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Badalamenti |
The 2008 Ghent International Film Festival: Angelo
Badalamenti: (Compilations) Since 1986, New York based
composer Angelo Badalamenti has provided screens big and small with
original scores often saturated with tragic sensibilities. The pianist
and songwriter spent several of his early years concentrating on
arranging songs with many mainstream pop artists, though his hiring to
coach lead actress Isabella Rossellini in her vocals for the David Lynch
movie
Blue Velvet in 1986 launched both a collaboration with the
popular director and an extremely varied film score career over the
subsequent few decades. Instrumentally, Badalamenti's palette has always
been highly varied and unpredictable in some cases, concentrating on
orchestral depth in many of his best film scores but also never afraid
to incorporate electric elements in his more contemporary projects.
Highly diverse vocals are also a common thread in his work, from the
traditional musical environment of
The Edge of Love to the world
music ensemble performances of
Holy Smoke! and the lovely,
traditional choral majesty of
The Beach. A tragic sense of
lyricism is the most defining aspect of his music, and although he has
strayed into the realm of dissonance and challenging turbulence in
scores like
Arlington Road and
The Wicker Man, the full
range of his music typically emphasizes a significant amount of tonal
emotional weight. In many regards, Badalamenti has written the most
depressing body of work of any film music composer in the 1990's and
2000's, his tempi often extremely slow, his ensembles rooted in the bass
region, and his chord progressions as melodramatically ominous and dark
as they are beautiful. His music has been recognized with nominations
for all major awards with the exception of the Oscars, earning a Grammy
for "Twin Peaks" and a BAFTA for
The Comfort of Strangers.
In 2008, Badalamenti received a lifetime achievement award
from the World Soundtrack Awards, deserved recognition from a group that
otherwise usually makes itself known for some truly bizarre choices in
its annual selections of the best film music. As part of the
presentation of this award at the Ghent International Film Festival, a
concert of Badalamenti music for film, television, and solo projects was
assembled for performance by the Brussels Philharmonic. This concert
also represented the third time that an album was pressed of these
performances, each titled "For the Record." Unlike the prior entries for
Craig Armstrong in 2007 and Mychael Danna in 2008, as well as the
subsequent concert for Shigeru Umebayashi in 2010, the assembly of
Badalamenti music for the 2009 concert and "For the Record" album is far
more diverse and comprehensive, spanning two CDs instead of one and
amounting to 90 minutes in total length. It touches upon most of the
composer's "greatest hits," as well as a few hidden gems, and the
performances under the direction of Dirk Brosse (along with the mix of
the recording for the album) are so faithful to the original versions
that some listeners won't be able to notice any difference. As
necessary, electronics or vocals matching what is heard in the original
recordings were contracted as well. This review will move quickly
through the chronology of "For the Record: Angelo Badalamenti" before
summarizing the album and Varèse Sarabande's follow-up product
that presents an abbreviated collection of the same performances. The
complete "For the Record" album opens with the "Main Title" from
Blue
Velvet, an elegantly lithe, squirming string theme with suspense and
discomfort inherent in its allure. From there, a pair of Badalamenti's
most famous romance scores explores two very different sides of the same
genre. The fluid, melancholy progressions of the restrained suite from
A Very Long Engagement will please many, though the score is
likely overrated by fans of the film.
The hopelessly optimistic "Love Theme" from
Cousins
is conversely a bright beacon of light, arguably the composer's most
buoyant and fluffy career piece. The original album for
Cousins
is not only difficult to find but also features terrible sound quality,
so to hear the rambling piano and grand strings performing this Italian
waltz in sonic clarity is a great pleasure. The flavor turns Latin in
"Dark Spanish Symphony" from
Wild at Heart, castanets and
acoustic guitar joining Badalamenti's usual strings for a theme highly
reminiscent of Michael Kamen's
Don Juan Demarco. The guitar
continues with softer, less exuberant shades in "Rose's Theme" from
The Straight Story. Among the most interesting but ultimately
frustrating works in Badalamenti's career is
The City of Lost
Children from 1995, its troubled score featuring elusive melodies
and carnivalesque French tones but never really making use of its
stunning song, "Who Will Take My Dreams Away?" It's a case where a
three-minute original song absolutely dominates the score that it
accompanies. Marianne Faithfull thankfully returns, and her grisly,
chilly voice performs heartbreaking lyrics over resolute, beautiful
strings in what has to be among the most depressingly powerful songs
ever written for a film. That said, there is no doubt it is a highlight
of this set, its performances seemingly identical to the one on the
original soundtrack album. The BAFTA-winning 1990 score for
The
Comfort of Strangers is represented by a long suite that opens with
its light percussive rhythms and exotic woodwinds before segueing to the
primary theme complete with a heavy emphasis on lower brass. The 2008
period musical
The Edge of Love features a handful of decent
underscore cues in between its songs, none as consistent as "Fire to the
Stars." The only thing that could have improved the soft string and
guitar reflection in this cue would have been the inclusion of
Badalamenti's short but impressive opening cue for the film (with or
without its dialogue). Included instead is Beth Rowley's strong but
somewhat out of place performance of "Careless Talk" from that
musical.
The morbid realm returns with a long suite of the two
most famous themes from "Twin Peaks." The
Vertigo-like "Laura
Palmer's Theme" is afforded two performances before extended treatment
of the electric guitar coolness in "Main Title Theme." This is always
nice to revisit, but it has difficulty sustaining an eight minute suite.
Closing out the first CD in the set is a dull violin and cello duet
version of "Rose's Theme" from
The Straight Story. The second CD
is a bit more eclectic, starting with the television music for "Inside
the Actors Studio," pleasantly inoffensive background tonality that
reminds of Lee Holdridge's documentary style. Equal in its orchestrally
stoic character is the Lincoln Center Commission's "Snapshot From
Prague." Returning to more familiar territory is the "Mysteries of Love"
instrumental from
Blue Velvet, a blend of strings and synthetics
that meanders through a hazy romance theme at an appropriately slow,
excruciating pace. Similar in its electronic enhancements but lacking
the same element of sleaze is "Sacrificing Reality" from
The
Adversary. Two tracks featuring Dolores O'Riordan of the Cranberries
are an unexpected highlight, beginning with her contribution to the song
that brackets the 2004 score for
Evilenko. The album for that
soundtrack is difficult to obtain, so the song's inclusion here, as
hauntingly depressing as it may be, is a positive. Even better is a 2006
single O'Riordan recorded for Badalamenti that has never seemed to find
a home in a larger work for the composer or any of the singer's solo
albums of the late 2000's. Conservative electronic backing and
O'Riordan's trademark performance emphasis makes "The Butterfly" a clear
winner. One final trip back to Badalamenti's gloomy orchestral
tendencies is taken for the "Main Title" from
Mulholland Drive.
The set concludes with "The Torch Theme" from the Barcelona Olympics of
1992. There are plenty of trumpet fanfare figures and heroic ensemble
choral performances in the bright theme, residing far closer to Basil
Poledouris' take on the games than John Williams' unashamedly American
variety. It's a bit strange to hear Badalamenti write such immense,
outwardly positive, major-key expressions of action for brass, and while
its inclusion on this set is welcomed, it's an awkward way to wrap up
this compilation.
On the whole, the "For the Record" compilation is a
solid representation of Badalamenti's various talents, though it does
omit the composer's scores that remain memorable and popular because of
their ensemble vocals, most notably
The Beach and
Holy
Smoke!, both deserving of more attention in their highlights. The
set also exposes his tendency to write his film music themes in the form
of a song, repeating each primary phrase twice with a standard bridge
sequence or interlude in between. He's not as obvious in this respect as
John Barry was, but some listeners may find his themes to be a bit
monotonous when heard in succession here. The sound quality of the
product is outstanding, and the only quibble that could be made with set
is its ordering of tracks in a non-chronological presentation. The 2009
compilation was not a regular commercial release, though it could be
purchased as a promotional item through soundtrack specialty outlets for
$20 to $25. A little over a year later, Varèse Sarabande
condensed the contents of the set down to a single CD and titled it
"Angelo Badalamenti: Music for Film and Television." The twenty minutes
of material dropped from the prior album includes most of the
electronically-defined music from the second CD of the set, notably
"Mysteries of Love" from
Blue Velvet and, most unfortunately, the
two O'Riordan tracks. Also removed were the least impressive tracks on
the set, however, led by
The Adversary and the duet from
The
Straight Story. The disparate style of the song from
The Edge of
Love is omitted as well, leaving the absolutely necessary and
engrossing "Who Will Take My Dreams Away?" as the only vocal track on
the Varèse version. Ultimately, these products include the same
recordings and mastering, however, and listeners not interested in the
higher price and challenging availability of the "For the Record" album
can hear most of the same music for standard retail prices on the 2010
follow-up. Still, the O'Riordan tracks are an undeniable highlight of
"For the Record," and while it's understandable why Varèse
probably had to drop them, they are reason alone to spend a few extra
dollars to receive the 2009 set. Either way, it's great to hear
Badalamenti receive this recognition. His musical voice has a tendency
to break hearts in a way no other composer can achieve.
**** @Amazon.com: CD or
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The insert of the 2009 "For the Record" set contains long notes
about the festival, composer, conductor, and orchestra, as well as extensive
photography from the event. The 2010 Varèse album features only a
short editorial comment about the composer and, surprisingly, no information
about the event or recording.