By challenging audiences with such a difficult and
unconventional score for
Dragonslayer, North was simply driving a
wedge further into the divide between those who didn't appreciate the
film's downbeat, cold demeanor and those who found it to be a refreshing
change. Disappointing box office numbers eventually proved that the
latter crowd wasn't enough to justify the experiment. For a myriad of
reasons,
Dragonslayer is a nearly impossible score to review
because of precisely that divide between mainstream expectations and
intellectual deviation. On top of that, you have a circumstance in which
North's fluffier material (upbeat scherzos and whining string romance)
was dialed out of the film and sometimes replaced with his challenging
avant-garde material from other scenes. Either way you look at it,
there's little doubt that the audience for
Dragonslayer and
especially its score is very limited, and whether you fall in the "love"
or "hate" categories in response to North's approach, it's hard not to
recognize that the score was, outside of the context of intellectual
appreciation, a conceptual misfire to match that of the film. First and
foremost among the arguable detriments of
Dragonslayer is North's
set of themes, which is never stated with the kind of clarity necessary
to define locations or characters. As in many of his other scores, he
takes a sufficiently harmonious melody and masks it behind a layer of
dissonance meant, perhaps, to make it sound scary or foggy, as it always
appeared to be outdoors in the Dark Ages. Don't expect a harmonious
result from the merging of his bass and treble lines. Thus, it takes two
or three listens to the score separated from the film before you can
actually identify each of North's five distinct thematic ideas. And they
are certainly there, despite their shrouded nature in the picture.
Because of its tone, the brass theme for the dragon, heard immediately
at the outset, is perhaps the most effective, though the tepid love
theme for the two leads offers some brief moments of standard woodwind
beauty. Even in these themes, both in the film and on album, North's
score plays like a mass of orchestral noise, often with several
different sections performing different "polyphonic" tangents, sometimes
mimicking an ensemble warming up, with action sequences that bludgeon
the listener rather than entertain or exhilarate.
The application of many of these troubling cues to
Dragonslayer is an "in your face" saturation of the soundscape,
causing North to distract the viewer from some scenes rather than
tastefully compliment them. The "dissonance by default" method of
scoring here simply wasn't necessary to yield the kind of response
sought by this production. For those who defend
Dragonslayer to
no end, it's difficult to qualify North's theme for the amulet, which
structurally is fine but is enunciated with such dainty, ridiculous
instrumental tones that it's no wonder the filmmakers were inclined to
remove such material from the film. From the scherzo in "Forest Romp" to
the entirety of the finale and end credits merging of the amulet theme
with the primary love theme, North writes material suitable for a 1960's
backyard romantic comedy. It's disgracefully out of place, with a plucky
personality of harpsichord, violins, metallic percussion, and high
woodwinds that was better suited for the composer's nature documentary
assignments than a swords and sorcery film. A few exceptions from the
otherwise tiring, abrasive, and awkward listening experience include
"Landslide," with a snippet of John Williams string rhythms at 2:00, and
fantastic timpani usage in "Tyrian and Galen Fight." While distractingly
silly, the spirited, upbeat, and rejected chase cue in "Galen's Escape"
and more lyrical presentation with fluttering woodwinds and cheery
percussion in the aforementioned finale are at least a break from the
gloom and doom. But moments like the terrible dissonance in "The
Lottery," imitating the shrieking of a female voice over tolling bell,
cause
Dragonslayer to annoy more often than not. In its
addressing of synchronization points, the score completely misses the
mark, playing like an extended, aloof classical concert piece rather
than a film score with a coherent narrative. Distinct cue changes are
rare, thematic statements are often veiled, and inconsistent pacing in
the score fails to allow the action sequences to really stir up much
excitement. This final characteristic isn't surprising given North's
history of composition outside of film scores. In the end, you don't
hear
Dragonslayer discussed much, if at all, in debates about the
great sword and sorcery scores of the 1980's, and that's due to the
score's inability and/or refusal to fit into the basic parameters of the
genre outside of its most basic orchestral employment.
On album,
Dragonslayer frustrated listeners for
three decades. It was originally released on an LP record with the
unbelievably ridiculous statement: "never to be re-released in any
medium." Well, in 1990, Soundtrack Collector's Special Editions (SCSE)
made fools of whoever wrote that statement by releasing the score on CD
as the third of their original five products of the early 1990's. While
purists in the soundtrack production industry long lambasted the SCSE
releases for being nothing more than professionally pressed bootlegs,
collectors didn't really care. Limited originally to 2,000 copies,
another 750 were pressed by SCSE shortly thereafter as a special but
identical "Gold Edition" of the product. All versions from SCSE
contained badly mislabeled tracks, with the listings on the CDs
completely erroneous and useless when matched to the music. These long
expensive products were eventually supplanted by an expanded album from
La-La Land Records in 2010 that the label made a fuss about being "the
first official release" of the score. Regardless of the SCSE/bootleg
debate, the La-La Land product, limited itself to 3,000 copies, is a
fine presentation of the music, offering very satisfying sound quality
with a tasteful amount of reverb that doesn't drown out the precise
individual performances by the London ensemble. A few alternate and
source cues finish off a corrected presentation of the score proper. One
listen to North's disastrous, alternate "Main Title" cue at the very end
of that album, however, with the obnoxiously bouncing amulet theme in
the treble originally set to open the story, is clear proof alone that
North was hopelessly lost in this genre. With the 2010 product selling
out, the label re-pressed another 2,000 copies of the same presentation
in 2021 for the film's 40th anniversary. Overall, this score is a
stylistic mess that happens to enjoy a very limited but highly devoted
following of intellectual listeners, and despite the genuine size and
scope of North's music, the veteran failed to grasp the necessary
connection points of the genre and wrote an inappropriate and
unsatisfying score for the picture. If you seek a truly timeless,
avant-garde fantasy score that actually works, try Elliot Goldenthal's
vastly superior but equally intellectually stimulating
Final Fantasy:
The Spirits Within. That score has a balance of conventional, linear
gravity and unusual instrumental structures that exposes North's
Dragonslayer as both misguided and badly dated.
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