Goldsmith

  • Review: The Spiral Road (Goldsmith)

    1962 was an important year for Jerry Goldsmith.  It would see his first score nomination for FREUD and would also feature a rather interesting update on the demise of the Old American Western in Lonely are the Brave.  Both of those scores have now been released satisfying the composers fans but there was another score that year that is a real curiosity in Goldsmith’s canon for an uneven Rock Hudson adventure, The Spiral Road.

     

    Lonely are the Brave allowed for an often restrained Americana sound that, like Freud, featured music that got at the interior lives of the characters.  Where the former was more lyrical, the latter tended toward more experimental orchestral sounds with angular themes and atonal writing that is still striking to hear.  In The Spiral Road, we hear a different approach.  This is a score with one foot heavily in the 1950s.  Though Julie Kirgo’s notes are excellent she says nothing of the very Herrmann-esque sounds that Goldsmith created throughout most of this score.  In fact, the shimmering gamelan-like sounds which he created here sound like something out of the Harryhausen universe that Herrmann scored so well.  This is the first surprise in this score.  But Kirgo points out that without the Indonesian instruments available, Goldsmith arrived at his sound through orchestral choices—that may be why it sounds more like Herrmann.  There is some confusion whether or not he managed to get the real thing as a number of musicians listed were noted for their abilities on ethnic instruments like those whose sounds are approximated in the score. 

     

    What does happen as the score progresses is that we begin to hear less and less of Herrmann’s “sound” and begin to hear signs of what Goldsmith would develop in later scores.  The most striking cue, “Frightful Frolick,” is a chilling musical moment that does standout amidst a progression of several scenes of more “horror-like” narrative.  It is perhaps the one cue most like what would become the composer’s signature style.  The more lyric side appears in “Worth Waiting For” and the wryly humorous “Interrupted Idyll.”   

     

    For Goldsmith fans, The Spiral Road will likely remain a curiosity.  The music has plenty of exotic musical elements that are on full display throughout the score.  More importantly, we might be able to piece together what the composer learned from this score.  Was it more important not to be over the top with exotic elements since that tended to take over his musical sound?  Was it a conscious decision to link the musical qualities to that Saturday Herrmann matinee sound or was it the result of solving the lack of ethnic instrument availability?  We can only hear what Goldsmith chose to do later in The Sand Pebbles and other scores where Asian backdrops were part of the story line, but interestingly enough, his scores through the 1970s would inadvertently lead to a redefinition of scoring for adventure B-pictures.  Perhaps The Spiral Road was the composer’s straw that helped him see that he could be himself that would lead to the superb results in Freud and later in Planet of the Apes among so many other musical journeys along the way.

     

    The Varese Club release is limited to 5000 copies and is recommended especially as a score that sits precariously between the 1950s and the action music of the 1960s.  While it is not uncommon for Goldsmith fans to hear his extension of Alex North's style in much of his music, The Spiral Road sees part of that transition unfold within the context of a single score from Herrmann to North!

  • Best of January--New to the Collection

    The night before we hear the Oscar nominations, here are some fine "new" to the library discs of a fairly full month of "catch-up" for me. 

    There are no classical releases to mention for the month of January, but two older scores quite different from each other and three newer scores.

    First off, Film Score Monthly's release of Bullitt is a worthy release full of great music and one of Schifrin's best groovy themes of the 1960s.  This is a pretty full release of original score material and album presentation that will easily have you tapping your toes.  This is a disc that would easily have made "best of 2009" had it arrived in time for that article here.

    The other older score, now already rare to find, was an expanded re-issue and remastering of Goldsmith's The Blue Max.  The score is one of the composer's finest efforts with a stunning main theme receiving many variations throughout the ample playing time.  This score has surfaced on a shorter Columbia "Legacy" CD here in the states but Intrada's sound is a vast improvement with a great article to accompany the package.  The first "best of 2010" release, look for this to make the list unless something even more wonderful can bump it out of my top 10 list next January.

    Though I found some of Horner's Avatar to seem thematically like Titanic at times, it was good to hear a modern score that has intriguing melodic ideas and rich orchestral writing.  Most interesting in this score is the more ethnic-based musics Horner incorporates.  In some respects it is like a gentler version of his Apocalypto--a score which was probably the furthest from the composer's norm.  Though many have seen the film, I do not think its music will have the same lasting sense of the composer's Titanic love theme.

    Now, if you only buy one film score, you will thoroughly enjoy Alexandre Desplat's gorgeous thematic score for Coco Before Chanel.  I think I played this about 5-6 times after receiving my copy (another of those that would have made "best of 2009"!) and it is probably the composer's most engaging theme since Girl With a Pear Earring.  The composer was pretty busy last year and this is just one of many charming themes.  If you enjoy Gallic scoring that is a cross between Ravel and Jarre this is a fine, though short at 40 minutes, release.

    While Extraordinary Measures is mostly being skewered as a TV-movie-of-the-week that never should have been shown in theaters, Andrea Guerra's score is still quite beautiful.  It too has received its share of complaints by film reviewers but on its own this lovely little score makes for an enjoyable listen on its own.  If this score was written by a "big" name composer you would already have bought it.

    The wait begins now to see which scores will be nominated for Oscars.  As to the Grammy's, Giacchino's Up received a Grammy (a score released as a digital download as of today) as a score and a Grammy for "Married Life" as "Best Instrumental Composition."  A.R. Rahman managed to get 2 Grammy's for Slumdog Millionaire--fortunately placed in a "compilation" category--one for his song "Jai Ho."

    Both private orchestra labels for the Boston and San Francisco Symphonys picked up Grammys as well.

    Congrats to all the winners and best of luck to those who will receive their early morning wake up call tomorrow.

    The

    18.  Extraordinary Measures (Guerra)                                                           Lakeshore