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The House With a Clock in its Walls (Nathan Barr) (2018)
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Average: 3 Stars
***** 19 5 Stars
**** 40 4 Stars
*** 51 3 Stars
** 40 2 Stars
* 19 1 Stars
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Composed and Produced by:
Nathan Barr

Conducted by:
Lucas Richman

Orchestrated by:
Penka Kouneva
Jeremy Borum
Larry Rench
2018 Back Lot Album Tracks   ▼
2019 La-La Land Album Tracks   ▼
2018 Back Lot Album Cover Art
2019 La-La Land Album 2 Cover Art
Back Lot Music
(September 21st, 2018)

La-La Land Records
(January 25th, 2019)
The 2018 Back Lot album was a commercial digital release with no high-resolution option. The 2019 La-La Land album is limited to 1,500 copies and available initially for $20 through soundtrack specialty outlets.
No official packaging exists for the 2018 Back Lot album. The 2019 La-La Land album's insert contains notes about both the score and the film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #1,898
Written 11/2/18, Revised 9/2/20
Buy it... if you appreciate diverse fantasy instrumentation emphasizing treble ranges, this score's resurrection of an authentic Wurlitzer organ impressive in parts but leaving a nagging feeling of incompleteness in its dainty mix.

Avoid it... if you demand a resounding fantasy soundscape for this topic, Nathan Barr's affable and spirited emulation of vintage Danny Elfman music engaging in parts but underplayed in much of its length.

The House With a Clock in its Walls: (Nathan Barr) It's remarkable that the 1973 John Bellairs novel on which 2018's movie, The House With a Clock in its Walls, is based had not been fully plundered by studios prior to Eli Roth's version. The children's fantasy story places a ten-year-old boy in the care of an uncle who practices magic in a haunted old mansion. As the boy learns the craft, he, his uncle, and a family friend must thwart the legacy of the house and the doomsday clock hidden within. It's a tale about loss, primarily, sharing some similarities in tone with 1995's Casper and enticing audiences with its light-hearted demeanor and spectacular visual style. The movie was only a moderate critical and fiscal success, satisfying audiences but not living up to its potential. Arguably sharing the same fate is the film's soundtrack, which itself has a long backstory. The score is handled by Roth's longtime collaborator, Nathan Barr, who had not been challenged with a full-fledged opportunity like this during his successful career in the smaller modes of television scoring. Completely aside from any consideration of The House With a Clock in its Walls, Barr, who collects rare and unusual instruments, had managed to purchase and restore the classic Wurlitzer organ that had originally graced the scoring stage at 20th Century Fox and had been utilized by countless film scores from the era of Bernard Herrmann to John Williams and Elliot Goldenthal more recently. After six years of restoration work, Barr built a custom scoring studio with the Wurlitzer as its centerpiece and didn't need to wait long before a perfect film score assignment for the instrument rolled his away. The composer had always aspired to write a large-scale fantasy score akin to the music of John Williams and Danny Elfman, and The House With a Clock in its Walls allowed him to not only explore that genre in full but employ the Wurlitzer at the same time. The instrument itself functions more like a synthesizer than an organ, its immense capability conveyed in over 1,500 pipes and the various methods of air movement through them. The traditional pipe organ sound, of course, was expected for this film because of the on-screen presence of an equivalent. The breathiness of this instrument's authenticity is a major selling point of the score, as truly synthetic alternatives cannot emulate the breathing sounds of the pipes. It is, simply put, a pleasure to hear the fruits of Barr's efforts on behalf of the instrument and the film.

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