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Review of Babe (1975) (Jerry Goldsmith)
Composed, Co-Orchestrated, Conducted, and Produced by:
Jerry Goldsmith
Co-Orchestrated by:
Alexander Courage
Label and Release Date:
Film Score Monthly
(August, 2003)
Availability:
The 2003 Film Score Monthly album featuring this score with other Goldsmith television music was a limited release of 3,000 copies, available originally through FSM or specialty outlets for an initial price of $20. After selling out, it escalated to more than $100 in value on the secondary market.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... only for the notable finale cue of sentimental remembrance from the full ensemble, the bulk of Babe understated in its pleasant but underwhelming acoustic guitar, harp, and string presence.

Avoid it... if you expect Jerry Goldsmith to provide a film about a historic female athlete with anything remotely resembling the inspiration of his later, famous sports drama scores.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
Babe: (Jerry Goldsmith) Among the greatest women athletes of the 20th Century, "Babe" Didrikson Zaharias was not only a hero of the 1932 Summer Olympics but went on to a successful professional golf career and dabbled in baseball, basketball, and track and field. With a sassy Texas attitude and the support of her husband, a former athlete himself, Didrikson defied gender stereotypes in an effort to promote women's ability to compete directly against men. Along the way to defining concepts of femininity and equality in sports leagues and sporting equipment, she earned a plethora of both adoration and scorn. Her death from colon cancer in her 40's was an immense loss to the progressive movement for female athletes. Television producers had for years attempted to buy the rights to her story from Didrikson's husband, eventually managing to do so after an initial conflict with him about the studio contract. By the time Babe debuted on CBS in 1975, however, he loved the end result, and the movie was nominated for eight Emmy awards, winning two. Among those two triumphs was recognition for Jerry Goldsmith's score. While he wrote a capable score for Babe, the music's presence is surprisingly minimal in the final product and competed with a few source pieces that included a diversion showing Didrikson singing and dancing on stage. In reality, the win was something of a hat-tipping capstone to a career that was shifting back from the small to big screen for the increasingly popular composer. In fact, Babe came near the end of the line for Goldsmith in his regular work for television, his music only gracing that medium for choice, singular projects with regular collaborators in the immediate years to come. Goldsmith's Emmy win for Babe likely came from the prominence of his music in the closing scene of the movie in which Didrikson is embraced by her husband as she dies in a hospital and the end credits feature a tribute to her life. The remainder of the score is extremely sparse, and some of what the composer recorded for the film was never used in the final product. Goldsmith recorded several variants of his main theme, including a song adaptation, that never made the final cut, as the movie opted to proceed without music for much of its length. Although the format of the narrative is conducted in flashbacks deviating from Didrikson's gloomy hospital stay, the music is used inconsistently in scenes for both the present and past.

The limited budget for Babe may have impacted the scope of Goldsmith's score, for there is no attempt to use the music to provide dramatic grandeur to any of Didrikson's exploits. The composer limited himself to only 24 orchestral players for his ensemble, highlighting the strings, woodwinds, piano, and minimal brass with accents from acoustic guitar and harp. The heart and soul of the score comes from the guitar, which Goldsmith keenly utilizes to suggest a folksy warmth emanating from Didrikson's sometimes defiant Texas charm. The bulk of the character portions of the work, those involving scenes of interaction between Didrikson and her husband, are driven by the guitar and harp, with the ensemble rarely making significant appearances. The brass is largely confined to Goldsmith's source-like newsreel passages that occupy a few cues early in the narrative. Interestingly, only some of the material in these scenes is provided by Goldsmith, and its sparse but uppity brass and percussion demeanor stands apart like a sore thumb. Cues like "The Team," "Round Trip," and "On the Green/Can She?" aren't flagrantly offensive, but they are also too dainty for the gravity of Didrikson's accomplishments. The remainder of the score is anchored by Goldsmith's main theme for the character, summarized in the unused recording of "Theme" for guitar, harp, and soft strings. Secondary passages for the violins are a throwback to the golden age of Hollywood, as appropriate for the setting. This material is tapered back and aided by piano in "Babe/High Off the Hog," which pleasantly opens the movie and accompanies the earliest flashback. After the meandering string suspense of "Where is It" and "Sick Nun," Goldsmith offers the theme on solo violin at the end of the latter cue. The idea bubbles in "You Bet Ya/It's Late/I Do," earning brighter shades late. The guitar continues that light, friendly tone in "Morning Edition" until its suspenseful end. The feel for the guitar and strings turns darker in "No Changes/Sudden Pain" but achieves its romantic catharsis in "Always a Winner" with the subtle addition of a vibraphone to the ensemble. At the 2:54 mark in that cue, the film offers its optimistic coda with rambling piano accompaniment that likely won the Emmy for Goldsmith. The score isn't one of his best dramas, but it does just enough to win the day. It was released only on a rare 2003 Film Score Monthly compilation of Goldsmith television scores from the era. A mono presentation of the song version of the theme performed by the composer's wife is a nice addition to bring additional appeal to an otherwise muted and bittersweet experience.
  • Music as Written for the Film: ***
  • Music as Heard on Album: **
  • Overall: ***

TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 31:27

• 11. Theme (2:27)
• 12. Babe/High Off the Hog (3:34)
• 13. The Team/Where is It (2:54)
• 14. Sick Nun (3:06)
• 15. You Bet Ya/It's Late/I Do (3:23)
• 16. Round Trip/Morning Edition (2:12)
• 17. On the Green/Can She?/WPGA/Outpatient (2:00)
• 18. No Changes/Sudden Pain (2:33)
• 19. Always a Winner (4:11)

Bonus Material:
• 20. When You've Gone Away* (4:47)
* Performed by Carol Goldsmith (mono sound)
(Music from Babe occupies tracks 11 through 20 on the compilation album.)
NOTES & QUOTES:
The insert includes extensive information about the score and film.
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The reviews and other textual content contained on the filmtracks.com site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Christian Clemmensen at Filmtracks Publications. All artwork and sound clips from Babe are Copyright © 2003, Film Score Monthly and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 8/27/24 (and not updated significantly since).