Isham, however, to his credit, did take a slightly
different path when approaching
The Mechanic, merging his
synthetic library called "The Sodden Dog Electronic Arts Ensemble" with
an orchestra in Prague and a variety of super-cool soloists on electric
guitar, rhythm guitar, acoustic guitar, bass, and rock-like percussion.
The result is a score that is certainly more stylish than Isham's usual
churning in the thriller genre, though even this effort has more than
its fair share of atmospheric brooding. Thankfully, the resulting
merging of the above elements, though in many circumstances reminiscent
of a Remote Control ensemble effort, is at least a bit different in
tone, giving
The Mechanic a solid musical voice. There is a raw
intensity in Isham's combination of sounds in
The Mechanic that
allows the guitars in the score to be cool but not evoke the
sophistication of a James Bond score. The orchestral presence seems
limited to only a string section, occasionally offering creepy,
noir-like romantic harmony while at other times exercising the
customary, chopping ostinatos typical to this genre in the 2000's.
Honestly, while you can tell from the performance aspects (and their
slightly wetter sound) that the string players are live, Isham probably
could have saved some money and stuck with their synthetically sampled
counterparts without much detriment to the score. The strictly
electronic elements include looped percussion sounds, groaning
dissonance, and the periodic use of sound effects meant to imitate the
operation of weapons or the pitch-wavering wails of police sirens. The
soloists are the real highlight here, the guitars really employed in
brutal but oddly palatable ways to match the personalities on screen.
The closing suite, "The Mechanic," most successfully conveys the
heightened coolness factor that results from these performances, and the
score's midsection is best served when Isham injects the same brazen
attitude. There's nothing quite as raw as Ry Cooder-like guitar passages
over tapped percussion and violently chopping strings.
The score's primary theme is heard most clearly in the
summary "The Mechanic" as well, its opening minor-third progression
repeated twice and an effective tool of quick reinforcement throughout
the score without the need to state the entire theme. When toned back to
transitional or conversational cues like "Bayou" and "An Outside
Individual," the theme becomes even more alluring, faintly reminiscent
of John Ottman's contemporary style. Other melodic ideas are just as
menacing, though their meandering lines don't offer the directly focused
simplicity of the main theme. These ideas occupy cues such as "Amat
Victoria Curam" and "Vengeance is the Mission," the former featuring
smooth orchestral passages and the latter infusing Isham's usual
processed vocal tones before unleashing a heavy metal guitar rhythm to
indicate a victory. For some listeners, the multitude of ambient cues in
between those of extroverted, stylish intent will make
The
Mechanic too difficult as a whole to appreciate. Isham, who was in
the news at the time for his staunch disagreement with former
collaborator Paul Haggis over the director's angry departure from
Scientology, did use this score as the opportunity to launch his own
label, "Mark Isham Music" (or MIM). Not only that, but he released three
different albums for
The Mechanic, the first an "Assassin's
Edition" with suite-like highlights, the second a "Complete Collector's
Edition" with the whole score in order, and the third a "Double Barrel
Limited Edition" containing both albums with a few additional perks
(including a USB stick, autograph, and videos). Ironically, the complete
album is a better listening experience than the shorter, suite-like
"Assassin's Edition," the longer album containing some specific cues of
note that were not incorporated into the shorter product. In the end,
The Mechanic is a more stylish score than expected, overflowing
with attitude in parts, and because of these highlights, it should be
recommended to those who enjoyed the film. On the other hand, the score
does also exhibit many of Isham's tiresome ambient techniques as well,
so it's a clip half full or clip half empty scenario at best.
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