The Hobbit: A Soundtrack Review
Well, likely many of you reading this today got a chance to head over to your local theater and join the craziness that was the midnight showing of Peter Jackson's rendition of The Hobbit. I was not among that throng, but I have been able to get a good listen to the soundtrack over the past few days, so that's what I'll review for the time being.
I have not been disappointed in Shore's return to Middle Earth. Well,
except for Neil Finn’s performance of “The Lonely Mountain Song,” which will
run under the film’s credits. The light, reverb-laden vocal interpretation of
an otherwise excellent theme did not succeed in capturing the essence of the
Tolkien universe the way Annie Lennox’s “Into the West,” or Enya’s “May It Be”
did.
That small failing aside, The
Hobbit soundtrack strikes a wonderful balance between resonance and awe.
The interpolation of themes Shore used in The Lord
of the Rings creates the
exact feeling that readers who return to Tolkien's work time and time again
crave--that sense of immersion in the atmosphere of his story world. The Hobbit's warm clarinet rendering of
the Shire theme is just as perfect as it was played on wood flute in The Fellowship of the Ring. The
underscore of Bilbo's departure on the adventure recalls the flight of the
hobbits from Farmer Maggot in Jackson's first trilogy, and it beautifully sets
the tone as yet another hobbit flees from a small set of problems into larger
dangers.
The dwarves' theme is equally soaring and weighty, and is
perfectly suited to the serious side of the dwarves that Jackson places on
screen, giving them a chance to be majestic and awe-inspiring. For a long-time
Tolkien fan like me, this came as a great relief, since in The Lord of the Rings, the only dwarf represented, Gimli, ended up
shouldering the bulk of the movie’s comic relief—a decidedly un-dwarvish job.
Sure, there will be members of the company that will still inspire laughs, but
Shore’s soundtrack helps undergird and remind the viewer of the dwarves’
formidable nature.
When the movie draws characters into deeper peril, Shore does not
shy away from the use of instrumental performance for atmospheric sound. Many
of the later tracks in the score contain heavy dissonance, brash playing, and the
use of improvised percussion instrumentation--all perfectly suited to clashes
with goblins and the darker forces of Middle Earth. He makes use of dramatic
and imposing men’s vocals, and pits them against ethereal women’s choral work
(for example, Galadriel’s vaguely eastern-inspired theme) and the purity of boys’
choir.
I'm excited to see how the themes I now have had the opportunity
to internalize will enhance the visuals Peter Jackson has chosen to depict on
screen. My advance familiarity with the score will free me up to appreciate the
amazing synergy between sound and image The
Hobbit is bound to offer.
I'm thinking I'm in need of a new soundtrack :-)
ReplyDeleteOh, excellent review by the way! I don't think I could quite articulate it the way you did. :-)
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