While Jones' music for this Frank Coraci directed
version of
Around the World in 80 Days is nothing less than
ambitious and enthusiastic, his contribution to the film seems stuck in
the rut of perpetual slapstick action of bombastic stature. Rather than
producing an adventure of monolithic proportions, which seemed to be the
intent with his score for
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen
the previous year, Jones swung the doors open to the realm of
high-flying children's music. Perhaps more than any other composer in
the modern era, Jones has proven to be a chameleon when forming a
workable style within a score, and
Around the World in 80 Days is
a strong example of Jones adapting the sounds heard in previous Disney
children's adventures and reproducing them at his customary, bloated
levels of orchestration. The title theme for the film is a variation on
Harry Gregson-Williams' swashbuckling tune for 2003's
Sinbad: Legend
of the Seven Seas, and the rhythmic, harmonious action cues follow
many leads from James Newton Howard's work for animated films by the
same studio. The enormous magnitude of the noise produced by the London
Symphony Orchestra, combined usually with break-neck tempos, may even
remind the listener of the wild action cues from James Horner's
The
Rocketeer. The swashbuckling tone of "The Balloon Chase" contains
more than just a hint of John Williams'
Hook as well. The first
half of the score is filled nearly wall to wall with this loud,
straight-forward action material, and had Jones continued with only that
direct, brass-blaring style, the score could easily have been a
headache-inducing nightmare by the end. Luckily for the listener, the
story takes audiences on a journey through a variety of different
cultures, allowing Jones to stretch his legs in the areas of world music
at which he maintains such a rich knowledge. The action music is by no
means substandard, but it does exhaust your ears with its consistently
brazen attitude and lack of one of those super-dominant themes that
Jones is known for conjuring. If you bypass the more generic action cues
in the first 20 minutes of the score on album, you'll find some much
more impressive development with specialty instrumentation and a full
choir near the end.
As the story picks up another main character in
"Rendezvous in Paris," Jones lays on the accordion as the first real
break from the action, switching from polka to waltz rhythms that are
simple in character, but a relief nonetheless. An elegant, sweeping
variation on the rhythm carries into "1st Class Waltz," but Jones
finally starts to cook with the female Turkish soprano voice that opens
"Prince Hapi Escape." As the story progresses into the Far East, the
following two cues offer the score's highlights; slower renditions of
the score's themes performed by a Chinese violin and flute, with lush
accompaniment from the full ensemble, easily outshine the rest of the
score. For brief moments in these two cues, you can almost forget the
ridiculous nature of the film and appreciate Jones' more serious melodic
tendencies, sans his sometimes alluring electronic accompaniment. The
"Lost in America" cue has the most playful and easily accessible action
cues that are, understandably, saturated with the musical cliches of the
Wild West. A honky tonk piano yields to a swinging clarinet theme in
early high jazz style and, inevitably, the snappy percussion and rhythms
of the cowboy lifestyle. The final two cues introduce the choral element
into the mix, with Jones allowing both the instrumental and vocal
ensembles to increase in velocity and intensity as the wager is won. A
ripping snare propels listeners to the finale, and Jones leaves the
story with the customary, pulse-pounding choral crescendo that you've
come to expect from big-budget Disney adventures. On the album, three
songs are placed before about 48 minutes of score material. The popular
"Everybody All Over the World" is both decent and compatible with the
score, incorporating a children's choir into a nice melody. David A.
Stewart's performance tone, though, resembles Jeremy Irons' singing
voice a tad too closely, and seems a little scruffy for such a peasant
song. The "River of Dreams" song, starting like a bad rehash of Ace of
Base from the mid-1990's, as well as the "It's a Small World"
interpretation, range from irritating to outrageously out of place.
Hearing the Baha Men crucify a Disney classic (the story didn't even go
through the Caribbean, did it?) is especially disturbing. Overall,
despite these snippets of commercialistic garbage from the studio, there
are highly commendable parts of Jones' score that will make it worthy of
some interest. Keep in mind that you do need to survive several temp
track influences and relentlessly jovial comedy and action writing in
the first half to get to the treasures that reside in the latter half.
**** @Amazon.com: CD or
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