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Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (Lorne Balfe/Various) (2023)
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Average: 3.07 Stars
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Fuck Lorne Balfe and fuck this website
RedTower3 - May 9, 2023, at 8:33 p.m.
1 comment  (934 views)
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Composed and Produced by:

Conducted by:
Peter Rotter

Co-Orchestrated and Additional Music by:
Adam Price

Co-Orchestrated by:
Harry Brokensha
James Yan
Aaron King
Jack Mackenzie

Additional Music and Arrangements by:
Brandon Campbell
Stuart Thomas
Peter Adams
Steven Davis
Joshua Pacey
Kevin Blumenfeld
Kevin Riepl
Gabriel Churnick
Regular Album Tracks   ▼
"Book of the Bard" Album Tracks   ▼
"Dungeon Master's Jukebox" Album Tracks   ▼
Regular Album Album Cover Art
"Book of the Bard" Album 2 Cover Art
"Dungeon Master's Jukebox" Album 3 Cover Art
Decca Records/Mercury Classics
(March 31st, 2023)

Paramount Music
("Book of the Bard")
(June 23rd, 2023)

Mercury Classics
("Dungeon Master's Jukebox")
(July 28th, 2023)
The regular album is a standard commercial release with belated digital, CD, and vinyl options. The supplemental albums, "Book of the Bard" and "The Dungeon Master's Jukebox," were released digitally a few months later. High resolutions digital options were available for all three.
The inserts of the physical albums include no extra information about the score or film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #1,905
Written 4/8/23, Revised 11/28/23
Buy it... if Celtic lyricism has a place for you in any genre, Lorne Balfe and his team supplying lovely melodic highlights in this otherwise pedestrian action score.

Avoid it... if you don't need proof that nine ghostwriters and arrangers, five orchestrators, and six music editors might struggle to maintain a satisfying personality and narrative in a film's music.

Balfe
Balfe
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves: (Lorne Balfe/Various) Since its invention in the 1970's, the "Dungeons & Dragons" role play game has helped craft definitions of modern geekdom and influenced countless other concepts on screens big and small. After a series of films inspired by the game failed to take hold in the 2000's, the property languished in courtrooms as entities fought over its rights. Eventually, the suitors came together to solve these legal woes, and development of a new reboot yielded the 2023 movie, Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves. Critically acclaimed, the film struggled to gain a foothold with audiences beyond young males, the hordes of geeks in the world failing to generate the expected response in theatres. The humor and careful loyalty to the source material were widely praised, the story's generally campy tone seeing a variety of characters teaming together to use wit, bravery, and magic to steal artifacts necessary to defeat the villains of the imaginary land. The Middle Earth vibes from The Lord of the Rings are unmistakable, but along with hearty character profiles comes funny plot devices that keep Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves far lighter on its feet. Many members of the crew on the film were professed lovers of the original concept, and one such loyal player was composer Lorne Balfe. The immensely busy Balfe professed that he was thrilled about the chance to work on this film. That didn't stop him, however, from sharing the experience with an absolute army of collaborators to carry much of the load. Between nine ghostwriters and arrangers, five orchestrators, and six music editors, Balfe's adherence to his standard methods of producing scores more than truly composing them doesn't indicate that Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves was a particular labor of love for him personally. Not surprisingly, the resulting score sounds like the usual combination of a barely coherent thematic narrative and unique moments that are clearly evidence of too many cooks in the kitchen. Luckily, the work is saved by its strangely applied Celtic flavor and a handful of lovely cues for character development.

At its core, the music for Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves is a typical Remote Control Productions entry of Hans Zimmer influence with Celtic elements like whistles, bagpipes, and light voices on the lyrically ethnic side balanced by heavy percussion, domineering chorus, and synthetic embellishments. At times, the Celtic portions and other related melodic passages are so lovely that they cannot be disregarded. At other times, the Lorne Balfe of Ambulance and Luther: The Fallen Sun decides to lay waste to an action cue and challenge your tolerance for sheer noise. The former grouping is concentrated in the first third of the score but does sprinkle highlights throughout the work. This softly alluring, lyrical material strives to combine Howard Shore's The Lord of the Rings trilogy with John Powell's How to train Your Dragon trilogy in its handling of tonally easy fantasy expressions for orchestra and choir. The triumphs of this emulation are numerous, led by "Finding Zia," "Thick as Thieves," "Journey to Neverwinter," "Forge Begins," "Be Gone," the latter halves of "Owl Bear" and "Wizardry," "Swim to the Beach," "Remembering You," "A Red Wizard's Blade," and "The Reawakening." The sensitivity and beauty of moments in these cues rival the prettiest character moments of a Balfe score like Home. Countering these attractions, however, are times when the composer's team infuse the worst of Balfe's suspense and action techniques into the work. The stereotypical sinking bass effect makes eyes roll in the middle of "Korrin's Keep." Electronic textures and pitch manipulation emerge abrasively in "The Underdark," though these techniques are orchestrated better and sound more natural in "Unlock the Helmet." The worst Balfe thriller effects ruin the narrative in the awful "The Ruckus," and yelled and whispered vocals over terrible electronics in "Into the Castle" make this cue completely unlistenable. Most of "The Maze" and parts of "Beneath the Maze" are contain totally generic action muck, and grating Terminator-appropriate tones at the start of "Final Battle" lead to whining pitch slurs at the cue's end. These modern influences become increasingly prevalent as the score progresses, only yielding for the final seven minutes of mostly orchestral resolution.

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