Filmtracks Home Page Filmtracks Logo
MODERN SOUNDTRACK REVIEWS
Menu Search
Filmtracks Review >>
Love Actually (Craig Armstrong) (2003)
Full Review Menu ▼
Average: 3.32 Stars
***** 62 5 Stars
**** 75 4 Stars
*** 62 3 Stars
** 45 2 Stars
* 32 1 Stars
  (View results for all titles)
Read All Start New Thread Search Comments
The US is finally getting a release!
A Loony Trombonist - November 19, 2021, at 11:53 a.m.
1 comment  (406 views)
More...

Composed, Arranged, Co-Orchestrated, and Produced by:

Conducted by:
Cecilia Weston

Co-Orchestrated by:
Matt Dunkley
Audio Samples   ▼
2003 Universal European Album Tracks   ▼
2003 Promotional Album Tracks   ▼
2021 La-La Land Records/Back Lot Music Album Tracks   ▼
European Album Album Cover Art
Promotional Album Album 2 Cover Art
2021 La-La Land / Back Lot Album 3 Cover Art
Universal Island Records (European)
(November 17th, 2003)

(Promotional)
(December, 2003)

La-La Land Records/Back Lot Music
(November 19th, 2021)
The American retail song compilation contains only one score track. The European version sold within its native lands contains slightly different songs and three score tracks. Be aware that versions of this album listed as an "import" in America are sometimes missing two tracks, including the final score track. The promotional album was released to AMPAS members at the end of 2003 and has disappeared from the secondary market in subsequent years. It came with no cover insert, but bootleggers added the artwork associated with the promo since.

The 2021 album is a commercial digital release by Back Lot Music. A CD version of that product was also released by La-La Land Records, limited to 2,000 copies and available initially through soundtrack specialty outlets for $22.
The inserts of neither 2003 product include any extra information about the score or film. The 2021 digital album from Back Lot Music offers no official packaging. The insert of the La-La Land CD for that 2021 album includes extensive information about the score and film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #1,364
Written 9/28/09, Revised 1/10/22
Buy it... on the European compilation album if you seek a strong combination of the song and score highlights that you heard in the film or on the 2021 product for a comprehensive survey of Craig Armstrong's memorably pretty score.

Avoid it... on the American song compilation album for any purpose or on either of the score-only options of you have little interest in Armstrong's relatively scant, lightweight instrumentals.

Armstrong
Armstrong
Love Actually: (Craig Armstrong) By 2003's adorable Love Actually, the team of writer and director Richard Curtis and producer Duncan Kenworthy had proven their mastery of the British romantic comedy. Following their success with Four Weddings and a Funeral, Notting Hill, and Bridget Jones' Diary, they turned a $25 million budget for Love Actually into nearly $250 million in worldwide grosses, the mass majority of which coming from outside of America, where the film's charm didn't connect as well. It was the kind of episodic production nominated for ensemble cast awards, featuring a screenplay that examines romance in contemporary times through several love affairs and marriages that cross nearly every conceivable socio-political boundary. Familiar names carry both the lead roles and cameo appearances throughout the picture, led by crowd and critic favorites Emma Thompson, Liam Neeson, Alan Rickman, Keira Knightley, Colin Firth, and Hugh Grant. So authentic are the depictions of each couple's struggles and triumphs that Love Actually is a rare entry in the genre that sidesteps the cheese factor almost entirely. Curtis' mastery of the balance between comedy and truly serious concepts of romance makes the film a tear-jerker in the all the right ways. The soundtrack for the film was also well managed; like all of the director's films of this variety, an intelligent combination of classic and contemporary rock songs was licensed for prominent placement in mostly transitional scenes. Leading these songs were the Pointer Sisters' "Jump" for an entertaining scene with Grant and Dido's "Here With Me," a song for a moment of solitude on the streets that was experiencing an explosion in popularity at the time. Unlike the aforementioned Curtis films, though, Love Actually also gave a prominent role to an original score. Although these films had included work from names as popular in London as Patrick Doyle and Trevor Jones, the production turned to Glasgow's own Craig Armstrong for this assignment.

Given Armstrong's success in building bridges between sensitive, intimate topics and his extensive experience as an arranger of accompaniment for pop songs, not to mention the high praise that he was still enjoying from the monumental success of his compositional and arrangement work for the phenomenal Moulin Rouge, he was a smart choice for the job. Armstrong's score for Love Actually, despite consisting of mostly short, disconnected cues, occupies some of the most poignant scenes in the film, underlining both the incredible sorrow of some of the storylines while offering jubilant, fully orchestral exuberance for others. The material that Armstrong provides to Love Actually was so effective, in fact, that its three most engaging themes became a strong accompaniment to the rock songs for the demographic of women most interested in the film and soundtrack. Despite Universal's attempt in America to push the score for major awards consideration, Armstrong was shut out of that season across the board, likely due to his contribution's perceived short running time and its placement in the shadow of the songs. Still, for enthusiasts of the composer's relatively sparse but fruitful output in the first ten years of his film scoring career, Love Actually is a lovable entry with ten to fifteen minutes of music that belongs on any compilation of light orchestral romance. Three of the major relationships receive consistent thematic development, led by the Glasgow theme for the bittersweet, doomed interaction between Knightley's character and her new husband's best friend. This piano piece is pure Armstrong at his best, devastatingly lovely in a tragic sense, using descending lines much like the love theme for Christian and Satine in Moulin Rouge. Highlighting the devastating scene of the original cue title "Mark's Video," it's also the best recognized track from the score, the only one to appear on all of the commercial song compilations for Love Actually. Joining it is the Portuguese theme representing Colin Firth's funny interactions with his Portuguese chambermaid, culminating in a full-ensemble, grand expression in the restaurant proposal scene.

  • Return to Top (Full Menu) ▲
  • © 2009-2025, Filmtracks Publications