The score for
Deep Impact would be impressive if
not for the enormous problem that nearly every moment of its lengthy
running time is reminiscent of some Horner score that has come before.
It is one of Horner's more obvious and thus tiresome efforts, for any
listener with a substantial Horner collection will hear really nothing
new in its contents. In many ways, it repackages ideas in the same
fashion
Bicentennial Man would the next year, but not with as
interesting alterations. There are three primary thematic ideas in
Deep Impact, and two of the three are weak. The first of these
elements of continuity is a motif for piano that never really develops
into anything more than a representation of sorrow and grief. Opening
immediately at the outset of "The Wedding," this motif defines the first
few minutes of "A Distant Discovery" and appears throughout. A theme of
stoic resolve is introduced in the first half of "Crucial Rendezvous"
and appears with full ensemble at various moments requiring a sense of
gravity later in the score; this idea goes sadly underutilized. The
third theme to be heard in the film is actually its primary identity.
One of Horner's more compelling themes of the 1990's, the "tragedy and
survival" theme weaves mostly throughout the latter half of the score
and provides wholesale grief and melancholy to several scenes. This
theme flourishes for the first time in the latter half of "The Wedding,"
which is commonly considered the concert suite for the film, before
receiving a lengthy ensemble and choral performance at 6:15 into
"Goodbye and Godspeed." Because so much of the score is required to
brood in conjunction with the mounting suspense on screen,
Deep
Impact isn't one of Horner's more readily enjoyable melodic works.
Outside of the occasional solemn statement of one of the score's three
themes, Horner typically approaches the scenes of discovery and
preparation with a slight hand. The comet itself receives a blast of
percussion as its identity, which may be standard in Horner's templates
but at least isn't as distracting as the terrible electronic rips that
followed the rock in
Meteor. One could hope for a more
interesting idea to represent the approaching menace in either case, but
that could be too much to ask.
As a standalone effort, Horner's
Deep Impact is
sufficient (and occasionally quite rousing) within the context of the
film, but collectors of the composer might be dismayed by the blatant
self-references evident both there and on the album. The action
sequences in
Deep Impact, occupying most of the first half of the
album, borrow heavily from
Apollo 13 and
Titanic. The
general snare, medium range drums, chimes, and violin flurries that
represent danger throughout
Deep Impact are distinct carry-overs
from
Apollo 13. The most engaging action cue, "Our Best Hope,"
however, bursts forth at the 4:00 with a substantial restatement of the
sinking sequences from
Titanic, even down to the same ethereal
synthetic voices and harmonic chord progressions. Some of the more
disjointed action crescendos will remind listeners of the general panic
in parts of
Courage Under Fire. Thematically, Horner's heroic and
patriotic ideas for
Deep Impact, especially when conveyed by
restrained brass, mirror
Apollo 13. The more fluid theme of
tragedy and survival is an extension of numerous Horner themes of times
past (and would influence some in the future, too), going all the way
back to
Cocoon. The cue "Sad News" presents two interesting
snippets that reference previous Horner works; first, at 2:45, Horner
lifts a section of his song theme from
The Land Before Time, and
second, the
Titanic love theme, if only in the progressions, is
heard just after the three-minute mark. Most of the subtle references on
piano in
Deep Impact pull from
To Gillian on Her 37th
Birthday and, to a lesser extent
The Spitfire Grill. For
strictly the purposes of listening enjoyment, the album runs far too
long for a satisfying experience, and Horner's only major extended
thematic sequence for full ensemble accompanies the one performance by a
real choir in "Goodbye and Godspeed." Unless you're willing to dig a bit
deeper into the softer moments of the score, then there's quite little
at face value to reach out and grab you. A mixing discrepancy between the
ambient and full performances often hinders the flow of the listening
experience on album. Compared to the composer's other works,
Deep
Impact is a generally mundane, predictable entry.
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