The oddly titled The World’s Fastest Indian is
a fine small-scale film which is based on a true story about a motorcycle speed
record that holds to this day, achieved at the Bonneville Salt Flats by a New
Zealander (Anthony Hopkins) on an old motorbike. J. Peter Robinson, a
classically trained musician at the Royal Academy of Music in London who began
his recording career in London as the pianist for Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice
on Jesus Christ Superstar, has worked on numerous projects before. These
include A Man Apart, Fifteen Minutes and mainly horror films like Nightmare
Cafe, Return of the Living Dead Part 2 and New Nightmare.
Surprisingly for some, but due to his longtime and successful relationship with
producer-director Roger Donaldson (including Cocktail and Cadillac
Man), he was attached to the scoring duties of this film.
Robinson wrote for a wide and eclectic musical ensemble
here, led by piano, oboe and clarinet and accompanied by harp, acoustic guitar,
sparse electronics, electric guitar, percussion, electronic percussion and
marimbas, and occasionally a full symphony orchestra. The film, as explained in
the informative liner notes, was initially scored and recorded on his piano as
he viewed it for the first time. Later on, unique instrumentation and
arrangements were added so the final score, resulting in a diverse and
variegated but also flawed work.
As far as thematic material is concerned, Robinson launches
two tender themes that are difficult to define, at least initially. The main
theme is a slow, loose and light-hearted piano melody (based on a four-note
idea) that gets various renditions during the whole score, its first appearance
being on ‘Memories’. An eerily beautiful solo piano passage based upon major /
minor chord and arpeggios opens the cue, soon joined by the full orchestra in a
smooth, melodic and romantically nostalgic piece. ‘Refusal-Heart Attack’,
‘Sportsman of the Year’ with its beautiful string solos, and the victorious and
uplifting ‘Burt's Triumph’, all offer variations of this theme. Moving on, we
find an eight-note Latin-flavored marimba motif, strongly echoing Thomas
Newman’s American Beauty. Electric and acoustic guitar with smooth rhythmic
percussion and orchestra present this theme in ‘Bike Shop’. In ‘Eggs for Fran’
it’s underlined by a heavy electronic hip-hop drum loop.
Another element featured in
the score is that of the intense action pieces which accompany several races on
screen, and are performed in a unique way. ‘Beach Race’ is the first such
piece, led by abrupt dark percussive cuts, violin clusters and violent piano on
the lower register mixed with some rousing orchestral writing and
marimba/electronic rhythms. Other pieces like ‘Trial Run’ and ‘The World’s
fastest Indian’ also fit this mould, aided by rousing percussion, electronics
and complex dissonance, all constantly building up. The real gold of this work
however lies within the romantic and lush piano with orchestra pieces like the
opening ‘Burt and Tom’, ‘Departure’ a sweepingly romantic orchestral passage
built on major scales and performed with emphasis on the violins and oboe,
clarinet, harp and plucked strings. ‘Disappointment’ and the concluding ‘Back
to My Shed’ (which hints of Craig Armstrong) also belong in this category.
All this might sound good on
paper but there are a lot of problems with this score. The obvious Thomas
Newman references betray a sad lack of originality. It also doesn’t help either
that the music here is strongly connected to the movie it accompanies. With
constant and abrupt changes between rock to country, jazz and modern minimalism
and from classical-oriented orchestral passages with piano and string solos
into dark and violent action writing with intense percussion and modern
electronics, this is too much for anyone to follow on album. The direct result
on CD, despite its value as an accompaniment to the movie, is a particularly
complex and incoherent musical experience. I suspect that the producers of the
album also noticed this, especially if you take into account the fact that none
of the pieces are separated with the usual pause in-between. On the contrary,
all of them are sliced-up into fragments of small duration and cross-faded into
each other, creating the effect of a very large suite. This results into a
subjective flow that makes it hard for the listener to keep up with everything
going on. Moreover, this not only happens during the transitions between the
very different tracks, but the internal structure of several pieces (see
‘Bonneville Salt Flats’) is also problematic. Yes, Robinson’s score is a strong
aid to the movie it accompanies, but that’s probably where it should have
stayed.
Demetris Christodoulides
Rating: 2.5