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Legend (Jerry Goldsmith) (1985)
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Average: 3.2 Stars
***** 239 5 Stars
**** 241 4 Stars
*** 243 3 Stars
** 201 2 Stars
* 150 1 Stars
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Goblins
Sam - June 26, 2022, at 9:44 a.m.
1 comment  (411 views)
One more of Goldsmith's masterpieces
Richard Kleiner - October 17, 2010, at 12:03 a.m.
1 comment  (2058 views)
An addictive masterpiece... *NM*
I was scepticle at first - August 13, 2009, at 3:08 p.m.
1 comment  (2256 views)
This is a true epic fantasy score!
C.J. - March 12, 2007, at 9:01 p.m.
1 comment  (3293 views)
Extraordinary score!
Rende - January 19, 2007, at 12:48 p.m.
1 comment  (2870 views)
Unavoidable To Listen
Sheridan - April 17, 2006, at 6:10 a.m.
1 comment  (3523 views)
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Composed, Conducted, and Produced by:

Performed by:
The National Philharmonic Orchestra

Lyrics by:
John Bettis
Audio Samples   ▼
1986 Filmtrax Album Tracks   ▼
1992/2002 Silva Albums Tracks   ▼
2021 Music Box Album Tracks   ▼
1986 Filmtrax Album Cover Art
1992 Silva Screen Album 2 Cover Art
2002 Silva Screen Album 3 Cover Art
2021 Music Box Album 4 Cover Art
Filmtrax PLC (Germany)
(1986)

Silva Screen
(April 13th, 1992)

Silva America
(May 7th, 2002)

Music Box Records
(October 25th, 2021)
The 1986 Filmtrax album from Germany was long difficult to find outside of Europe. The 1992 Silva album remained long available and was still available in stores upon the arrival of the 2002 album, which is a regular commercial release. The 2021 Music Box set is limited to 2,500 copies and available initially through soundtrack specialty outlets for $25.
The 1986 Filmtrax album has sparse packaging, but both Silva albums and the 2021 Music Box set offer extensive information about the film and score.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #300
Written 3/15/97, Revised 1/10/22
Buy it... if you want to hear a fascinating and melodic venture by Jerry Goldsmith that remains one his most outlandishly stylish and effective integrations of synthesized and symphonic elements.

Avoid it... if you prefer Tangerine Dream's less striking music for the American release of the film despite the fact that Goldsmith's partially rejected work remains extremely memorable in its own hybrid fantasy rendering.

Goldsmith
Goldsmith
Legend: (Jerry Goldsmith) If film score disasters could be ranked on a top ten list, then Legend would exist somewhere near the top of it. Director Ridley Scott was coming off of two rather unpleasant films in the middle of the 1980's, Alien and Blade Runner, and had decided to create an uplifting fantasy film targeted towards families. The convoluted story conveyed all the genre staples of the best alternate worlds, with incredible creatures, demonic villains, and a sappy love story. With a young Tom Cruise in the lead role and Tim Curry as the demon opposing him, the tone of Scott's Legend somehow darkened considerably during its shooting, leaving its original audience behind. Plagued by production cuts, stage fires, and studio meddling, the movie turned out to be just as much of a nightmare for the director as it would be for composer Jerry Goldsmith. The veteran composer had been less than happy with his experience working on Alien with Scott, but he was favored heavily by the film's studio and additionally won over by the fantasy script and was eagerly brought in on Legend's pre-production to assist in adapting John Bettis' lyrics into source-like songs that would fit into appropriate points during the film and were helpful to have in hand during filming. Goldsmith had just completed the synthetically jarring music for Runaway, and he thankfully utilized his newly developed array of synthesizers in a much more harmonious fashion with a London orchestra and choir for Legend. The massive score was destined to suffer the same fate as Scott's entire film, however, with the earlier, European release cut significantly and arbitrarily in length. Goldsmith's score experienced the same ill fate. With more than forty minutes of his music removed from various places in the project, including a huge chunk of half an hour in the middle of the narrative, Goldsmith's score was ultimately jumbled and out of place in that international cut of the movie, with several astonishingly bizarre temp cues, including music from his own score for Psycho II, even remaining in the final cut of the film.

After he initially lauded the score for Legend as among his best ever in the genre, Goldsmith's frustration with this process was significant. Not only had Scott demanded constant, annoying changes to cues after they were recorded, but he had no advance warning that his music would be largely rejected. All of the most drastic changes came after he had been paid and left the project for greener pastures, including his famous effort for Hoosiers the following year. Like many others, Goldsmith had his scores mutilated or rejected altogether on multiple occasions, so the event really was not considered earth shattering at the time. Only in retrospect, with the help of a director's cut DVD that revisited copies of the original master tapes for the score, has the situation been deemed tragic. Through careful reconstruction, the Silva Screen label has, over the years, treated Goldsmith's score with great care, reconstituting most of its cues on multiple releases. While collectors of the composer's works assume that his music would have been better suited for the picture in its original arrangements, this is a case in which even a casual observer could also say the same. Goldsmith's score is lyrical and thematically beautiful, a relative rarity at a time in his career when he was using his music in a variety of more abrasive applications. Sensitive in its attitude and fantastically evocative in its use of melody to soften the characters at the heart of the faerie tale, his music for Legend is rich with texture and choral majesty. The thematic battle between good and evil is masterfully matched to the attempts by the Dark Lord to reign in the film. Instead of resorting to several completely separate motifs to distinguish this dichotomy, Goldsmith establishes a central faerie tale theme and simply elaborates on different sections of that theme to represent other characters and locations in the story. The performances of the National Philharmonic Orchestra are dynamic and precise, with the endless electronic supplements integrated from live stereo performances with skill. Goldsmith had always stated that he wanted to treat his synthesizers like a fifth section of the orchestra, and this score is among the composer's most notable such combinations. Many of the techniques he employed with the electronics in this score would directly inform his music of the next fifteen years.

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