John Williams: The Phantom Menace, Saving Private Ryan * Jerry Goldsmith:
The Mummy, The Thirteenth Warrior, The Haunting * James Newton Howard:
The Sixth Sense * Danny Elfman: Instinct * Elmer Bernstein:
Wild Wild West * Trevor Rabin: Deep Blue Sea * Michael Kamen:
The Iron Giant * Don Davis: The Matrix * Chris Boardman:
Payback * Stephen Warbeck: Shakespeare in Love * David Newman:
Bowfinger
Although this album contains music from Saving Private Ryan, it is
essentially a 'year's best' anthology of film music from 1999. There is music
from 14 films, each apart from Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace
represented by one track. Unusually, the collection presents a mixture of
original soundtracks and new recordings, these latter being conducted by
Frederic Talgorn with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and Chorus. The
new recordings feature The Mummy, Saving Private Ryan, Shakespeare in
Love and a five-movement concert suite from The Phantom Menace.
This suite consists of 'Star Wars Main Title and Arrival at Naboo', 'The
Flag Parade', 'Anakin's Theme', 'The Adventures of Jar Jar' and 'Duel of
the Fates'. By far the finest are 'The Flag Parade', one of the genuine
highlights of the complete score and a grand ceremonial in the Miklos Rozsa
epic tradition, and the thrilling choral epic 'Duel of the Fates'. This finale
offers a chorus of 150 voices and a sonic challenge to test the limits of
most hi-fis. The sound is simply enormous, with a darker intensity than the
soundtrack recording. It demands to be played very loud indeed. The problem
is that the suite begins the album when it should really end it; it proves
a hard act to follow. Happily Jerry Goldsmith's 'The Sand Volcano' from The
Mummy can more than hold its own against the might of John Williams in
full flow, but again, this is a new recording with large choir. Coming directly
after, the original soundtrack of James Newton Howard's The Sixth Sense
sounds unfortunately anaemic. This is not Mr Howard's fault, but rather a
result of the sequencing of the album, for hat his music is essentially low
key underscore and is inevitably overshadowed by the preceding epic set-pieces.
There are several frustratingly short tracks. Those that are appealing leave
one wanting more, such that this album may finally serve as a full-priced
sampler: by themselves some of the pieces are so brief as to not afford
satisfactory listening experience. Thus music from Instinct, Wild
Wild West, The 13th Warrior, Deep Blue Sea and The
Iron Giant only whets the appetite. Trevor Rabin is a composer I have
never previously rated, but his cue 'Aftermath' from Deep Blue Sea
certainly leaves me wanting to hear more of this particular score. 'Old Bagbad'
from Jerry Goldsmith's The Thirteen Warrior is a delicate cue
unrepresentative of the score as a whole, while the same composer's 'Home
Safe' from The Haunting is only another incentive to buy the soundtrack
album. Michael Kamen's The Iron Giant is tremendously muscular, while
the 'Finale/Fe-Ex Delivers' from David Newman's Bowfinger seems an
odd way to end the anthology. This is romantic comedy music, developing into
a rousing heroic finish, the whole not so far removed from the style of John
Williams under-rated Hook.
We have Williams himself again, with the 'Hymn to the Fallen' choral end-title
music from Saving Private Ryan, a piece which is appearing on compilations
with considerable regularity. Also present is Don Davis' vibrantly percussive
opening to The Matrix, while Payback likewise is represented
by its 'Main Title', this time a piece of driving serial jazz-funk by Chris
Boardman which starts well but never develops. This may be effective with
the film, but becomes tiresome in isolation. That leaves a 7-minute suite
from Stephen Warbeck's Shakespeare in Love, which begins with the
finale and first part of the end title music (the best film music of last
year), then jarringly cuts to a rendition of the main theme. The transition
probably works if you're not familiar with the original, but doesn't if you
are.
The problem with this album is that virtually all of the scores represented
are of sufficient quality that the original soundtrack albums are worth buying,
such that these often too short extracts may just encourage you to do exactly
that. Buy enough of them and the anthology becomes redundant, while as an
album in its own right this collection is just too diverse, a patchwork less
than the sum of its parts. The new recording of The Phantom Menace
is well worth having, if only for 'The Flag Parade' and 'Duel of the Fates',
while The Mummy and Saving Private Ryan neither add to nor
detract from the originals. It is difficult to recommend a full price album
for two otherwise unavailable recordings. As it stands, longer suites from
fewer films would make a better listening experience. Star Wars and
John Williams completists will want this album, though virtually any of the
original soundtracks represented here would make a more fulfilling purchase.
Note should be made of the unusual but not unattractive digital cover art
(by Matthew Joseph Peak), which represents none of the films in particular,
but has a science fictional feel oddly reminiscent of a 1970's UK SF paperback.
Meanwhile the insert notes are by none other than
FMOTW reviewer Paul Tonks.
Reviewer
Gary S. Dalkin