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Addams Family Values (Marc Shaiman) (1993)
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Average: 2.93 Stars
***** 15 5 Stars
**** 28 4 Stars
*** 41 3 Stars
** 31 2 Stars
* 18 1 Stars
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Composed and Produced by:

Conducted by:
Artie Kane

Orchestrated by:
Brad Dechter
Hummie Mann
Jeff Atmajian
Michael Starobin
Total Time: 38:14
• 1. It's an Addams!* (2:05)
• 2. Sibling Rivalry* (3:01)
• 3. Love on a Tombstone (1:01)
• 4. Debbie Meets the Family (2:17)
• 5. Camp Chippewa Song (1:36)
• 6. Fester's in Love (0:32)
• 7. The Big Date (2:28)
• 8. The Tango* (2:44)
• 9. Fester and Debbie's Courtship (2:42)
• 10. Wednesday and Joel's Courtship (1:18)
• 11. The Honeymoon is Over (1:27)
• 12. Escape From Debbie (3:27)
• 13. Eat Us (1:02)
• 14. Wednesday's Revolt* (2:26)
• 15. Debbie's Big Scene* (6:59)
• 16. Some Time Later* (3:09)

* Contains "The Addams Family" theme by Vic Mizzy
Album Cover Art
Varèse Sarabande
(December 7th, 1993)
Regular U.S. release but out of print by the end of the decade.
The insert includes no extra information about the score or film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,263
Written 3/31/22
Buy it... if you loved Marc Shaiman's approach to The Addams Family, the sequel score offering a handful of related highlights with most of the same set of waltz-derived themes.

Avoid it... if you expect the narrative of this score to survive based upon Shaiman's new material, the pre-existing themes carrying most of the weight to less cohesive ends.

Shaiman
Shaiman
Addams Family Values: (Marc Shaiman) After pleasantly surprising audiences in 1991 with The Addams Family, Paramount and director Barry Sonnenfeld returned to the concept in a 1993 sequel that lost some of the charm of the 1960's television show and added macabre humor in much greater doses. The famously morbid family welcomes in a new nanny for the youngest new Addams baby, and this woman takes an immediate interest in Uncle Fester. Meanwhile, the older children are sent off to a summer camp which, much to their pleasure, they literally destroy. The nanny's interest in Fester is one of gold digging, however, and the family must unite to teach the woman about what happens to people who cross the Addams family. Addams Family Values was met with a mixture of opinions depending on how audiences handled the tonal shift of the story, and with diminished box office returns and the death of lead actor Raul Julia within a year of the film, the franchise concluded there. Both movies were treated to Broadway musical elements despite also being littered with songs; the sequel's soundtrack is built upon hip-hop covers of 1970's funk tunes and a pair of sickeningly chipper children's sing-alongs. The latter were in the wheelhouse of composer Marc Shaiman, who approached these films with a stage-proven lyricism and unashamed exuberance that overplays the story's comedy for effect. The scores for The Addams Family and Addams Family Values are exercises in funny waltz structures and some Carl Stalling residuals, haphazard in pacing and rarely stopping for a breath. They are undoubtedly fun scores, but they also tend to exhaust in their combined lengths, the highlights ultimately residing in the more romantic moments. For Addams Family Values, not much is new for Shaiman, many of the first score's themes returning, the general format of the work's narrative similar, and the orchestral coloration and their specialty contributors remaining familiar. The harpsichord seems to receive more airtime in this entry, often paired with higher woodwinds. A greater emphasis is placed on action music in Addams Family Values, wild, cymbal-crashing sequences of expressiveness for the two main themes especially pronounced.

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