August 2000 Film Music CD Reviews

Film Music Editor: Ian Lace
Music Webmaster Len Mullenger

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EDITOR’s RECOMMENDATION August 2000

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Benjamin FRANKEL
Battle of the Bulge

Music from the film Queensland Symphony Orchestra conducted by Werner Andreas Albert.
cpo 999 696-2 [78:43]
Crotchet   Amazon UK   

The 1960's. A decade with ironclad behemoths stalked the silver screen. Real epics. Not like today's Super-35 pseudo-epics, but the real epics with overtures and intermissions and shot in Ultra-Panavision 70, offering a truly widescreen aspect ratio of 2.75-1. Battle of the Bulge (1965) was one such film. Overall its reputation hasn't stood the test of time as well as The Longest Day or The Great Escape, the two best-known war epics which immediately preceded it. But who knows? For decades the film has only been seen (or half-seen) on television, and it is simply not possible to judge the full merits of such superb spectaculars this way. What has undoubtedly stood the test of the intervening 35 years is the music score by Benjamin Frankel.

Frankel is not as well known a composer as he should be. However, a fine introduction to his life and music can be found in the Benjamin Frankel pages on Classical Music on the Web, starting at: http://www.musicweb.uk.net/frankel/. Suffice to say that Frankel made an early career as a jazz musician and arranger, before moving into film work in the 1930's. In total he scored over a hundred film, TV and theatre productions, including such cinema classics as The Man in the White Suit, The Importance of Being Ernest and The Night of the Iguana. From 1958 onwards Frankel concentrated on his concert music, writing eight symphonies among many other works, retiring from film composition following Battle of the Bulge. Little of his film music has ever been issued in album form, and now, following a complete symphony cycle on CPO which has seen Frankel acclaimed as one of the great composers of the post-war period, CPO have embarked on a series of CDs of Frankel soundtrack re-recordings. This current disc is actually the very first re-recording of any complete score by Benjamin Frankel. For this we have to thank in large measure Dimitri Kennaway, Frankel's stepson and an indefatigable champion of the composer's music. In various ways, not least in the actual preparation of the scores and sometimes in the reconstruction of missing parts, Mr Kennaway has been instrumental in bringing this music to us.

I interviewed Dimitri Kennaway recently, (to read the interview follow the link) and he explained that while a series of albums were planned, they started with Frankel's last score because Battle of the Bulge is still a film with a wide following, to say nothing of having the sort of 'big' score that has a good chance of appealing to both film music collectors and those who have bought the previous CPO symphony recordings. It is a big score, this CD running virtually 79 minutes and essentially containing all the music from the film: a few short cues, which were slight variations on material included on the album, were omitted because it wasn't possible to fit any more music onto the disc. However, there is twice as much music here as on the original soundtrack LP, and a lot of it is to all intents and purposes new because in the film it was mixed so low as to be nearly subliminal inaudible.

Those familiar with the film may initially to shocked to find the overture missing. Worry not, it is here, but where it really belongs, in correct film sequence as track 11, 'The Armaments Train'. What became the overture was actually written for this particular sequence, which in the finished film plays without music.

There are 18 tracks in all, with music ranging from exciting set-pieces such as 'The German Tanks Emerge and Break Through' to more reflective moments, 'Christmas at Ambleve', even incorporating traditional carols. There is the guilty pleasure of such source music as the 'Panzerlied', here including the essential rhythmic snap of marching feet, the sound of which was omitted from the original soundtrack. There is a huge amount of music to assimilate, from the savagery and desperate terror of 'Massacre at Malmedy' to the final triumph of 'The Panzermen Abandon their Tanks: Victory and Postlude'. This is not simply one of those very long scores which repeats the same couple of ideas over and over until the CD is full, but instead is packed with a wide variety of material worthy of much more detailed analysis than a simple review. Reflecting this, Dimitri Kennaway provides not only excellent accompanying notes but also illustrates the booklet with several significant musical examples. Of course none of this would mean a thing if the sound and performances were below-par. Fortunately the sound is as vivid and dynamic as one could hope for, and the performances, by players who are by now utterly familiar with and sympathetic to Frankel's musical world, simply superb. This is not just a feast of great film music, but a very significant album which will hopefully lead to the classical audience exploring more film music, and the soundtrack audience uncovering the riches of Frankel's symphonic output. Certainly album of the month, and undoubtedly one of the best re-recordings of the year.

Reviewer

Gary S. Dalkin


Reviewer

Gary S. Dalkin


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