If the destruction of the music's flow during the editing
process doesn't bother you in regards to the
Die Another Day
score, then perhaps the imbalance between ensemble and synth array will
put you over the edge. Arnold's delicate, but successful balance between
Barry's traditional, orchestral jazz and his own electronica and techno
tendencies in
Tomorrow Never Dies is lost to the relentless
slashing of the electronic programming here. He simply cannot shake the
constant electronic looping for very long, and whenever he begins to
adopt a purely Barry-like progression of strings or brass, the cue is
cut short by electronic laser sounds or the mad pounding of tinny drum
pad emulations. Absent from this score are some of the five or six
minute juggernaut cues of orchestral and electronic mastery that Arnold
has produced for his other scores in the franchise. Even the lengthier
action sequences in this film switch stylistic genres of music with such
frequency the listener can have difficulty adapting. A few cases of temp
track influences contribute to this problem, especially in the lengthy
finale sequence aboard the plane. The few moments of more low key
character building, such as the Jinx-related cues heard during her
introductory scenes, show hints of more readily accessible and engaging
material, but Arnold never unleashes the full orchestra in these moments
until the very last cue. In terms of creativity in its instrumentation
and rhythms, the score is, in a word, uninspired. It is evidence of a
composer simply going through the motions, and it's not surprising that
many critics and fans were calling for a new composer to accompany the
reboot of the franchise after Brosnan declined to return for the money
offered. Arnold did, to his credit, insert a monumentally mixed choral
sound into
Die Another Day, a rarity for the franchise. The full,
male choral performances are an interesting and perhaps under-explored
method of handling a master villain, though critics still cite an
over-reliance on
Stargate-like sounds in the composer's career.
The lengthy "Antonov" offers a solo female voice as well as an ensemble
chorale, and these occasionally magnificent moments save the score from
being a total waste. A cimbalom-like plucked autoharp is a nicely exotic
touch for one of the villains, and a few stylistic references to Barry's
material for
On Her Majesty's Secret Service (descending baseline
in action cues) and
You Only Live Twice (flowery string romance
for the Jinx theme) are cool, but usually lost in the overall
equation.
Thematically, despite introducing two recurring major
themes,
Die Another Day seems like a one-dimensional score
because of Arnold's almost constant exploration of his main theme
loosely tied, perhaps by coincidence, to Madonna's song. This theme
makes a compelling appearance during the prisoner exchange sequence and
is woven into the fabric of many of the subsequent action cues. Lighter
shades are rare but outstanding when explored, including the fuller
secondary lines exposed beautifully by piano and other softer performers
in "Peaceful Fountains of Desire" and "A Touch of Frost." In its most
ominous applications, mostly in relation to the villains, the theme
faintly foreshadows the deep brass treatment that Arnold would provide
for the Quantum organization a few films later in the franchise. The
score's most interesting specialty instruments are devoted to the
villains, including the use of the accelerating autoharp motif for the
North Koreans. The composer also offers the Norman theme a significant
roll in
Die Another Day, ranging in incarnation from loyal solo
electric guitar strumming to wildly frenetic techno variations. Both
this classic theme and the main theme for the film were arranged into an
intolerable electronic mess for a rejected end credits suite, "James
Bond Will Return," which seems like mostly a regurgitation of the
obnoxious parts of "Hovercraft Chase" repackaged a second time. A
heavily Barry-like, descending string theme for Jinx, introduced in
"Jinx Jordan" and "Jinx & James" before mostly disappearing until "Going
Down Together" at the end, is not as well adapted into the mass of the
score's material, diminishing her character's impact on the music. A few
other secondary themes, some of which quite noble in intent, peek
through in
Die Another Day, sometimes mingling with themes
established by Arnold in previous films. The bass plucking from the
start of the
Goldeneye song is reprised. A descending piano motif
for danger carries over to late action cues. The main theme for
Tomorrow Never Dies is heard on subdued horn at 1:35 into "Kiss
of Life" as a clever reference to Bond's jeopardized career. The pretty
love theme from
The World is Not Enough, reduced to only its
secondary, ascendant phrasing to eliminate that movie's main theme from
it, is heard in this score's final two cues, especially wrapping the
Moneypenny story arc well. Arnold's massive, general villain theme from
the prior two scores returns, exploding at the end of the full version
of "On the Beach" and heard several times thereafter for moments when
villains are shown in their fully overblown, badass mode.
Joining the references to other Brosnan-era scores in the
music for
Die Another Day are several nods to Barry's general
style at specific points, including the well known snare rips that Barry
loved to use while the villains were describing their nasty plans and
the descending baseline of
On Her Majesty's Secret Service under
some of the main theme performances. The problem with these subtle
references, however, is that they were drowned out in the film and
mostly missing from the woeful commercial album released at the time of
the film's debut. Both
Tomorrow Never Dies and
The World is
Not Enough were badly represented by their initial commercial album
offerings. In the case of the latter score, no bootleg was quickly
forthcoming to appease angry collectors. The same was not the case with
Die Another Day, which was spread around in 2-CD bootleg format
within just a few years of its recording. In 2017, roughly the same
film-order presentation of the score as heard on the bootleg was cleaned
up and offered officially by La-La Land Records, which also added a
variety of alternate mixes to its product. The two previous Bond scores
really did have significant, lengthy, and superior material missing from
their initial commercial albums. While the double-CD presentations of
Die Another Day will offer some material that will clear up
Arnold's thematic intents and include some of the less irritating action
material, they really don't improve the appeal of the score by great
margins. There are interesting, short cues that will be worthy of an
Arnold/Bond compilation, but nothing of absolute necessity. The "Kiss of
Life" cue, which includes the keen
Tomorrow Never Dies reference,
builds off of the score's earliest suspense moments with a few minutes
of melodramatic conversational backing. The main theme's elegant
translations onto solo piano in "Peaceful Fountains of Desire" and "A
Touch of Frost" are required listening. The strong action cue "Jinx,
James, and Genes" contains outstanding fragmentary development of the
main theme against the best homage to
On Her Majesty's Secret
Service and finishes with a great performance on trumpets of
Norman's theme at the end; this cue, from 1:42 onward, is undeniably
attractive and often drops the electronic loops to leave the ensemble
alone. A traditional guitar performance of the Norman theme in "Gustav
Graves' Grand Entrance" is interrupted by a terrible, stuttering
performance of Arnold's recurrent villain's theme, this time overwhelmed
by frantic overlays in this performance that are totally ridiculous and
unnecessary.
The cue for Madonna's conveniently sleeveless cameo in
Die Another Day is surprisingly lush and contains no eye-winking
hints of the song. Both "Blades" (alternately "Sword Fight") and
"Bond Gets the Key" use the main theme extensively, the former with
the usual wailing brass and the latter with the autoharp. Arnold gets
cute with "Virtual Reality," ending the cue with an intentional
shutdown of declining pitch and one last guitar strum to show a sense of
humor. It's funny but unlistenable. The subsequent and short "The
Vanish" features an ultra cool blend of the orchestra and techno
elements performing the Norman theme. The glory of
Goldfinger's
wailing brass figures explodes in the shamelessly flamboyant "Bond Goes
to Iceland." The major action piece missing from the original
commercial album is "Ice Palace Car Chase," a generic blend of the
difficult action material heard before (and again in "Switchblades").
All the albums unfortunately include the preceding "Iced Inc.," which
could have been used as a sonic torture device at government detention
camps worldwide. The concluding, symphony-only action cue, "Antonov
Gets It" (mislabeled "Going Down Together" on the bootleg)
deconstructs the recurring villain motif and concludes with a snazzy
tribute to the Norman theme. That classic tune is offered on both albums
in two versions of "Wheelchair Access," the rejected one with tapped
cymbal at the outset a clearly superior recording. The swagger of this
cue is saturating, fragments of the main theme calling out on flutes and
trumpets like a siren against Bond's confident coolness. The longer
albums will also please listeners seeking sentimental endings, the love
theme from
The World is Not Enough finally represented in the
longing "Moneypenny Gets It" and Bond's affair with Jinx in "Going
Down Together" (alternately "Diamonds") with true
You Only Live
Twice intentions. The La-La Land product also features a number of
other alternate takes, highlighted by a smoother conclusion to the
romantic "Peaceful Fountains of Desire" and a pair of softer cues with
the already-minimal synthetic elements removed. It's unfortunate that
some of the action cues could not have been featured with the loops
stripped. Hearing a major cue like "Ice Palace Car Chase," for
instance, with the synthetic elements reduced by 50% to 75% in the mix
would have been a tremendous treat to hear, and there was room on the
album for at least one such inclusion. The remaining film versions of
the cues on the La-La Land album are moderately interesting by
comparison but certainly not vital.
Overall, the expanded presentations available for
Arnold's
Die Another Day are interesting in the whole and
redemptive to some degree, but they ultimately expose the reality that
the music is still the weakest of the composer's five consecutive Bond
scores. The commercial product remains a clearly miserable experience to
suffer, however. Several aspects of the album are unsavory, starting
with the inconsistent mix of the bass elements from track to track, with
gain levels also not normalized. A comparison with the 2017 expanded set
will reveal very different sound quality in certain cues as compared to
the 2002 original, and it may be of interest to die-hard fans that even
the bootleg contains a unique and sometimes superior sound quality. In
terms of contents, there are pieces of the commercial album that are
almost laughable in the context of a Bond franchise that had seen better
times. The Paul Oakenfold remix of the classic Bond theme is sadly
predictable and offers nothing of substance. There is the absence of any
conclusive end credits song or suite on the product. The Cuban-flavored
source cues are barely tolerable; they were rolled into a distinct,
alternate version for that album whereas the actual cues heard in the
film waited for the longer albums. The consistently jarring stutter-step
editing in the early cues will end the listening experience for some
enthusiasts. The album is surprisingly brief, continuing a trend at the
time of shorter albums for each successive Bond film. But it did contain
Madonna's song, which is absent from the 2017 set for licensing reasons.
While such omissions are usually unforgivable, the loss of that song is
a benefit here; there's a reason why people stand around texting and
journey to the lines at the toilets whenever that particular song begins
during Madonna's concerts. Its total disregard for the franchise's
heritage and its unlistenable editing is a waste of Madonna's mature
voice and reduces her to an inflective tone as mousy as that of her hits
of the mid-1980's. In its condensed presentation, and to a lesser extent
on the longer albums, this score has no cinematic sweep, no consistent
action material worthy of the character, and no melodic love theme to
mark the film's place in the rich history of Bond music. It is a
sickening listening experience for which
Tomorrow Never Dies is
the only antidote and, fortunately, the pursuit of a strikingly modern
and edgy attitude for the Bond songs and scores was finally balanced
peacefully in the subsequent
Casino Royale. When soundtracks need
an antidote, you know it's time for them to die on any day.
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