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The Martian
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Composed, Co-Orchestrated, Conducted, and Produced by:
Co-Orchestrated by:
Alastair King David Butterworth
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LABELS & RELEASE DATES
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Columbia Records (Download)
(October 2nd, 2015)
Columbia Records (Deluxe CD) (November 6th, 2015)
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ALBUM AVAILABILITY
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Regular U.S. release. The 2-CD "Deluxe Edition" set with songs and score
was released a month after the initial download options and was an Amazon.com exclusive.
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AWARDS
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None.
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ALSO SEE
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Buy it... if you desire a very intelligent blend of styles from
Vangelis, Wendy Carlos, Jerry Goldsmith, and James Horner, an
occasionally fantastic narrative of instrumental and thematic
development by Harry Gregson-Williams in top form.
Avoid it... if the fifteen or so minutes of triumphant,
inspirational highlights for the main theme cannot compensate for an
otherwise challenging but still accessible collection of ambient
representations of scientific perseverance.
BUY IT
 | Gregson- Williams |
The Martian: (Harry Gregson-Williams) Like its
recent predecessor, Gravity, and any other good space survival
film that strives for realism, 2015's The Martian fought off
accusations from scientists that its plotline was improbable, if not
impossible. The Ridley Scott film actually fared well scientifically
compared to other science fiction thrillers, though, aided by
enthusiastic support from NASA during production, a move by the space
agency to utilize the film's possible success as promoting its own
interests. In the story of The Martian, a team of astronauts on
Mars in 2035 experiences a freak wind storm that causes one of their
crewmen to be left behind during an emergency evacuation from the
planet's station. Believed initially to be dead, this crewman is forced
to survive on the planet for a prolonged period using ingenious methods
of food and water generation, among other feats of communication and
exploration. A frantic rescue mission ensues while the lonely astronaut
contemplates life and science with a surprisingly upbeat attitude during
his struggles. The film performed well critically and financially,
breathing fresh life into Scott's reputation after several relative
duds. The director's flame-outs in the 2000's have suffered at times
because of his insistence upon bizarre editorial choices in the music
for his projects, an issue dating back to well-documented failures to
collaborate nicely with Jerry Goldsmith. After his successful stint with
Hans Zimmer, Scott turned to Harry Gregson-Williams and Marc
Streitenfeld for his more recent soundtracks, with mixed results. While
Gregson-Williams' strong score for Kingdom of Heaven was
absolutely butchered by Scott (who chose to insert music by the then
deceased Goldsmith prominently and intrusively in the picture), the
director returned to the composer for additional musical contributions
for Prometheus and the ultimate in composer pow-wows, Exodus:
Gods and Kings. Many film music collectors considered
Gregson-Williams' music for these pictures to be among the best supplied
to those and other Scott films, and his assignment to The Martian
is thankfully devoid of any interference from other composers. In fact,
the composer's crew was kept rather small for the project, all things
considered in the 2010's, with Gregson-Williams seemingly credited with
all the writing of the original material in the movie. That said, the
film does make humorous use of several source songs of 1970's disco due
to their placement as a distinct story element.
The approach by Gregson-Williams to The Martian
has significant thought put into its constructs, instrumentation, and
tone. It's a surprisingly intelligent score for a circumstance in which
an ambient musical presence was assumed a foregone conclusion. It is
still a pensive and low-key score for most of its length, but its
balance of genre-defying instrumentation of multiple ages and
alternation between intensely intimate, churning, solemn passages and
heroically muscular fantasy grandeur is notable. The variety of
instrumental colors applied to The Martian is immense, giving it
a worldly feel that defies classification into any particular sub-genre
within film music, though it's tempting to describe the whole as a retro
work that combines the electronic textures of vintage Vangelis and Wendy
Carlos with slightly more recent techniques utilized by Thomas Newman
and Jerry Goldsmith, all the while hints of Gregson-Williams' own
ambient mannerisms and thematic structures do shine through. This is
primarily an electronic score, with groaning synthetic tones of
alienation harkening back obviously to Vangelis' Blade Runner and
1980's keyboarding taking the serious alternative to Henry Jackman's
comedy pilfering of the Tron era brought back to life on screen
more recently by Daft Punk. The bell and bowl effects bring Tom Newman
into the equation, and these contributions are manipulated
electronically to merge them seamlessly with the other highlighted
textures. These textures are alienating in ways but also feature an
earthiness to their rendering, a carry-over from Vangelis' later works
which capture both the inhospitable atmosphere of Mars and the
protagonist's conquering of it for survival. The orchestral elements
supply multitudes of solo performances, led by the composer's affinity
for cello and piano, though there is a touch of Goldsmith and James
Horner in the solo trumpet and especially French horn passages. The
composer passes his main theme through so many different instruments
that it experiences a heck of a journey itself during this score,
beginning on muted, solo electric guitar and finishing in triumphant,
fully orchestral form. The bulk of the score for The Martian is
understated, often exploring either a recurring rhythmic figure or the
work's one main melodic identity. Fans of the move will recall the three
or four really vibrant and bold symphonic expressions of hope, and these
sequences are indeed quite impressive, but Gregson-Williams earned his
pay for this film in the quieter cues. There is a distinct deference to
scientific methodology and persistence in the rhythmic nature of these
ambient cues, a solitary but determined sense of process and order in
their movement and precision.
The frequently referenced main theme for The
Martian is a series of three rising two-note phrases followed by a
three-note descending phrase that sometimes launches off into an
interlude upon the achievement of success or hope in the story. Heard
immediately but faintly in "Mars," this idea permeates the softer
portions of the score on piano, French horn, electric guitar, or cello.
Its major ensemble performances are quite magnificent by comparison, a
successful dichotomy by Gregson-Williams to plainly herald in the
triumphs of the story. These passages in "Making Water," "Messages From
Hermes," "Crossing Mars," and "Fly Like Iron Man" are among the best
career achievements by the composer. The Wendy Carlos variation on the
ensemble idea in "Making Water" is countered by an almost urban, cool,
and hip, purely Gregson-Williams version in "Messages From Hermes" while
"Crossing Mars" offers hints of Hans Zimmer counterpoint over the theme
and "Fly Like Iron Man" presents an almost blissful cross between
Vangelis magnificence and James Horner melodramatics (especially in the
French horn). In between, you hear Goldsmith influences in the handling
of solo flutes and trumpets in their skittish rhythmic presence.
Gregson-Williams' nurturing of common, ascending rhythmic formations
under this theme builds to a culmination in "Fly Like Iron Man" that has
undeniable defiance of gravity at heart. The singular emotional
breakthrough in the score is the purely Vangelis conveyance of wonder at
2:34 into that cue, with rambling Horner piano and later French horn
solos to melt the heart. Not long after, the rhythmic platform develops
into a full-fledged secondary theme of victory carried by the ensemble
over muscular male vocals for the concluding highlight of the score, a
lovely close to a turbulent journey. The choral impact on The
Martianshould be mentioned as somewhat curious, not in its balance
of ethereal background presence in several later cues and in the form of
a boy solo in the heartbreaking "Crops Are Dead," but in the album
release's liner notes that specify that Gregson-Williams supposedly left
behind the ensemble choral "aaahs" and "ooohs" in favor of actual Latin
spoken lyrics. And yet, despite the lyrics for these cues provided on
the same liner notes, the actual music resorts back to the typical
wordless vocalizations. This oddity exists on both the score-only
presentation on album and in the short suite of score music on the song
compilation (a merging of parts of "Making Water" and "Crossing Mars").
On CD, you can hear both presentations in one product, and
Gregson-Williams' score is a solid and intelligent, genre and
era-bending listening experience with a few magnificent ensemble
highlights marking his best blockbuster music in many years.
**** @Amazon.com: CD or
Download
Bias Check: |
For Harry Gregson-Williams reviews at Filmtracks, the average editorial rating is 3
(in 40 reviews) and the average viewer rating is 2.99
(in 55,275 votes). The maximum rating is 5 stars.
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Deluxe Edition Tracks ▼ | Total Time: 84:47 |
CD 1: (33:06)
1. Turn the Beat Around - performed by Vicki Sue Robinson (3:24)
2. Hot Stuff - performed by Donna Summer (5:12)
3. Rock the Boat - performed by The Hues Corporation (3:19)
4. Don't Leave Me This Way (Single Version) - performed by Thelma Houston (3:37)
5. Starman (2012 Remastered Version) - performed by David Bowie (4:14)
6. Waterloo - performed by Abba (2:46)
7. Love Train - performed by The O'Jays (2:58)
8. I Will Survive - performed by Gloria Gaynor (3:17)
9. The Martian Score Suite - composed by Harry Gregson-Williams (4:19)
CD 2: (51:41)
1. Mars (2:25)
2. Emergency Launch (3:09)
3. Making Water (2:38)
4. Spotting Movement (1:49)
5. Science the S*** Out of This (2:16)
6. Messages From Hermes (3:31)
7. Sprouting Potatoes (1:39)
8. Watney's Alive! (2:46)
9. Pathfinder (2:33)
10. Hexadecimals (2:33)
11. Crossing Mars (3:36)
12. Reap & Sow (2:21)
13. Crops Are Dead (3:26)
14. Work the Problem (1:58)
15. See You in a Few (5:11)
16. Build a Bomb (5:06)
17. Fly Like Iron Man (4:45)
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(other individual products feature the two CDs separated with identical contents) |
The insert of the "Deluxe Edition" set includes extensive credits and information from
the composer about the choral texts that are oddly not heard on the album's mix of the music.
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