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Review of Music from the Cinema: Volume 1 (Nicola Piovani)
Composed and Conducted by:
Nicola Piovani
Produced by:
Piero Colasanti
Label and Release Date:
Pacific Time Entertainment Co.
(March 9th, 1999)
Availability:
Regular U.S. release.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... if you fondly recall the Oscar-winning score to Life is Beautiful and seek a decent sampler of Nicola Piovani works from the previous decade.

Avoid it... if Piovani's distinctly Italian style of intimate, rhythmic romanticism is predictably irritating to your more melodramatically-inclined sensibilities.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
Music from the Cinema: Volume 1: (Nicola Piovani) After his sudden burst into the international spotlight with a 1998 Academy Award for his score to Life is Beautiful, Italian Nicola Piovani's work began receiving more exposure on the American market. While having scored over 100 European films during the previous decade, his level of recognition outside of European cinema was minimal, and the Oscar win gave his name the same international appeal as Luis Bacalov and a handful of other regional composers. The scores for Italian films are typically the subject of album release for C.A.M. Soundtracks of Italy, perhaps the foremost European soundtrack label in existence. In the wake of Piovani's Oscar win, though, the Pacific Time Entertainment Company in New York opened a series of "Music from the Cinema" albums with an entry compiling pieces of earlier scores by Piovani onto one sampler-style product. The second volume in the series, released concurrently with this one, was devoted to the works of Pino Donaggio, and both albums are easily distinguishable by their somewhat unusual graphic art on the covers. On this "Volume 1" is included a wide variety of Piovani's scores from 1986 to 1994, with music that ranges in style from orchestrally dramatic to purely electronic rock. As to be expected, the listening experience is greatly varied. The album begins well, with four orchestral cues (from two films) that fans of Life is Beautiful could easily appreciate. The ensemble in these sections is of medium size, but Piovani's light and often dancing Italian touch adds plenty of personality where power lacks. The selections from the third and fourth films are more difficult to grasp, though. The five cues from Fiorile are extremely diverse to exist in the confines of a single film; the first cue has a distinct loungy, jazz style, and this romanticism gives away to a more ambitious series of rock beats before ultimately returning to a full choral performance with orchestral depth. The tracks that follow combine a trademark Italian/Mediterranean style (i.e. you better like accordions) with a variety of synthesizers and a small ensemble of performers.

Piovani has a career that spans many different countries and media, and outside of his scores for film and television, Piovani has also provided the music for numerous theatrical works. The fifteenth track changes of the pace of the album from the composer's consistently light and playful film music to full and dramatic orchestral music that has the essence of theatre, accompanied by a large male chorus. As the highlight of the album, some listeners will no doubt be interested in hearing further works by Piovani along these lines. This selection also seems to provide a significantly more vibrant sound quality compared to surrounding cues. Heard again in the following selections are more of his theatrical-sounding works, and the fullest personality of Piovani's music is evident during these tracks. The album finishes with a score that is closer to street level (no pun intended, for those of you who have seen the film), as it draws from a small jazz ensemble that features pleasant piano and guitar performances. Overall, the album is an excellent treatment of Piovani's work during this period of his career. Sound quality is often intimate, which is not unexpected given the personality of most of the scores provided. Be aware, though, that only a very little portion contains music that resembles the grand and melodramatic themes comparable to those heard in Life is Beautiful. Off hand, many American listeners would probably place Life is Beautiful at a higher level than most everything on this "Music from the Cinema" compilation (which may very well logically explain why he won the Oscar for it rather than any of these, though the popularity of the film had the most to do with the Oscar consideration). One curiosity regarding the album that is not explained (other than its strangely wasteful packaging that offers a blank insert) is the absence of any works by the composer in the five most recent years before the CD's assembly. On the whole, though, Piovani has a distinctly interesting scoring style that should not be summarily dismissed by American film music fans, even though it might be difficult to appreciate fully on the first or second listen.  ***
TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 53:40

Palombella Rossa:
• 1. Palombella Rossa (1:56)
• 2. Le Mamme Ci Asciugavano I Capelli (2:36)
• 3. Il Sol Dell' Avvenir (2:56)

Il Sole Anche Di Notte:
• 4. Il Sole Anche Di Notte (3:06)

Fiorile:
• 5. Fiorile (2:35)
• 6. Rock Mediceo (2:38)
• 7. La Leggenda Dell'oro (1:40)
• 8. Mon Beau Voyage (1:06)
• 9. La Memoria Di Jean (1:43)

Il Camorrista:
• 10. Il Camorrista (2:00)
• 11. L'anello E Il Serpente (1:52)

Speriamo Che Sia Femmina:
• 12. Speriamo Che Sia Femmina (3:30)

I Cammelli:
• 13. I Cammelli (3:00)

O'Re:
• 14. O'Re - featuring Angela Pagano (3:28)

In Nome Del Popolo Sovrano:
• 15. In Nome Del Popolo Sovrano (2:24)

Domani Accadra:
• 16. Allegretto Dei Butteri (3:03)
• 17. Domani Accadra (2:35)
• 18. I Musicanti In Armonia (2:54)

Caro Diario:
• 19. Caro Diario (2:00)
• 20. Bambini Al Telefono (2:26)
• 21. Medici (2:02)
• 22. Isole (2:10)
NOTES & QUOTES:
The insert contains a short note from Sergio Cossa, but the internal fold of the insert is completely blank.
Copyright © 1999-2024, Filmtracks Publications. All rights reserved.
The reviews and other textual content contained on the filmtracks.com site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Christian Clemmensen at Filmtracks Publications. All artwork and sound clips from Music from the Cinema: Volume 1 are Copyright © 1999, Pacific Time Entertainment Co. and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 4/1/99 and last updated 10/23/07.