you took the abrasive rawness of Elliot Goldenthal and combined it with the modernistic approach of Graeme Revell, then mixed in some of Danny Elfman's quirkiness (particularly with percussion) you would come somewhere close to covering the breadth of style contained in this hour of surprises.

There are many instances of punctuating crescendo on brass, cymbal and enhanced synth effects. The combination is quite shocking. There are quite furious passages of percussive rhythm which actually suggest the heyday of Lalo Schifrin. In "This Is The Day" and "You Are A Dead Man" this kicks up a terrific pace and weaves numerous percussion instruments into its hits around sharp brass stabs.

That gives an impression of the Cmiral take on the thriller score. Then there are the entirely left-field cues that defy logical inclusion in their surroundings - and yet sit quite comfortably. "Carousel For Little Tamao" is a waltzing fairground's accompaniment. The 'oompah' of riding up, down, and around on a Merry Go-Round. "Passion" smacks of the grand Hollywood heyday tradition of swirling strings as the camera pans away from two first time lovers and looks onto crashing waves or a roaring hearth. "The Girl Sold Us Out" uses the duduk again at its tenderest, and probably strikes as a particularly effective change of pace after some relentless pyrotechnics in "Gunfight At The Amphitheatre"

Reviewer

Paul Tonks.


Ryuichi SAKAMOTO Snake Eyes OST HOLLYWOOD 162 155-2 [47:53]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

This film starring Nicholas Cage and directed by Brian de Palma has already made something of a splash because of the initial long-long single-tracking shot. This has been compared with the same effect in Orson Welles’ ‘A Touch of Evil’. The film has otherwise received a rather savage reception. None of the reviews I have seen have commented on the music.

Sakamoto wrote the score for The Last Emperor (it won an Academy Award). This one is pretty impressive. The first track breathes sweetly and warmly: a balm to the mind’s turmoil. The gentle contours take something of John Barry’s style and a little of the lyric Herrmann. The second track is jumpy. Track 3 makes noises like shaking, iron skeletal strands of barbed wire pulled taut and humming in the wind - eldritch and threatening. Figures scuttle and spin across the landscape. There is a hint of Shostakovich in this music and even of Vaughan Williams (Symphonies 4 and 6) in the night-ride through a terrain populated with caterwauling devils. A strange electronically produced phasing effect is used as well as for the Tyler and Serena track a synthesised echoey jazz treatment. A romantic score, then, dotted with islands of violence. The song, Sin City (sung by Meredith Brooks) is quite good. The other song (Freaky Things sung by LaKiesha Berri) is shallowly commercial and holds little attention. This is quite a meaty score and certainly worth exploring.

Reviewer

Rob Barnett


Edward SHEARMUR The Wings of the Dove OST MILAN 73138 35833-2 [48:56]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

The adulation directed towards this score last year really was entirely deserved. Despite a reasonable grounding in the film world this was effectively the (then) 30 year old's first major release. His age and the maturity of the score are an impressive sum to equate.

Henry James' tale of deception set in the early part of this century was always going to require understated treatment. With the opening "Underground", that subtlety is set. A harp plays alongside some very yearning strings; a main theme of extreme tenderness. A livelier tone picks up for the remainder of this small suite, then with a minor sense or urgency a couple of cymbal rolls restore the calm.

A secondary motif is introduced at the beginning of "Rendezvous", and the wind instrument we are apparently treated to is an Egyptian Flute according to the booklet. Also credited, and appearing in various guises with the theme throughout are a lute, bazouki, and acoustic bass. Hardly atypical period instrumentation, this exotic ambience really lends itself to the portions of the film set in Venice. The Romantic style of the music remains, and has been compared to the likes of Vaughan Williams, Frederick Delius, Frank Bridge, and Gerald Finzi. The London Metropolitan Orchestra were ideally suited.

There are many instances of sustained notes from small ensembles, giving an effective sense of free floating - a travelling sensation in accordance with the character's movements and/or travails of allegiance ("Venice"). Knowing Shearmur to be the 'protégé' of Michael Kamen it has been a pleasure to note none of the tutor's own style within his scores. On studying this particular album, these prolonged moments are truly about the only vague stylistic comparison to be made. Kamen's title theme to The Dead Zone is an ideal example.

With "Carnival Masque" the unexpected instrumentation is brought to the fore for a snake charming surprise. The cue is really in two halves, with the belly dance followed by an ethnic rhythm bridging a segue into a reprise of one of the main themes. Some tambourine rolls round out the delightfully intimate cue. The following "Tryst" performs the same trick by starting with the former's style taken at an upbeat lick; an Egyptian dance working to an accelerating beat. Then it too returns to the orchestral romance of swirling string movements.

Making a rare change for a soundtrack release is the fact that there isn't a single cue of less than 4 minutes length. The effect is of individual movements to a concert work. Shearmur performed a suite of the score at this year's Flanders Film Festival, where his extremely intimate conducting style elicited a beautiful performance from the Belgian National Orchestra and a sincere ovation from the audience.

The film studio took a chance on the young composer's music for this film - so should you.

Reviewer

Paul Tonks


Bernard HERRMANN The Trouble With Harry Joel McNeely conducting the Royal Scottish National Orchestra VARÈSE SARABANDE VSD-5971 [43:07]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

The Trouble With Harry was of course that he was dead but he was not allowed to lie down - or at least to lie down in the same place for very long, for this Hitchcock black comedy was all about a collection of mostly delightfully bumbling people who for various reasons needed to hide and bury the same body - Harry!

The film has been the least understood and the least admired of Hitchcock's films from his Hollywood period of the 1950s. (It was made in 1955 the same year as Hitchcock's To Catch A Thief and before his masterpieces Vertigo (1958) and Psycho (1960). Part of the reason might have been that there was no real murder and the cast list was composed of character actors: the delightful, cherubic Edmund Gwenn partnered with the equally charmingly madcap Mildred Natwick as, respectively, the elderly sea Captain and the older woman he fancies, with the younger couple played by John Forsythe and the delectable Shirly MacLaine who was making her film debut. It was also the beginning of the partnership between Hitch and Bernard Herrmann. Herrmann was always fond of this score. It certainly received his greatest attention when he was preparing the first commercial recording (for Decca/London in 1968), more so than the music for the other Hitchcock film scores that were also included on that album (which is highly recommended and still available - London 443 895-2): i.e. - North by Northwest, Psycho, Marnie and Vertigo. As Christopher Husted says in the booklet notes that go with this new Varèse Sarabande release, "Seeing The Trouble With Harry as an expression of Hitchcock's dry and diabolical humour, he arranged partially reorchestrated music into a short concert piece which he called Portrait of Hitch. It has since been published and enjoys regular performances."

This present album represents the world premiere of the complete score as it was originally written. I should say at the outset that McNeely follows the precedent set by his two earlier recordings of the Vertigo and Psycho in delivering an outstanding performance in splendidly clear, detailed and impressively-perspectived sound. He catches the clever, sardonic, diabolic humour of the score wonderfully well. Listening to the music in total one can play spotting post and pre-echoes of other Herrmann scores: there are the deep, swirling harp ripples of Beneath the Twelve Mile Reef, for instance, and the theme for The Doctor reminds one of the cocky perkiness of the music from The Magnificent Ambersons; while looking ahead, one recognises snatches of the dark string figures of Psycho and the beginnings of Vertigo's big romantic theme, but treated more wistfully in this context in cues like "The Cup", "The Walk", "The Wish", and "The Proposal"

The arresting, short, sinister brass fanfare that opens the score in cue 1, is quickly followed by a few creepy low string chords and both are strongly contrasted by buffoonish bassoons which quickly deflate the pomposity and quieten the terror. In fact, in the main, it is the woodwinds that are assigned most of the comic parts while braying, rasping brass and lower strings are given more threatening, darkish material. A major feature of the film was the exquisite colour photography of the New England location, dressed in all its ravishing Fall tints. Herrmann's pastoral evocations have an appropriate Autumnal glow. The cue Autumn is warm, gentle and nostalgic. So, too, are the cues "Harvest Eve" and "The Phantomn Coach" with gentle harp arpeggios, the prevailing serenity threatened only by a few passing shadows. The theme assigned to "The Captain", which is very lyrical, is reminiscent of Vaughan Williams (Herrmann was a very keen Anglophile and very keen on British music); it has, too, a hint of sea shanties and deep mysterious waters. RVW's influence is very prevalent in the pastoral-like "Tea Time". It is interesting that this melody, the most lyrical in the whole score, is given to the Captain rather than to Jennifer (the Shirley MacLaine character) The "Jennifer" cue is rather furtive and it anticipates a theme from Psycho. There is a collection of contrasting waltzes that make up three consecutive cues: "Waltz Macabre" that really lives up to its title, a lovely "Waltz Reprise" which has that Edwardian cosiness of The Magnificent Ambersons score, and "Valse Lent" which is a jerky, comically grotesque piece that is barely a waltz - and it has a heavily ironic cuckoo figure. Child-like figures for the little boy are effectively counterpointed with some of the most malicious music in the score, in "The Burial" but that cuckoo figure triumphs reminding us that it is all in fun.

The album has 40 cues many very short and all shorter than two minutes. Many will make you smile. One of Herrmann's most delightful scores.

Reviewer

Ian Lace


John WILLIAMS Midway Rick Wentworth conducting the Royal Scottish National Orchestra VARÈSE SARABANDE VSD-5940 [35:48]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

There couldn’t be a more fascinating time to look at the career and style of Williams. Midway came right after the hullabaloo of Jaws’ success, and just before the milestone of Star Wars. It has not been possible before now, since no recording was made available at the time of the film (1976). Instead the main theme - that of "The Midway March" - has teased us in concert repertoires and on collection albums. Here it is in its full glory and it provides some telling pre-echoes of the later music that has popularised the man so much.

The decisive Battle of Midway was pretty potent material - cinematically speaking, and a stellar cast always seems to raise the stakes for the creative talent involved. To Williams it spoke of patriotic pride about the heroics leading to victory. It shines through in the fanfares for brass that have become the composer’s ‘trademark’. If you want to swell the chests of a crowd with pride, who else do you turn to ?

After the brief "Prologue" which is essentially a bugle call rendition of the March, "Main Title" features some very interesting piano figures over snare drumming. It is a disarmingly different voice from Williams since it does not re-appear in the rest of the score, which like the remainder of the cue instead plays upon our familiarity with later works. A quieter moment of reflection from "Yamamoto’s Choice" is a red herring with "Signal Corps Con" picking up the drama. In both, a lighter piano touch demonstrates just how subtle a master of underscore Williams can be. That is even more evident in "Haruko’s Dilemma", where a flute and harp are as gentle as a sea breeze.

What tends to happen with the chronological sequencing of the album, is a series of lulls and crescendos. For every quiet interlude such as "Missing The Flatlands", there is the militaristic suspense and cymbal crash filled drama of "Morning Of The Battle". The peaks and troughs do not dilute the enjoyment of the music. Whereas with another composer’s style it might tire of such choppy swaying, with Williams it as a prolonged teasing - in expectation of the inevitable March.

Alluded to above were forecasts of music to come contained within this score. It would be extremely picky to latch onto more than a few specific examples. I would cite an early part of "Men Of The Yorktown March" as calling up an image of the Rebellion’s Throne Room from the end of Star Wars. "Hiroshima Harbour" smacks of upcoming hero Indiana Jones before some subtle oriental flavours take over. In many places, the style of both those trilogies is evoked. Like the sequencing, this isn’t something detrimental to the music itself but merely a welcome insight to the frame of mind within which Williams was obviously in during the mid ‘70s to mid ‘80s.

The two Marches naturally finish the disc in some style, although strictly speaking "Men of the Yorktown" isn’t a March in the truest sense. Originally, it came as a bonus B-side to a Japanese single release of the main theme. "Midway" itself is the real toe-tapping feel-good jingoistic jaunt. With a pipe at counterpoint to the snare rumbling and of course the theme itself picked out on trumpet, it is quintessential Williams.

Reviewer

Paul Tonks


Basil POLEDOURIS Lonesome Dove Music conducted by Bail Poledouris SONIC IMAGES SID-8816 [56:09]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

Lonesome Dove is a television Western. It was written and produced against the spirit of the 1980s. The Western, while never quite dead, was at least largely moribund so far as TV/silver screen were concerned by the 1980s when this mini-series appeared. The auguries were not good. Director Simon Wincer produced an eight hour epic and looked to Poledouris to provide 3 hours and 45 minutes of music. Wincer had heard Poledouris’s music for Farewell to the King and considers it his most underrated score. Poledouris did not want to use Copland style Americana preferring to evade many of the clichés and latch onto folk music rather than build on the distortions and patina of decades of cliché. In that aim I am not sure that he totally succeeded. There is much here which seems to rest with the mainstream of open air Western music. Nevertheless the score is strong and especially in the pastoral and elegiac. As the excellent notes by Randall Larson point out, the end result was an adaptation of the Larry McMurtry novel which won seven Emmys and one of these was for best score.

The main theme is wide and slowly unfolding, evoking a great sluggish river - epic and remorseless. The theme recurs extensively. Track 2 is a sleepy vignette. In fact there the whole score has steady exhausted pace. The third track opens with hectic chuntering from the strings and recall of concert music by Bill Schuman. The Dallas theme seems momentarily to be about to put in an appearance. We also get river-side idyll music alternating with leathery epic cattle range atmosphere. There is the occasional splash of ‘South of the Border down Mexico Way’ with burnished high fiesta trumpets and castanets.

A banjo dance [4] provides some variety before the threat meets elegy of the Death of Deets [5]. Track 6 is haunted with a shadowed downward reflective curve epitomised by the clarinet at 1:03. Arkansas Pilgrim introduces fiddle music from the high mountain plains and a honky-tonk piano. Soon the reflective serenade returns. In track 7 the solo clarinet recalls the sunny slopes of yesterday in a feast of nostalgic. Track 8’s sleepy oboe curves and falls continuing the mood of track 7. This is interrupted by a slow blowsy polacca and recollections of Civil War or ‘Nigger Minstrel’ songs.

On the Trail has slow motion romanticism and a quick-silver-smooth string theme resolving lovingly back into main Lonesome Dove theme. Then follows (Murderous Horse Thieves) the quiet implacable threat of maracas and acoustic guitar and a country fiddle suggesting gentle Irishry. The Search has yet more fiddle music melting into a grand hoe-down heard through a myriad layers of gauze and a sense of a great uncontrollable force. This is one of the highlight tracks of the disc.

There are more quiet elegies for Gus Dies. At track 13 (Capt Call’s Journey) the long blooming theme returns with a sense of satisfied lassitude. Horns echo satisfyingly around the main theme like which is taken up by supple air-borne strings and the long lines of clarinet and oboe. This is an eloquent hymn to a bygone age and delivered with glistening eyes. The has more of the wide open theme and a burst of dynamism in the last few pages.

So ends a score distinguished by its curvaceous but chaste, elegiac and solitary tone implicit in the title. Instrumental features stand out: the roles for banjo, fiddle, bass, honky-tonk piano and acoustic guitar impart a sepia-tone alongside references to hymns and Western trail songs.

There are fourteen tracks on this disc of which four appear on CD for the first time. I am sure that a CD was issued when the series first came out but this seems to be the most complete authorised edition.

Recommended then for some extremely fine music but I only wish that Poledouris had been able to magic up some more dynamic material to match the sleepy-sad gloriously slow elegy that this score offers.

Reviewer

Robert Barnett

And Ian Lace adds:-

This is film music writing of a very high standard. You are captivated from the very start with the trumpet clarion calls, then the fine broad sweping melody recalling the old west - its grandeur, its nobility, its violence and its grief. Poledouris's music is rich in contrapuntal and polytonal design, it might be likened to a beautiful plant continually sprouting a myriad shoots all in perfect balance and harmony. All the obvious western music clichés are avoided and the music has a ring of sincerity, and it is in complete accord with the screenplay. Take one small example, in the cue Arkansas Pilgrim, there is a section of quiet romantic music, but notice its effective underpinning with gentle rocking clip-clop figures.

I remember the television series with much affection. Clearly with so many hours runing time and so many characters it is very difficult to remember the details of the plot. Instead of so many pictures in the CD booklet, surely it would have been more sensible to have reminded us what the cue titles represent; a description of the scenes to which the music cues related, would have added another dimension to our enjoyment. (For instance cue 2 is called "Jake's fate", now I remember one young cowhand dying of multiple-snake bites when the cattle drovers cross a river swollen after a storm, the opening bars of the cue seem to suggest a malignant turbulence and the coldness of sudden death but it would have been nice to have had that assumption confirmed or otherwise). I understand that there has been considerable demand for this release from presumably a discriminating public (which strenthens this argument even more) so they need not have been fobbed off with the usual picture gallery. Notes like those that Varèse Sarabande and Ryko offer to accompany their classic film scores would have been much appreciated. But I must not overstate this criticism because this score stands proud of its associated images as very satisfying music in its own right.

Reviewer

Ian Lace


Songs from ALLY McBEAL featuring Vonda Shepard EPIC/SONY 491124 2 [43:07]
Searchin' My Soul; Ask the Lonely; Walk Away Rence; Hooked on a Feeling; You Belong to Me; The Wildest Times of the World; Someone You Use; The End of the World; Tell Him; Neighborhood; Will You Marry Me; It's In His Kiss; I Only Want to be With You; Maryland
 

 

Crotchet (UK)

I am breaking my own rule here not to include "Pop" material. But since I am such an ardent fan of Ally (in accord with the programme's zany cartoonisms my tongue drops to the floor and my eyes bulge when she appears on my TV screen each week but why did she and Georgia have to change their hair lengths/styles?), and so I am exercising my editor's prerogative.

Ally McBeal is a huge success in the U.S. with an average audience of 15-20 million every week. The stories of Miss McBeal, a neurotic, earnest lawyer who endures various professional and romantic misadventures, have become the show that the critics love to hate. Indeed, it is amazing how much anti-Ally material has been written by feminist journalists, in the UK, but, as the lady, with whom I shared a train journey recently, admitted: "All you men like her [her little girl lost quality appeals to our protective instincts] and so all we women are jealous of her".

Anyway before I get shot down in flames by my lady readers, I'll hurry on to the songs; these are attractively sung by smokey-voiced Vonda Shepherd who is featured singing in the nightclub setting in the show most weeks. This is a nice collection of songs old and new; familiar and not so familiar. The song which opens the TV show each week, "Searchin' My Soul", written by Vonda Shepherd kicks off the programme. An ideal collection for a party, relaxed listening or for whiling away an hour in the car. And now that Miss McBeal has temporarily left our screens, here in the UK, this album is my only relief from withdrawal symptoms

Reviewer

Ian Lace

[In passing readers may have noticed that Varèse Sarabande utilised the singing voice of Jane Krakowski, on their recent Bacharach release. Jane, who plays the know-all secretary, Eileen in Ally McBeal, is a multi-talented Broadway star who could go further herself. Keen Ally fans will remember that Jane, herself, sang in one recent McBeal episode]


JUDY GARLAND in Hollywood OST performances (1936-1963) TURNER/RHINO R275292 [78:55]
Searchin' My Soul; Ask the Lonely; Walk Away Rence; Hooked on a Feeling; You Belong to Me; The Wildest Times of the World; Someone You Use; The End of the World; Tell Him; Neighborhood; Will You Marry Me; It's In His Kiss; I Only Want to be With You; Maryland
 

 

Crotchet (UK)

The Texas Tornado (Pigskin Parade); Dear Mr. Gable /You Made Me Love You (Broadway Melody of 1938); Over the Rainbow (The Wizard of Oz); I'm Nobody's Baby (Andy Hardy Meets Debutante); F.D.R. Jones (Babes on Broadway); For Me and My Girl (For Me and My Girl); The Trolley Song (Meet Me in St Louis); The Boy Next Door (Meet Me in St Louis); On the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa Fe (The Harvey Girls); Look for the Silver Lining (Till The Clouds Roll By); Mack the Black (The Pirate); Easter Parade (Easter Parade); Johnny One Note (Words and Music); Last Night When We Were Young (The Good Old Sumertime); Happy Harvest (Summer Stock); Friendly Star (Summer Stock); Gotta Have Me Go With You (A Star is Born); The Man that Got Away (A Star is Born); Little Drops of Rain (Gay Purree); Hello Bluebird (I Could Go On Singing); By Myself (I Could Go On Singing); I Could Go on Singing (I Could Go On Singing).

The incomparable Judy. This comprehensive collection represents nearly thirty years in her motion picture career beginning with the rousing "The Texas Tornado" from 1936's Pigskin Parade and ending with her ultimate semi-autobiographical performance in 1963's I Could Go On Singing. It contains most of her famous film musical performances, along with a few choice rarities, many of which have not been commercially available for years. An interesting, rare inclusion is "Last Night When We Were Young", an outake from In The Good Old Summertime (1949). The list of songs above is testament enough to the value of this generously filled collection which is beyond criticism for Judy has passed into legend. The accompanying 20 page booklet with excellent notes by Will Fiedwald (author of "Sinatra! The Song Is You") and many pictures from Judy's films is a great bonus

Reviewer

Ian Lace



Burt BACHARACH What's New Pussycat? OST RYKO RCD10740 [29:45]
 

 

Crotchet (UK)

The film What's New Pussycat marked several firsts: it was Bacharach's first major movie score and it was Woody Allen's introduction as both actor and screenwriter and it showed, after Peter O'Toole's more serious roles in Becket and Lawrence of Arabia that he had a considerable flair for comedy. O'Toole played Michael James who is instantly adored by every beautiful woman who sees him (what a lovely problem to have). Peter Sellers (dys)functioned as James's sexually obsessed psychiatrist who was really more in need of help than his patient while Woody was a totally incompetent would-be womaniser. The beauties were led by Capucine, Romy Schneider and Paula Prentice. Such a farcical comedy cried out for a score that not only included romantic material and Paris scene-setting stuff à la accordians, but also music that was as anarchic as the events of this improbable story.

Burt Bacharach cames up with the ideal mix. The CD includes the three songs that all made the charts: husky-toned Tom Jones singing the brassy, raunchy title song complete with raspberry-blowing trombones and "beer-stained" saloon piano; Dionne Warwick rendering "Here I Am" more romantic yet seamed with a somewhat sleazy accompaniment; and the frenetic up-beat "My Little Red Book" sung by Manfred Mann. The score was liberally peppered with wacky material to underscore the wilder slapstick moments of the film. It employed almost everything but the kitchen sink, from polka-style oompah-pah tuba-playing to squawking kazoos.

As usual Ryko include a ROM element as a nice reminder of the wildness of the screenplay and the foldout booklet has the original striking poster design and very good informative notes by David Konjoyan. Amusing and enjoyable - mainly for fans of the film.

Reviewer

Ian Lace



Henry MANCINI The Pink Panther Strikes Again OST RYKO RCD 10739 [47:31]
 

 

Crotchet (UK)

This particular reviewer has always considered the fifth entry in the Pink Panther series to be the very finest. Sellers was neither too assured as Clouseau nor bored (as he almost seemed in the next and final of his performances [Revenge of]). It has the most carefully choreographed fight sequence with Cato. Herbert Lom gets to ham up his role of Dreyfuss gloriously. Plus it features one of the most successful comedy scores from Mancini.

We already knew these movies to be tongue-in-cheek, but with the fabulous animated opening credits a wonderful montage of images and sounds comes purloined from very recognisable sources. Led by the infamous "Pink Panther Theme" the on-screen cinema plays: "Funeral March Of A Marionette" (the Hitchcock 'Theme'), "Batman" (Neil Hefti's '60s classic), "The Sound of Music", "Singin' In The Rain", and "Big Spender". It sets the tone superbly.

Immediately after comes the exquisite "Inspector Clouseau Theme" opening with what sounds like mandolin, keyboard, and glockenspiel. Gentle flute notes take up the lackadaisical tempo - a pace in perfect synch with the thought processes on display. Reprised later on the album, either cue could be from a hilarious sequence of Clouseau attempting entry into the castle across the surrounding moat. Each successive method is more ridiculous than the last, and the music's suggested dimwittedness is pure genius.

When not beating up poor Cato, the Inspector loves to show off new disguises. In "The Great Quasimodo Disguise" Mancini carries us off with the inflating "hermp" until he is floating obliviously over the Seine. Some beautiful harp glissandos float him ever higher, before the inevitable drop into the drink.

The exuberance of "Bier Fest Polka" is as much at odds with the surrounding cues as the events on screen. A collection of the world's most highly skilled assassins are sent Clouseau's way. The increasingly ridiculous 'hit' attempts are all underscored by this bouncing number. It works for the scene by being as contrapuntal as the moat sequence's use of 'Clouseau's Theme'. We are carried by the ludicrous melodies which make the bumbling even funnier. These really are showcases for Mancini's gift for comedy timing and underscoring. Yet this should not ignore such subtleties as "Along Came Omar" (for Mr Sharif's uncredited cameo), which tiptoes the hitman along on Egyptian harmonies and guitar.

The album generously presents 6 bonus cues of material, which are welcome despite messing with the chronological order. Here we get the brief Asylum flute happiness that opened the film. Then a terrific example of Mancini at his most dramatic with "The Plan / The Snatch", which is initially urgent on its strings. This leads in to some sustained high pitched effects that are fortunately not as grating on the teeth as when Dreyfuss runs a clawed gauntlet down a chalkboard ! The urgency returns for "The Doomsday Machine", and moves in and out as we see Clouseau attempting to thwart the mad ex-Chief Inspector's plans. The brass-built crescendo is sadly spoiled by an obvious edit (at about 2:44) - perhaps this is just my copy.

There is also an "Alternate Instrumental Version" of "Until You Love Me". The original 'Instrumental' precedes it, as does one of the film's comic highlights with a showstopping drag turn from Michael Robbins as "The Incomparable Ainsley Jarvis". His voice really isn't all that bad either (!). "Come To Me" also features saucy lyrics by Don Black, but was the Oscar® nominated of the two. Possibly Tom Jones' vocals decided that. We are 'treated' here to a segue from the Welsh Wonder's warbling straight into Clouseau's own. A moment for the tone deaf to sympathise with.

Still in Bonus territory is the thankfully brief "Organ Interlude" which is as cheesy as possible for Dreyfuss suited in black cape playing chateau phantom. The all-too short "End Titles" are a reminder that we didn't always have to sit through 7 minutes of credited assistants and trainees. With a succession of 'Panther Theme' variations interrupted by what sounds suspiciously like the Jaws theme, the album ends with the traditional musical breakdown signalled by a dying horn wail.

Saving the best for last I now turn to "The Evil Theme". An almost subterranean chime reverberates an echo beneath the lightly treading guitar of Dick Abell. The classic exaggerated cartoon steps of the Inspector's creeping around is perfectly encapsulated by the first half of the cue. It is then stepped up by flute, percussion, and the most innovative use of put of tune pizzicato violin. It is as important an invention as either the Pink Panther or Clouseau themes, or indeed the original A Shot In The Dark theme (which is sadly absent).

Rykodisc spoil us as ever with a CD-ROM trailer and a fold out booklet with great notes and photographs. Out with the bad music - in with the good!

Reviewer

Paul Tonks


Ernest GOLD Judgment at Nuremburg OSTRYKO RCD 10723 [44:26]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

Stanley Kramer's Judgment at Nuremburg (1961) was set during the Nuremburg War Crimes Trials of 1948. The film was nominated for 12 Academy Awards. It starred Spencer Tracy as an American district court judge sent to Germany to act as chief judge for a tribunal against four German judges accused of war crimes during World War II - the story provoking an interesting irony; judges judging judges. Burt Lancaster co-starred as Ernst Jannings, one of the accused, defiant, until he eventually relents and admits their mutual culpability. The film also starred Marlene Dietrich, Richard Widmark, Maximilian Schell, Judy Garland and Montgomery Clift.

Ernest Gold, enjoyed a successful collaboration with Stanley Kramer over a period of more than 20 years and included scores for: The Defiant Ones, On the Beach, Inherit the Wind, and It's A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (the Ryko score for that film was reviewed on this site earlier this year); proving his versatility in writing for such different screenplays. Gold was always careful to absorb local colour and musical styles into his scores. Interestingly, Gold was born in Vienna in 1921 and escaped to the United States from the Nazi threat and eventually arrived in Hollywood in 1946. Clearly, then, his early experiences were eminently suitable for writing the score for this film.

The music for the three-hour Judgment at Nuremburg is relatively sparse and Gold chose to underscore those scenes outside the courtroom underlining character interactions, locale painting and giving warmth to the deliberations of the judges.

The opening "Overture" introduces the main themes. After snare drums, the opening heraldic trumpet figure, stunningly recorded with off stage echoing trumpet calls, suggests both past military victories and the present importance of the trial. This motif moves straight into a rousing German folk song, brutalised to suit the ends of the Third Reich. This brutalisation of the opening folk material reaches its twisted, vicious extreme in the cue "Entr'acte". "Ghostly ruins" accompanies the American judge, Haywood's tour of the ruined Nuremburg with eerie high woodwinds and mocking twisted fragments of the bumptious introductory march. In "Sights and Sounds of Nuremburg" we have warmer friendlier music associated with the people Hayward meets in the streets. We hear street organs and a folksy tune in the market place but when Hayward reaches the stadium ghostly strains of the Third Reich impinge once more. "Schwalbenwinkel" is attractive, melodious restaurant music. For the cue "Madam Bertholt's Story" Gold works poignant variations around the song "Lili Marlene". Equally poignant is the "Liebeslied", a typical operetta aria sung in the style of Richard Tauber of Nicolai Geda, in a restaurant as Haywood dines with Bertholt (Dietrich). "Du Du" is a more upbeat beer cellar song with stamping feet rhythms; while the breezy, and, in part, almost ballet-like music for the cue, "Tea time in Berlin" emanates from a hotel lobby radio which has just announced news of a Russian blockade between Berlin and Western Germany. "Colonel Lawson's Mission" begins with Wagnerian, noble/heroic overtones but proceeds with more personal emotional intensity emphasisied by strings and woodwind as the Judy Garland character is persuaded to testify.

There has been some debate about the inclusion of dialogue in these Ryko releases. But in this case I totally defend the inclusion of the two speeches by Burt Lancaster and Spencer Tracy about the causes of the Holocaust and the guilt and culpability of those involved; it's lesson is worth regular revisiting. As usual we have the ROM content, poster material and intelligent, eminently readable notes by Randall D. Larson, Senior Editor of Soundtrack Magazine.

And Jeffrey Wheeler adds -

My brother, who has a genetic affection for all good things German, shall probably abscond with "Judgment at Nuremberg" - a truly fascinating listen. The use of traditional German songs is effective and symbiotic with the underscore, although used a bit too often. The underscore itself makes nice use of period sensibilities and works flawlessly. The narration is chilling, and I cannot think of hearing the score without its presence. It belongs alongside the score as a powerful recollection of film and international history as well as a wonder for the ears.

Reviewer

Ian Lace


Elmer BERNSTEIN The Magnificent Seven OSTRYKO RCD 10741 [67:41]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

This is an important album in the firmament of film music: the first ever release of the original soundtrack of the most famous Western ever (perhaps vying with High Noon - which centres rather around a song than this score which has some very fine music). Elmer Bernstein’s music, or more accurately the big theme, has been recorded and presented in concert many times. The complete music, of which I would guess pretty well every substantial segment has been presented here, was, astoundingly, never issued on LP. Of course there may have been the odd pirate LP but certainly nothing commercial or approved. The closest you get to a contemporary commercial release is the LP of The Return of the Magnificent Seven which contains much of the original score in a (then) freshly recorded version.

The film is a classic and had a classic cast. Eli Wallach was suitably villainous (more so than his successor) villain in the first sequel. ‘The Seven’ are lead by the indomitable and murderously cool Chris - which in turn made Yul Brynner a natural role in the Michael Crichton technology-gone-berserk film ‘Westworld’. Steve McQueen, Robert Vaughan, Charles Bronson, James Coburn are all foremost names and Brad Dexter with Horst Buchholz are only slightly less celebrated. By the way I do hope that people will not forget the original grittier and certainly less commercial (and more amoral) Akira Kurosawa film which was the template for Magnificent Seven (I am sorry but I do not recall the music at all - no doubt my fault). Kurosawa offers the story with rough edges and without the faint commercial sheen offered by Hollywood and director John Sturges.

The main theme jumps and kicks like a stallion. If age has roughened the edges of the sound it has not robbed it of its visceral charge. The high mountains, desert plains, dusty streets are all here - together with an geographically asynchronous dash of Copland - after all this is Mexico not Montana or Texas or Appalachia. Never mind - Copland did write several devastatingly effective Latino pieces - El Salon Mexico being the best known and the best. Extensive use is made of the famous theme both in direct quotation and as a basis for various variations. Galloping barking figures stride through the 23 tracks contrasted with Mexican-style fiestas, honky-tonk saloon pianos (track 5) and the occasional romantic guitar serenades. The stylistic cross-references include Ponce (Concierto del Sur and Violin Concerto), Joaqin Rodrigo, Copland (of course), Piston, Randall Thompson and Manuel de Falla (track 11). The drum toccata in track 7 sounds as if it escaped from everyone’s cliché of ‘darkest Africa’. Track 9 uses metal drums in something which sounds very much like a Caribbean tin metal band. Later tracks gallop and storm and that blessedly famous theme is never far away. The Mexican romance element finally slumbers quietly into a warm twilight elegy (track 23).

Having played the disc through several times I have to contradict myself in my other review (included in this batch) of the Return of the Magnificent Seven album. There is too much music here and Bernstein’s inspiration while often burning strongly coasts along repetitively at low voltage (track 22 is an example) for at least ten minutes in the complement offered here. Attention is not held consistently. The Return album, which is in better, but less atmospheric, sound leaves you wanting more. The trick may be to avoid playing the present album all in one go.

The notes are by Jeff Bond who writes enticingly mixing fact and observation. There are a couple of paragraphs from Elmer’s daughter Emilie (since 1990 the orchestrator for his film scores) who was one of the moving forces for the disc. Great stills from the film, location shots and a rather crude looking poster copyrighted 1980 - it must be for a re-release of the film.

The sound is grainy and we are warned as much by Emilie who refers to the original soundtrack being recorded ‘without the benefits of modern day recording techniques’. With the rider mentioned above I can recommend this disc to the aficionado of Western scores, enthusiasts for the film itself and for Brynner mavens and also for collectors of Bernstein’s scores. Warm thanks must go to Rykodisc and MGM/United Artists for making this CD possible.

While I have my reservations about some of the music (about 55 minutes would have been just about ideal) this is a very significant disc, generous in timing (not given on the sleeve) and handsome in presentation. Incidentally this disc (unlike The Return disc) fills its 67:40 without resorting to dialogue clips from the film.

Reviewer

Rob Barnett


Elmer BERNSTEIN The Return of the Magnificent Seven OSTRYKODISC RCD10714 [34:54]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

The 1960 film The Magnificent Seven was a great success. It was a remake of Akiro Kurasawa’s Seven Samurai translated into the Wild West. Elmer Bernstein’s score was devastatingly apt - dynamic, open-air, masculine music. Scores like this create a genre. The score, quite properly, attracted an Academy Award nomination. The music gained an even wider and longer-sustained currency during the 1960s in advertising for cigarettes. In the sequel film (there were three sequels all suffering, if I remember correctly, from the usual law relating to sequels and quality degradation). For Return of the Magnificent Seven, Bernstein re-used the original score. In addition he re-recorded it for an album. The present, fairly brief, CD (for which timings are not given on the leaflet) is a reissue for the first time on CD, of that album plus three atmospheric tracks of OST dialogue.

The score has all the zing and freshness you will expect from a receptive pupil of Copland. Also there is a probably unconscious influence to be found in Bohuslav Martinu’s glorious Fourth Symphony. Sceptical? Well, listen to the last five minutes of the last movement of the symphony. You should also note that Martinu’s six symphonies all date from his years (1950s) in the USA. I dare to say that the hallmark track (main theme) is more instantly and enduringly appealing than anything his teacher (Copland) wrote - powerful and heavens-striding music. The theme, quite properly, returns throughout the disc. There are other elements, of course. Bernstein suggests the Mexican locale with the usual stock references but used in a non-cliché-ed way. Track 5 paints in an Hispanic evening with guitar and a warm open air feeling. Track 10 again uses the solo guitar in a Mexican Concierto de Aranjuez. Succulent High Sierra Mexican trumpets register confidently and with high voltage in track 7. Track 4 is a string elegy of great and uncloying power. Bernstein has a great empathy for the brass. He is not above the influence of Randall Thompson’s Second Symphony and Walter Piston’s Second, Third and Sixth Symphonies. These works of the 1940s were the quarry from which much Western film music was mined. In turn the Magnificent Seven music must have been the inspiration for such punchy TV Western themes as The Virginian and The High Chapparal as well as providing an easy mark for the Blazing Saddles music.

Excellent notes again by Jeff Bond. The notes include original poster art, the cover of the LP, stills and location shots. Mr Bond explains the complex relationship between the music on the original album of the film and the music of the film itself. I wish we could be told about the orchestra, recording venue etc and the conductor who made this recording. Sound quality is healthy with an infrequent hint of edge when the sound is loud and saturated. The tracks date from 1967, after all!. Nothing to worry about.

This is a classic album, although it offers rather short measure. Could nothing be done to rescue some tracks from the OST, I wonder? It is only this aspect which forces the star rating down. The music is up there with the best. Just a pity that there is not more of it.  

Reviewer

Rob Barnett


Michel LEGRAND The Thomas Crown Affair OSTRYKO RCD 10719  

 

Crotchet (UK)

This classic film of the 1960s will for ever be associated with two of its elements: the song 'Windmills of Your Mind' and the suggestive chess scene between Steve McQueen and Faye Dunaway. The song is sung distinctively by Noel Harrison. He does not have much of a voice but he is indelibly memorable and distinctive. From the beginning you are struck by what a fine song it is and by the ear-catching orchestration. Listen for example to the deep brass chord under the word ‘round’ from ‘Round like a circle in a spiral.’ So many popular song accompaniments are brainless. This one has a profusion of fine details to entertain and stimulate.

The style of the score is two-fold. The big symphonic score for the two songs is approachable and comparatively easy to assimilate without being boring. A similar style reappears only briefly on this disc: for the song His Eyes, Her Eyes (sung by Legrand) at track 9 and in the orchestral only Windmills track at 17. The music is sharply evocative of many French films of the 1960s: a cool, sophisticated romanticism with jazz inflections.

The remainder of the score (circa ten tracks) is a jazz-melts-into-orchestra concoction. The notes suggest that it is a sort of jazz influenced ‘symphony’. Jazz is a strong influence but is fused into a myriad orchestral details which would not be out of place on a major impressionist orchestral score. There is jazz sleaze [3] it is true but in [5] a fluttering and spinning flute, cross-cut with strings introduces an oboe serenade reminiscent of Malcolm Arnold. The music is thoroughly engaging and inventive even if (like me) you do not warm to jazz. Rich plush strings strike across the texture. A softly shuffling drum kit could ruin the atmosphere but Legrand avoids that with great skill. Vibraphone (always associated with Lionel Hampton) adds anpther dimension. Once in a while you feel wafted back in time to a ‘sophisticated’ 1970s hotel lobby but this is rare enough not to put you off the score. The erotic chess game music deploys maracas and various other items of Latin American percussion with dessicated chipping and zipping noises. The vibraphone reappears with a moaning trumpet accompaniment. There is an Arnoldian swoon to the strings which glowing gently. The approach is like the aural equivalent of a mosaic. A tinkling harpsichord contributes another pointilliste effect soon swept away with a brief recollection of Rhapsody in Blue. There are shrieks and bird calls. Track 8 opens with an upbeat Latino rhythm and dissolves into trumpets counterpointed with hanging bells, brash brazen trombones and briefly (but horrifically) a ‘dabbadoo’ vocal in Swingle style.

Legrand sings His Eyes Her Eyes - with nice and presumably authentic French accent. There is a little jazziness in the accompaniment but the piano which is made to make some startling harp-like effects offer splashily engaging music. Track 10 reintroduces light scampering vibraphone and trumpet punctuation over the top. Track 13 opens unpromisingly with some bland commercial jazz but soon too a welter of detail rushes in like some complex of undertows, tidal currents and whirlpools. The vibraphone reappears and even the Hammond (get thee back to the infernal regions!) does not sound too bad - a close call though!

Track 14 might just as easily suggest a portrait of the streets of Paris early in the morning with a hero/anti-hero relaxed, at ease and warmly confident in tune with the world. The possibilities seem limitless and confidence is high in a rain-freshened world. Malcolm Arnold’s sophistication is suggested in the strings and by a tortured high trumpet skating razor sharp across the top of the music. I wonder if Malcolm knows and enjoys this score? It would not surprise me.

The recording quality is fine for such old tapes. There is first class stereo separation and the sound does not come across as over-processed. John Bender is the author of the useful notes. Again plenty of stills although they would have looked better without the tinting.

It would have been good to be able to identify the fabulous soloists who grace every gem and fragment of this mosaic score. The score is more of a giant set of panels made of a mosaic of small episodes jazz and classic in style. Each little tile is perfect and floating free.

Legrand’s other American scores include Ice Station Zebra (1968), Wuthering Heights (1970), The Go-Between (1971), The Three Musketeers (1974) and The Picasso Summer (1969).

I warmly recommend this release and not only for nostalgiacs.

Reviewer

Rob Barnett

 Ian Lace adds -

Rob Barnett has just about said it all, but I would like to add that I found this score irresistable. This polished and sophisticated jazz-dominated score is very approachable as easy listening music and you will find your ear is continually captivated by so many unusual sonic images, so many interesting instrumental dialogues and juxtapositionings. Take the smoochy conversation piece between clarinet and trumpet in the "Doubting Thomas" cue; the superb multi-layered "Chess" with its sexual innuendo and its rattle-snake sounds warning that danger lurks behind Dunaway's sheen of elegant sophistication; or the intoxicating latin rhythms of "Cash and Carry." An album that will surely make repeated visits to many CD trays.

Reviewer

Ian Lace

 


Pino DONAGGIO Carrie OST with two songs by Katie Irving RYKODISC RCD10701 [38:04]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

Another handsome production from Rykodisc who seem to have their run of film scores through their valued association with MGM/United Artists. I am sure there are yet more riches to come. Rykodisc also do everything so well. Design, music and information are almost all you could ask for.

Carrie is an impressive shocker of a film. I did not see it at the cinema. I saw it on a portable black and white TV and yet can remember even now the shock and frisson of the climax in the closing dream scene. Sissy Spacek and Piper Laurie radiated quirky devotion, innocence abused, religious mania and gloating horror. The film by the ever-gory Brian de Palma deserved all the praise it received and receives.

Pino Donaggio’s score is dominated by the strings. It is by no means as striking when it is out of its visual context. The Carrie theme softly throbs with an undulating innocence and much of the score shares this inward quality. If you are looking for parallels then thinks of Barber’s Adagio, Richard Clayderman and Gabriel Fauré. Track four continues the innocence theme but injects shudders of deeper strings and harp alongside the ever-so folksy lines of the first song from Track 2. Track 7 spins a sumptuous Semprini or James Last type reflective string theme interrupted by darker interjections. The strings are borne along by harp and solo piano. The music on track 9 judders forward with little cross-currents and texture-rips paralleling the moment of transition from teen romantic dream (all self-absorbed) to the bucket of pigs’ blood dumped all over the tragic and then vengeful Carrie. Track 11 has the music for School in Flames but it is all very quiet - electronic noises over deep string chords. Track 15 sounds a little like Sibelius’ Rakastava leavened with a light dusting of Bernard Herrmann until the electronic effects appear. Track 16 gives us the main theme again sounding as if it is about to launch into ‘Close to You’.

There are two songs which are slight little creations but which worked well in the film but register feebly when separated from the visuals. Notes are of the usual high standard. Whoever chose Jeff Bond again chose well. He writes in detail and informatively, addressing both plot and music. Splendid stills, locations shots and posters. The latter is the French language version ‘Carrie au bal du diable’! Again I would have liked to have known something about the orchestra which recorded the music, date and location of recording sessions and name of conductor.

Short value in terms of playing length. The music is pleasant but I feel ambivalent about it. Sometimes it leaves me with the impression of being very flimsy and ever so commercial. Then again I listen to the main theme on the final track and I think to myself that this is definitely worth knowing. The theme would certainly go well in an anthology. This is a safer recommendation for horror film fans and especially for those who love the film Carrie and perhaps those who are fans of Piper Laurie (much underestimated in my view) and Sissy Spacek.

Reviewer

Rob Barnett


MONSTER MANIA Music from the Classic Godzilla Films (1945-1995)VARÈSE SARABANDE VSD5969 [64:23]  

 

Crotchet (UK)

Godzilla has been enjoying a revival for the last 12 months or so. The bubble will burst no doubt but for now you can still find boxes of videos of the original Japanese Godzilla movies in video shops. Then again we also get albums like this.

Fourteen of the 22 tracks are by Akira Ifukube who wrote the famous bubbly slightly brainless (suitable for dinosaurs) march which has overtones of Prokofiev and Sousa. Much of the music is in a similar 'fun' style even when other composers deputise for Maestro Ifukube.

There is, by the way, nothing which I recognise as typically Japanese in these tracks.

There are dollops of rattlingly golden fanfares from the trumpets and rough-edged raspberries from threatening trombones. In track 6 (King Kong vs Godzilla) Grieg’s In the Hall of the Mountain King was clearly in the compser’s mind at the time. Track 3 has a touching (and tinkling) picture which reminded me of the Russian steppes. Koroku’s romantic love theme from the 1984 Godzilla is extremely successful and must be doomed to appeal to Richard Clayderman’s arrangers. The original suggests the composer had learnt from John Barry. Sugiyama in track 16 (1989, Godzilla vs Biollante) takes John Williams’ Superman music as an exportable model. The last track (22), mysteriously, has a dismally commercial ‘rap’ song by a guttural male vocalist some minutes after the end of Ifukube’s march from Godzilla King Of The Monsters (1954). Can anyone identify the song and the singer? It is not listed on the disc contents.

This collection of new recordings is fine for souvenir collectors and is fun. It delivers great sound and depth. The purists will want the exhaustive 2CD Silva Screen collection of OST extracts. For more general collectors who want to sample the genre there is Silva Screen’s rip-roaring Monster collection.

 Reviewer

Rob Barnett



John BEAL Coming Soon! Music from Movie Trailers CD1 [62:04], 34 tracks; CD2 35 tracks [67:03] SONIC IMAGES SID2 8815  

 

Crotchet (UK)

Hats off for the most surprising concept album in ages. This is a true soundtrack collector's gem find. I wish I had a penny for every time I've been asked or seen it asked as to what music was used for a film trailer. On two discs you get 69 answers. Half of each answer is the name John Beal, who has recorded over 500 in the last 14 years. It must have been quite a job determining which cues to go with, but 7.5% is still a worthy result.

In approximately 2 minutes, Beal has the tall order of selling a picture as the must see event of your life. Most of the time he also has to do it within the style of a pre-selected temp score. It is therefore fully appreciated that the composer should include this dedication: "To the composers whose work I am hired to emulate, I am awed by what you create, and am blessed to have the opportunity to study your work. I hope you always feel I have treated your inspiration with respect and dignity." In fact, the CD's booklet is brimming with thanks and acknowledgements.

"The Cutthroat" thanks Joseph LoDuca for Army of Darkness in the Cutthroat Island trailer. Robert Folk gets a nod for the re-working of Toy Soldiers into "Schooltie" (for School Ties). The cue for Heathers thanks the composer of Beetle Juice in a slightly more amusing fashion, by calling the cue "Three Blind Elfmen".

Humour is really the key to 'getting' this album. Everything about it maintains that it is put together with a fun outcome in mind. So many of the cue titles raise a smile: "Beal's Con Theory" (Conspiracy Theory), "Lyle / Ennio / I'm Not Hoffa" (Quiz Show), "Unmarried White Woman" (Single White Female), "Beal's Volcanic" (Volcano), "Ocean Song" (Titanic). With that last cue, an interesting part of the album is raised. Inside the booklet the actual 'Used For' credit reads "Demo for a film trailer about a shipboard romance". On the CD's back cover, 52 of the features are listed alphabetically. Some of them are alluded to in the same way as Titanic is inside, but why is unclear. It all adds to an enjoyable game of determining the origins of many of the cues, and because there are so many, I have decided to present something a little different. What follows is a list of the stand-out elaborations. (I would welcome being contacted with additions.)

DISC ONE:

1 BLACK BEAUTY - GETTYSBURG / CLIFFHANGER

5 BLACK RAIN - THE ABYSS

8 CHAPLIN - THE ROCKETEER

9 CONSPIRACY THEORY - SE7EN (Nine Inch Nails)

12 CUTTHROAT ISLAND - ARMY OF DARKNESS

14 DEADLY BLESSING - THE OMEN / NEEDFUL THINGS

20 HAM'S PROLOGUE & EPILOGUE - BORN ON THE 4TH OF JULY

21 HEATHERS - BEETLE JUICE

22 HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER - ROBOCOP

32 LAST OF THE DOGMEN - DANCES WITH WOLVES / HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER

DISC TWO:

5 MIRACLE ON 34TH STREET - EDWARD SCISSORHANDS

10 I'LL ALWAYS FALL IN LOVE WITH LOVE (Haven't worked out title !) - ENYA (Caribbean Blue)

11 PAGEMASTER - THE ROCKETEER / FAR AND AWAY

13 POLICE ACADEMY - THE GREAT ESCAPE

14 QUIZ SHOW - THE UNTOUCHABLES

16 SCHOOL TIES - TOY SOLDIERS

17 SINGLE WHITE FEMALE - COMMANDO

22 SPECIES II - CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND

27 THE MASK - PEE-WEE'S BIG ADVENTURE

30 TITANIC - ENYA (Book of Days used in FAR & AWAY)

32 UNDER SIEGE II - THE USUAL SUSPECTS / HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER

33 V I WARSHAWSKI - BEVERLY HILLS COP

34 VOLCANO - ALIENS

35 WHITE WATER SUMMER - STREETHAWK (TV)

Not wishing this review to merely function as a re-worked credits list, I must mention what I assume to be Beal's own material -a quite beautiful orchestral piece called "Karen's Love Theme" which graces the second disc. One assumes this to be the same lady Beal dedicates the album to, and who sadly passed on earlier this year. There is also a funky disco groove to be found in "Skatetown USA Trailer / End Title", which apparently had glitter balls spinning with Carolyn Dennis' vocals.

Pretty much every conceivable musical genre is covered by the original and re-worked pieces. In all the scales must swing more toward synths having been used to save on time and money. Yet many of the temps used stem from electronic scores anyway. What a task it must be to find the appropriate samples. Although presumable for the re-recordings of Goldsmith's Judge Dredd trailer music and the Basic Instinct theme Beal would have had access to the scores.

There are some interesting conclusions to be drawn about the art of trailer making from what is on evidence. For example, the cue used for Ghost does not sound anything like a love story. It shows how a film can be pitched as one thing, only to be perceived as something else.

Another observation is how action trailers in the last few years have followed a format of pausing for the credits at the end then coming back for an explosion or shock visual (think of Twister and the flying truck). Several of Beal's cues here seem to have finished, then come back for a tail-end 'sting'. It is as predictable for those types of film now as either of the Mr Voice-over's dulcet tones

Since there is something of a randomness to the sequencing, it is conceivable that the constant shifting of styles may put some listeners off. The two options are either to re-programme, or select to played randomly. That would certainly add to the fun of the guessing game.

Reviewer

Paul Tonks

However Rob Barnett was not so impressed

This must surely be the equivalent of a vanity production. I would have never have thought that a 2 CD set of music written/adapted especially for movie trailers would have been issued. Next thing you know we will be getting boxed sets of music written especially for supermarkets, lifts and Sony Playstations (whoops too late - they are here already!). .There can be little doubting the skills of John Beal which, if the blurb is anything to go by, are in great demand in the industry. The skill is in delivering many moods without noticeably disruptive gear changes all in the compass of two or three minutes or a lot shorter for TV promotions. The music, which I confess only to have sampled, comes at you thick and fast. Beal’s command of styles is impressive. As to the music I am afraid I was not moved. At best this is for the avid (and I mean avid) collector or film memorabilia. That, I am afraid, is about it.

Reviewer

Robert Barnett

This review has given rise to some controversy. Our response may be read on the Bulletin Board



John BEAL Zork Grand Inquisitor (1998) Music from the CCD-Interactive Adventure composed and performed by John Beal Opus Pocus Records OPM1004 30:44  

 

Promotional

There seems to be a whole genre of music emerging from the buoyant market for computer games. As computer sound systems have become more capable so games and other programmes have taken up the challenge. Not so long ago I reviewed a specially written sound track for a PC game themed around The Lost World (Jurassic Park II). This one is the latest generation of the Zork games which have been around for a long time. In fact the original Zork must have been very primitive indeed by today’s standards. It is however a classic game by all accounts.

I have not seen the present game but the music is not half bad. It is produced electonically using sampled sound although this was not immediately apparent to me such is the quality of synthesised sounds these days. Beal (whose collection of music for movie trailers left me feelingly decidedly depressed) here turns in a score which oozes sly humour. Pompous marches strut across the scene. Tribute is paid to John Williams’ adventure scores - principally Indiana Jones. This score is a frolic through fantasy land. The music might just as easily suit a Terry Pratchett fantasy; just the right combination of dumb-monster humour and sword and sorcery. Worth hearing if you get a chance. The disc I have is marked ‘for promotional use only’.

Reviewer

Rob Barnett


Debbie WISEMAN Every Note Paints A Picture The Locrian Ensemble GRAMOPHONE PUBLICATIONS LTD GCD1298B [60:04]
Only available on purchase of the December 1998 Gramophone £3.95. Gramophone Publications, 135 Greenford Road, Sudbury Hill, Harrow, HA1 3YD. Tel +44 (0)181 422 4562 Fax +44 (0)181 869 8400 e-mail: info@gramophone.co.uk
 

 

September 19th of this year was a rather special date in the calendar of UK film music enthusiasts. At the Purcell Room of The Royal Festival Hall, Debbie Wiseman conducted an evening of her music for film and television which demonstrated her skills as a composer on so many levels. Most appreciable was the fact that each piece had been re-orchestrated for the 16 piece Ensemble, many of whom had played on the original recordings. It is quite rare for a film music concert to be recorded, and so the efforts of Tony Faulkner and the Gramophone team (particularly Mark Walker) are to be applauded.

The resulting disc is a limited edition presented with the December issue of Gramophone magazine, which also features an in-depth interview with the composer as well as an extended focus on film music. Since the disc is doubled with a separate disc of classical tracks the all round package is a very respectable collectible.

Just to be different, this review will comment on the cues in reverse order. So first but last comes "Ballet Lemur"; an exclusive presentation of a theme from the BBC’s Born To Be Wild: Operation Lemur which aired earlier in the year. This was a personal project for actor / comedian John Cleese who has a particular fondness for the Lemur. He makes a highly comical trek to seek out some of the animals introduced to the wild of Madagascar. In one memorable sequence, he explains nature’s shortcomings by demonstrating how the animals move. In the trees they have a remarkable accuracy for jumping and landing between trunks. Man’s encroachment into their habitat has cut great tracks through the forest, which means they often have to move at ground level. Here they have adopted an upright, sideways leaping gait. Following a group comes Cleese dressed as an English butler. The bizarre spectacle is accompanied by Debbie’s ballet; an accelerating piece which plays to both their grace and undeniable cuteness. It propels dizzyingly to a crescendo that comes to a dramatic halt. The point of the programme being the hope that the animals will not do the same.

A short change of pace came penultimately in "Wild West" from the score to Wilde. At the opening of the film, we see Oscar giving a lecture about the music of Beethoven to some American miners. The scene sets a comic tone as an introduction to the great man’s wit and eloquence, but is more comical for seeing his own amusement. When he announces that the composer is dead, one miner’s response is "who shot him ?" The dusty outback is conveyed as much by the solo violin strains within Debbie’s music as the sunset and scrub scenery. This stand-alone piece is appropriately light-hearted without being twee about our cousins across ‘the pond’.

The extended suite from Haunted was one of the evening’s brightest surprises, opening as it does with some quite unsettling effects from piano, solo violin, and a sustained suspenseful line from the remaining strings. It then leads in to a beautiful solo piano rendition of the film’s main theme. By the time the remaining instruments have followed a solo violin’s segue, the amassed emotion accumulated from the theme is as heartbreaking as music gets. If you are familiar with the film, the effect is yet more devastating. A sceptical supernatural investigator discovers a very personal truth which reverses all of his beliefs. The theme encapsulates the word ‘loss’ perfectly.

Should you find yourself in Tel Aviv for any reason, be sure to visit the Beth Hatefutsoth Museum. Their "Chronosphere" exhibit chronicles the history of the Jewish people, and features an extremely diverse score from Wiseman ("The Museum of the Diaspora"). The seven and a half minute extract here will have to suffice if you can't make it (!). An interesting observation occurred to this reviewer at the 1:10 mark, which is in a remarkable similarity to Jarre’s Lawrence of Arabia. Knowing of the Jews mammoth trek across the desert to reach the promised land, one wonders if this was a subtle musical reference ?

A few chapters in the life of poet T.S. Eliot are covered by the film Tom & Viv; specifically the years of emotional upheaval with his wife "Vivvie" (a remarkable Miranda Richardson). The composer’s score reflects the "moral insanity" she projects into the artist’s life. Its strong leaning toward strings likewise project a very soulful mood. It is arguable that actor Willem Dafoe cannot help but present a long face, but somehow the music manages to stretch it even further ! (Sony Classical’s release is all but impossible to find incidentally)

With The Dynasty: The Nehru-Ghandi Story, the aforementioned re-orchestration skills are most prominent. Original parts for tablas and Shenai are taken between the Ensemble, and yet still retain an appropriate ethnicity. India’s first Prime Minister is followed by the series, intertwining his life with key figures such as Mahatma Ghandi. A brief main title theme on solo trumpet opens the (all too brief) cue, and reprises for a final touch of nobility as well.

Making this disc particularly collectible, is almost 19 minutes of music from the as yet unreleased Tom’s Midnight Garden. This is an adaptation of Philippa Pearce’s children’s book about a very bored Tom Long entering and exploring a magical yet mysterious garden which appears whenever a grandfather clock strikes thirteen. This generous suite presents all the film’s thematic material, including orchestral versions of the song "After Always" (sung by Barbara Dickson, lyrics by Don Black). Near everything suggests a bouncing childlike wonder, but there are also some pleasingly ambiguous phrases which are at the stage when we are uncertain whether the events are for good or bad. Already awarded a catalogue number (MPRCD011), an album on the MCI label will coincide with film’s Easter 1999 release.

Lastly for this review, but opening the disc is Wilde. Released in the UK in October ‘97, it made it across the pond to the States for the Summer. Significant success and interest there led to Sonic Images repackaging a disc already made available on the British MCI label. Both are exquisite to look at, but feature the same track listing. I wanted to make this about face review to mention "Ballet Lemur" first, but mainly to wax lyrical about the phenomenal Wilde in summation.

Quite simply this is one of the most affecting film scores ever. A bold statement, but the music really does speak for itself. What is so wonderful is that after exposure to either of the full releases mentioned above, this Gramophone disc is so much more intimate for its pared down make up of instrumentation. The melancholy of Oscar’s "love that dare not speak its name" is communicated on a very immediate level. If any one score (thus far) blatantly exhibits Wiseman’s own poetical soul it is this.

A little inside trivia is imparted in telling you that the sequence of cues has been ‘fudged’ from the concert running order. A smoother play list has been created perhaps, but it is precisely the sort of collection for which the ‘Random’ button was invented. It matters not a bit. A slight shame is that financial concerns necessitated the exclusion of suites from The Good Guys and The Missing Postman - both British TV productions.

Reviewer Paul Tonks

       


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