April 2000 Film Music CD Reviews

Film Music Editor: Ian Lace
Music Webmaster Len Mullenger


 Mark THOMAS Aristocrats orchestrated and conducted by the composer, performed by the Irish Film Orchestra with vocals by Méav   BBC WMSF 6011-2 [71:31]

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My one regret is that I didn't watch the TV series, and now I am keenly awaiting the first repeat, for if Aristocrats is half-as-good as the soundtrack album suggests it might be, then it is a television masterpiece. Aristocrats was a 1999 BBC drama serial based on the story of the Irish Lennox family in and around 1770. What happens I can not tell you, though both from the titles and the music romantic intrigue would appear to be high on the list of priorities. What I can tell you is that, as an album, Mark Thomas' score is absolutely gorgeous, with melodies that set a whole new standard in the hauntingly beautiful stakes. In the time I have been reviewing film and television scores no disc that I have received has given me so much pleasure: indeed, Aristocrats has too often been occupying my CD player when I should have been listening to something else.

The music is a modern interpretation of the baroque - consider the way Vaughn-Williams transformed English folksong, then imagine a similar approach applied to the music of Handel and Vivaldi. The result is an exquisite hybrid with a wonderful flow of melancholy pseudo-baroque melody, suffused with a 20th century English classical warmth of string writing and delicate orchestration. Crafted with filigree attention to detail and considerable thematic diversity, there is here the quality that Philippe Sardé brought to Tess, that indeed many French composers have sought to apply to matters of the heart. There are vigorous up-beat passages ('Fireworks'), a lively dance ('Masks'), while 'Lord Kildare's Courtship of Lady Emily' offers playful variation on the central themes and 'The King's Party and Family Reconciliation' has a driving urgency which recurs in various sections. However, it is the timeless beauty of the main themes in various more sombre treatments which form the heart of the album. It seems rapidly to be becoming something of a cliché (see Earth: Final Conflict which I've also reviewed on FMOTW this month) but no one recently has made better use of the wordless female voice than Mark Thomas does here. The composer takes the voice of Méav and treats it as a solo lead instrument to utterly captivating effect.

If Ennio Morricone's music for The Mission and Once Upon in a Time in America count among your favourite scores, if John Williams in English pastoral mode for Jane Eyre and Angela's Ashes meet with your approval, make it a priority at least to hear Aristocrats. The best soundtracks don't always come from the most famous names - Mark Thomas has written over 100 scores, yet remains virtually unknown outside the film and television industry - and after much consideration I will go as far as to state that after 25 years Aristocrats has replaced Williams' Jane Eyre as my all-time-favourite television score. If I had seen the series last year I would almost certainly have voted for this 'score of the year'. Now someone, give Mark Thomas a major feature film to score.

Reviewer

Gary S. Dalkin


Reviewer

Gary S. Dalkin


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