CLOSE WINDOW
FILMTRACKS.COM
PRINTER-FRIENDLY VIEW
Filmtracks Logo
Review of Crash (Mark Isham)
Composed, Performed, and Produced by:
Mark Isham
Label and Release Date:
Superb Records
(June 7th, 2005)
Availability:
Regular U.S. release. A score-only re-issue with the same cover (minus the two songs at the end) came from Lionsgate in 2009.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... if you prefer to use your film music to establish a general mood or environment, in which case the lyrical half of Crash will function as well as any new age album in existence.

Avoid it... if you're looking for sharp subtlety in construct and development in this score, because it generally connects the disparate characters of the story without really emphasizing any individual, distinguishing characteristics.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
Crash: (Mark Isham) Television director Paul Haggis struck gold with his transition to directing for the big screen, and he can thank his talents at also writing strong screenplays for that success. His 2004 arthouse film Crash, released in full to theatres in 2005 due its immense popularity, was a rare and difficult ensemble picture, using a powerful story and a collection of capable, but not all A-list actors to breathe life into a race-related tale. Haggis uses the trick of connecting several disparate characters together by one auto accident, but in so doing exposes each of their racial prejudices and allows them to transcend those downsides through positive actions later in the narrative. The tone of the story refrains from preaching, an important aspect of the production that allowed race relations in a somewhat fantasy-land form of Los Angeles to be explored without pounding a message into audiences. The film performed soundly at major awards ceremonies, culminating in its surprising top Oscar win, rewarding Haggis for the extremely intelligent handling of the topic. The film had no relation to a high-profile 1996 picture that had reduced the concept of a car crash to the level of a sexual fetish, but Haggis' Crash did inspire a poorly adapted television series three years later that was not long to survive. The director did not have much money with which to augment his film with a substantial score, though he presented the challenge of another low budget assignment to his friend and collaborator, Mark Isham, who had for years written music for Haggis' television productions. Likewise, an original song by Bird York was written for the film's pivotal final scene. The latter was nominated for an Oscar despite being somewhat distracting (and disconnected from Isham's score) in the film, though it was Isham's contribution that brought the most to the table. The composer, with full knowledge of the challenges presented by such minimally funded assignments, returned to his roots for Crash, utilizing a combination of electronically keyboarded textures (sometimes raw in the rendering) and a solo female operatic voice to perform the entirety of the score. In retrospect, Isham remains proud of his achievement for Crash, correctly assessing his success in offering the film a flowing musical personality that brings an overarching sense of cohesion to the many unrelated characters and events on screen, though he was ultimately brushed aside amongst the plethora of awards nominations afforded the film.

Because of the film's somewhat hazy and unrealistic environment (outside of the character traits that are obviously the focus), Isham's music conveys the same almost other-worldly atmosphere. His score solely functions as sonic wallpaper, but within that type of application of film music, Crash perhaps makes the best of it. It doesn't start out promisingly, however, with the first three cues meandering in a dull soundscape of drab synthetics that reflects the urban drama techniques of Cliff Martinez. In the center section of the score, however, Isham introduces the uncredited operatic vocal performances that accompany the formation of the score's lyrical heart. The theme performed by this singer and emulated by Isham on the keyboards is so elongated and nebulous in its smooth progressions that you won't easily recall it after the score's conclusion, but as a counterweight to the score's completely faceless other half, it's a welcome, almost new age idea. The two performers provide the film its most redemptive spirit in "Flames" and "Sense of Touch," both of which using the non-English vocals in lovely harmony with simple electronic backing that doesn't feature a resounding bass region but does suffice to give the singing some depth. In "Flames," there is an interesting shift of the vocals from a Middle-Eastern flavor to its more natural Celtic tone, further muddying the multicultural examinations on screen. Along those lines, Isham's choice not to employ distant, stereotypical African American musical representations in the score (or even hint at them) is perhaps an opportunity lost. In between the vocal performances in the second half of the score are some of the score's most annoying portions, including a "Sirens" cue that accelerates the pace and provides percussion and harsh metallic effects that do little to raise the blood pressure. On the other hand, the pretty keyboarding in "A Really Good Cloak" sounds like a distant relative of Vangelis' style of the previous decade, and when these sounds are joined by the vocalist, there is a low-key hint of Graeme Revell's Red Planet to be heard. Ultimately, there is fifteen minutes of top notch new age material to be heard in the score for Crash, and if you appreciate solitary expressions of beauty, then this score will relax you to no end. A lack of emphasized narrative development in the music, however, leaves the album experience as one less satisfying than the music's presence in the film. The York song, as mentioned previously, was a poor choice for its scene, and the Stereophonics song to close the album shifts the tone far too drastically in a positive direction. A score-only re-issue came from Lionsgate in 2009. This is a morbid listening experience for all but the most somber, melodramatic of types.
  • Music as Written for Film: ****
  • Music as Heard on Album: ***
  • Overall: ***

TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 58:34

• 1. Crash (3:21)
• 2. Go Forth My Son (0:57)
• 3. Hands in Plain Sight (3:48)
• 4. ...Safe Now (1:03)
• 5. No Such Things as Monsters (3:59)
• 6. Find My Baby (4:23)
• 7. Negligence (2:56)
• 8. Flames (7:59)
• 9. Siren (4:41)
• 10. A Really Good Cloak (3:28)
• 11. A Harsh Warning (2:51)
• 12. Saint Christopher (1:55)
• 13. Sense of Touch (6:44)
• 14. In the Deep - performed by Bird York (5:55)
• 15. Maybe Tomorrow - performed by Stereophonics (4:34)
NOTES & QUOTES:
The insert includes notes from both the director and composer about the score.
Copyright © 2009-2024, Filmtracks Publications. All rights reserved.
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 Crash are Copyright © 2005, Superb Records and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 9/12/09 (and not updated significantly since).