The most intriguing evolution for Wallfisch in his
approach to
It: Chapter Two is his obvious attempt to increase
the depth of everything, including both the character and horror halves
of his work. The character and location themes, while sometimes
fragmented as needed by the narrative, really flourish in this score.
More interestingly, however, is the shift in the suspense and outright
horror passages, which rely far less on overbearing post-processing
manipulation this time around. As the heroes are now capable adults, the
score represents their battle with more accomplished orchestral mayhem,
sometimes aided by religiously massive choral accompaniment. Yes, there
are still a few horror genre cheap tricks in the music, but Wallfisch
restrains himself to more organic techniques on the whole. In so doing,
his suspense material has found a home someplace between Christopher
Young and Bear McCreary, with extraordinary intelligence defining
moments that are often too abrasive to appreciate alone on album.
Wallfisch and McCreary are, in this era, providing intellectually
fascinating suspense music, fulfilling a role that John Ottman was once
thought to occupy in the late 1990's. In the case of Wallfisch in
particular, these lyrical horror scores often sound magnificent due to
really compelling recording qualities. It's not often you can describe a
horror score as "lush," but the broad soundscape and perfect amount of
reverb in these mixes supplies a feeling of authentic and expansive
connection with the listener that is all-too-absent from most
contemporary film score recordings. In short,
It: Chapter Two
once again sounds fantastic, even if the shrill violins, violent flutes,
and blasting brass are obnoxious in their strident atonality. The
diminishment of electronic manipulation has led to cues like "Festival
Pursuit" and "Neibolt Escape" that are quite impressive without obvious
synthetic involvement. (Incidentally, the former cue really reminds of
McCreary's
The Cloverfield Paradox in its chugging strings and
the latter's conclusion raises memories of Ottman's
The Usual
Suspects with its choral resonance and descending piano line). The
horror sequences still contain the insufferable Pennywise vocal and
instrumental techniques ("Come Home" and "Henry Bowers"), and Wallfisch
reuses the children's recordings of an old English nursery rhyme from
the previous score in several cues. While somewhat more organic, don't
expect much of this material to be any more palatable than it was in the
prior score.
The quantity and development of themes by Wallfisch for
It: Chapter Two is admirable, though there still isn't any single
thematic identity that can tie the entire concept together for the
mainstream. The light waltz for the town of Derry is the most likely
candidate, and it returns whimsically on piano in "27 Years Later" and
"The Clubhouse." Aside from experiencing greater gravity in "The
Barrens," the idea is more often suppressed in the score and isn't a
strong presence in concluding scenes. The theme for the original boy of
the story, "Georgie," receives a crucial reprise in the gorgeous "Silver
Bullet." The children's bonding theme from the first film, tied mostly
to the Beverly character, is explored further in "Beverly Escapes" and
the opening of "Your Hair is Winter Fire" before it evolves into
representing the Stan character's influence in "Bar Mitzvah" and "Stan's
Letter." The ascending figures of this theme also form the basis for a
motif of conclusion for the score in "You're All Grown Up" and "Nothing
Lasts Forever" that is translated into a gripping representation of
grand mystery in "Back to Neibolt." The most interesting new theme in
this score exists for the ritual meant to exorcize Pennywise once and
for all. Heard fully in apocalyptic choral glory in "The Ritual of
Chüd," this theme is resolved in "You're All Grown Up" as the heroes
dispatch the evil alien. None of these motific associations is
blindingly obvious, though, which may bother some listeners. As such, if
you're not sympathetic to the gore of the film, then approaching
It:
Chapter Two solely from the perspective of a film music collector
may leave you appreciating the atmospheric personality of the score and
its superior recording more than its narrative. The trio of closing cues
is quite redemptive, but it doesn't provide the Derry theme or any other
overarching franchise identity a distinct and definitive conclusion
outside of wink and nod references in "Goodbye." The understatement by
Wallfisch is intentional, surely, as is the slightly modern electronic
backing, but there's a sense of catharsis that is somewhat missing.
Still, the music on the whole is a noteworthy achievement and an
improvement on the prior score, which itself was a more than decent
entry in the genre. The album release is once again long. At 103
minutes, there is more than twenty minutes of top-notch lyrical suspense
material here to add to similar sequences from
It and
The Cure
for Wellness for a fantastic compilation. Note that these generous
Wallfisch albums tend to go out of print on CD within a year or two, so
you should not hesitate to appreciate a lossless presentation of this
strong genre entry sooner rather than later.
**** @Amazon.com: CD or
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