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Review of Bolt (John Powell)
Composed and Produced by:
John Powell
Co-Orchestrated and Co-Conducted by:
Pete Anthony
Co-Orchestrated by:
John Ashton Thomas
Randy Kerber
Dave Metzger
Kevin Kliesch
Germaine Franco
Additional Arrangements by:
James McKee Smith
Paul Mounsey
John Ashton Thomas
Performed by:
The Hollywood Studio Symphony
Label and Release Date:
Walt Disney Records
(November 18th, 2008)
Availability:
Regular U.S. release.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... if you have been enamored by each of John Powell's similarly frenetic, parody-style animation scores of the 2000's.

Avoid it... if you're expecting to hear anything dramatically different from Powell's usual, functional but predictable formula for these assignments.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
Bolt: (John Powell) For years, Walt Disney Pictures has aspired to reclaim the thrown of king of animation from Pixar, something the studio didn't even have the success of Dreamworks in at least partially achieving. The trademark 3-D animation and strong, personable stories of the Pixar films has, frankly, left Disney's solo efforts in the dust over the late 1990's and 2000's, and the studio figured its best bet in closing the gap would be to work directly with Pixar's John Lasseter to help resurrect their own, homegrown appeal. The first result of that collaboration is Bolt, the safe financial bet of the animation genre in the 2008 holiday season. The title character is a dog in a television series in which he saves the life of his owner, Miley Cyrus, from the evil Malcolm McDowell (no surprise) in episodes week after week. Unfortunately for the dog, he doesn't realize that his powers are a fiction and, upon accidentally being shipped off across America, he realizes the boundaries of his abilities the hard way. But Bolt is a journey and adversity story of the classic order, and the majority of critics disappointed by the film have cited the predictable and tired plot as its major detraction. Predictability is something that plagues nearly all animated films, and it has a way of diminishing their soundtracks as well. Composer John Powell continues his journey into the animated realm with another Disney assignment here, expanding upon a year that already included the hyperactive kiddie flick Horton Hears a Who!, the action-packed Jumper and Hancock, and the drama Stop-Loss. In many ways, Powell has become a more mainstream equivalent of John Debney, both in quantity and quality. The music that Powell produces so frequently for children's films specifically is always of high enough quality to suffice for the purposes of the pictures, but rarely do any of these scores excel to a level clearly beyond the others.

The question facing film score collectors in the case of Bolt is this: does it simply mirror all of the wholesome parody elements of Powell's previous fluffy children's scores or does it actually break any substantial new ground? Unfortunately, the former applies. Once again, Powell gives us a score of basic quality that simply doesn't distinguish itself with a unique sense of style. Like most of Powell's other attractive and functional scores for the genre, Bolt is tonally pleasant from start to finish. A sensitive title theme for the dog is affectionately introduced in "Meet Bolt" and eventually flourishes with the entire ensemble by the last scenes. As the dog meets auxiliary characters in New York, Powell treats them to ethnic stereotypes that fit their personas well. The trip across America comes with genre-bending shifts as necessary to denote the ambience of the stops along the way. The inevitable rescue and reunion scenes at the end feature Powell's dense and dazzling action material at its most enthusiastic, testing the Los Angeles performers' abilities. Occasional lifts from other well known scores are a product of the parody needs of Bolt. The overall package, while consistent in its relative anonymity, does have some standout cues. The presentation of the title theme in "Meet Bolt" exposes a sensibility that reminds of Jerry Goldsmith's lovely character themes of the early 1990's, especially in the brief performance on piano at the end of the cue. The subsequent "Bolt Transforms" cue contains electronic enhancements for rhythmic purposes that in twenty years may sound as ridiculously outdated as Lalo Schifrin's music from 1970's cop thrillers. The woodwind jazz of "New York" and Mediterranean swing in "Meet Mittens" cross genre boundaries that aren't developed significantly later in the score. The heroic "Where Were You on St. Rhino's Day?" is a bizarre merging of the anthemic tendencies of Hans Zimmer and Patrick Doyle.

The character-performed "Sing-Along Rhino" is an obnoxious vocal performance of the theme song motif for the dog's show. A slight Western touch in the staggering of rhythms is not far behind in the journey. The smoothest thematic development comes in the pretty piano-led "Las Vegas." Powell cranks up the Debney-like orchestral action starting with "Saving Mittens" and culminating in "Rescuing Penny," which bloats the dog's theme out to magnificent proportions for the highlight of the album. That cue unfortunately suffers from a poor transition at its and, abruptly fading the title theme as "A Real Live Superbark" shifts the key awkwardly. The full blown Western adventure tone of "Home at Last" bounces with all the glee that Powell's scores typically exhibit at their conclusions, though Bolt offers a vocal reprise of "Barking at the Moon" (a song heard earlier in the film) that is a shameless pull from the spirit of Goldsmith's Wild Rovers score, even down to the closing progressions and the tone of Jenny Lewis' voice. The two songs in Bolt are decent, but the Miley Cyrus and John Travolta duet was likely among the young singer's reason for receiving the role in this film in the first place. If you don't mind the blatant commercialism, the rock song is non-offensive. The extended version of "Barking at the Moon" is a country piece that lacks any of the charm of the short reprise at the end. The songs and score together fit nicely enough to accomplish everything that Disney was seeking. But despite a rousing title theme, listeners won't hear much to take away from the experience. A short running time for the score (under thirty minutes) is a potential detraction for some, especially given the film's 96-minute running time. There is much admiration to be sent Powell's way for being able to produce scores like the one for Bolt with predictable functionality, but there still hasn't been a truly break-through solo effort in the genre for Powell since his heralded early collaborations with Harry Gregson-Williams. It looks as though, however, he'll have plenty of opportunities in the future.  ***
TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 36:57

• 1. I Thought I Lost You - performed by Miley Cyrus and John Travolta (3:36)
• 2. Barking at the Moon - performed by Jenny Lewis (3:17)
• 3. Meet Bolt (1:49)
• 4. Bolt Transforms (1:00)
• 5. Scooter Chase (2:29)
• 6. New York (1:44)
• 7. Meet Mittens (1:25)
• 8. The RV Park (2:14)
• 9. A Fast Train (2:38)
• 10. Where Were You on St. Rhino's Day? (1:58)
• 11. Sing-Along Rhino (0:42)
• 12. Saving Mittens (1:02)
• 13. House on Wheels (3:07)
• 14. Las Vegas (2:01)
• 15. A Friend in Need (1:13)
• 16. Rescuing Penny (3:09)
• 17. A Real Live Superbark (0:46)
• 18. Unbelievable TV (1:20)
• 19. Home at Last/Barking at the Moon (Reprise) - performed by Jenny Lewis (1:29)
NOTES & QUOTES:
The insert includes no extra information about the score or 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 Bolt are Copyright © 2008, Walt Disney Records and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 11/22/08 (and not updated significantly since).