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Review of The Equalizer 2 (Harry Gregson-Williams)
Composed, Co-Conducted, and Produced by:
Harry Gregson-Williams
Co-Conducted by:
Stephanie Economou
Orchestrated by:
Ladd McIntosh
Label and Release Date:
Sony Classical
(July 27th, 2018)
Availability:
Regular U.S. release.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... only if you seek a competent and sufficient supplement to the 2014 score for The Equalizer, the musical equation remaining exactly the same for this sequel.

Avoid it... if you expect Harry Gregson-Williams to even marginally attempt additional emotional development for the concept, his conservatively rendered thriller music as stubborn as the alienation of the titular character.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
The Equalizer 2: (Harry Gregson-Williams) So confident were the studios in producing 2014's The Equalizer that planning for its sequel commenced prior to that movie's debut. The concept's origin on 1970's television had morphed into a darker variant of the same vigilante idea for a 2010's audience, with actor Denzel Washington residing firmly in his comfort zone as the titular former government operative who takes matters into his own hands when the bad guys of the world piss him off. The project was a moderate fiscal success, featuring some morbidly humorous depictions on how to kill nasty customers with standard hardware store merchandise. For The Equalizer 2 in 2018, Washington reprises a character for the first time in his career, this time replacing the hardware store for a killing spree set against the chaos of a coastal hurricane. A recurring character and friend of Washington's Robert McCall is brutally killed by other wayward assassins of the American government, and this event expectedly turns him into full murder mode as he avenges the offense. The character continues to be lonely and sad, ending this tale arguably no more fulfilled than in the first film, and critics were quick to point to the diminishing returns for the concept in general. Still, the formula has its audience, and The Equalizer 2 repeated roughly the same grosses as its predecessor. Of no surprise is composer Harry Gregson-Williams' return in the franchise. His music for the 2014 entry was largely unremarkable, following very stereotypical development for a modern urban thriller without paying any sort of musical tribute to the identity of the 1970's show. It was a minimally sufficient but unmemorable score making use of the genre's usual instrumentation spanning the organic and synthetic realms, though Gregson-Williams did afford McCall a melancholy theme developed without much glimmer of hope by piano and electric cello. Not much changes in the sequel's music, so if you found the previous score to be monotonous and perhaps tedious in its more abrasive potions, then expect more of the same here. In the Filmtracks review of The Equalizer, it was suggested that all Gregson-Williams needed to accomplish to earn his pay was the following: hire a string section and overlay it with thumping electronic loops for the chase sequences, sampled noises for scary synchronization points, slight electric guitar for the element of "don't mess with this asshole" coolness, and piano for the auxiliary character reflection and there you go. No need for anything else.

Indeed, absolutely nothing has changed in Gregson-Williams' ingredients for The Equalizer 2 except for a swapping of the vaguely Russian instrumental tones in the first score with distorted female vocal inflections here placed in the back of the mix, a logical switch given the differences in plot. Disappointingly, there is nothing else of significance altered between the scores, the two playing in total synchrony with each other at every moment. In both works, the environment develops from one of solemn piano lamentation to butt-kicking, rhythmic electric guitar victory, and the same progression occurs in the sequel, the soft reflection of "McCall's Return" emulating "Alone" and the second half of "Top of the Tower" loyally reprising the highlighted rhythmic and electric cello thematic performance presented in "The Equalizer" during the previous score. A solid but redundant summary of the McCall theme closes out The Equalizer 2 in the brief but vaguely satisfying "Who Are You?" Perhaps it should come as no surprise that there is absolutely nowhere for the music to evolve in this franchise, as McCall certainly doesn't. He may be staring at a different view at the end of the sequel, but his alienation and disillusionment remains the same. Gregson-Williams' theme remains moderately attractive and appropriate, but there need to be something more than identical recapitulations of its personality here, even if that difference over time is subtle. The composer struggles to move that emotional bar a notch higher with his own piano performances in "McCall Mourns Susan," and nothing much comes of it. Likewise, the action sequences don't really start to engage until the hurricane sequence at the end, at which point the string section starts to kick up some legitimate dust. Even here, the drama of the storm as a backdrop is not reflected by the limited scope of the score's orchestral presence. (Some brass touches would have been appreciated in these passages rather than harsh synth tones.) But the remaining music is ambient droning outside of "Destroying the Evidence," which offers a peek at some of the rhythmic sophistication desired in the rest of the score. An interesting, simple three-note motif of suspense in that cue goes underdeveloped in others, too. On the plus side, the grating, dissonant synthetic element seems slightly dialed back here, the environment relying a bit more on tonal appeal. Overall, the shorter, 43-minute album for this score is surely sufficient and can be combined by concept enthusiasts with the first movie's soundtrack for a seamless experience. For other listeners, there's little reason to explore this conservatively rendered, often depressing thriller score, as even the thematic highlights offer no memorably unique characteristics.  **
TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 42:35

• 1. McCall's Return (4:39)
• 2. Boston by Day (1:19)
• 3. Boston by Night (1:24)
• 4. Five Stars For Amy (2:31)
• 5. Stories of Sorrow (2:34)
• 6. McCall Mourns Susan (1:56)
• 7. Destroying the Evidence (3:47)
• 8. Five Pounds of Pressure (3:38)
• 9. The Confession (5:49)
• 10. Behind the Bookcase (4:25)
• 11. The Bridge (2:43)
• 12. Storm Hunt (2:49)
• 13. Top of the Tower (3:19)
• 14. "Who Are You?" (1:35)
NOTES & QUOTES:
The insert includes a list of performers but no extra information about the score or film.
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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 The Equalizer 2 are Copyright © 2018, Sony Classical and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 10/24/18 (and not updated significantly since).