Anyone doubting the music for
Presumed Innocent
should re-examine its superbly careful constructs and execution, because
wrestling within its contents is one of Williams' most skilled
presentations of harmony versus disharmony, good versus evil, and
confusion versus resolution. It remains one of the most poignant musical
examinations of the corruption of the soul to exist in film music
history. The film tears at the viewer with questions of morality and
murder, building to the gut-wrenching and ultimate destruction of a
seemingly happy suburban family. Thus, Williams maintains the score with
a single piano at its heart, representing the normal sound of a safe and
typical family lifestyle with elegant though easily manipulated primary
and secondary themes. Also of note is a solo horn and timpani in the
credits performances and other cues, both forcefully performing their
roles apart from other brass or percussion and leading to the sense of
despair and fright on a personal level. Such instrumentation remains
consistently simple yet sharp, with dissonant electronic effects
providing a further edge of fright to the mix as technology comes to
play a role in the corruption within the story. A fuller ensemble,
including strings and brass, does exert some depth at times for both
misleading Americana comfort and outright horror. More importantly,
however, is how Williams adapts his themes in the film to the constant
battle between passion and suspicion. Each thematic idea is inherently
positive and elegant in its basic construct, meandering on the piano in
a deceitful dance of sincerity during the few relaxed scenes of the
film. As the story unfolds, however, Williams' slowly strips away the
accessibility from the themes and inserts more troubling off-key
instrumentation and subtle mutation of those ideas. Finally, as the
major confession is presented at the end of the film, Williams' score
has completely degenerated into a wash of tingling percussive sounds.
Within this narrative are four themes, essentially, and three of them
mingle inextricably in the opening and closing titles to suggest the
impossible connectivity between characters in the story. The two primary
ideas are the most often referenced by Williams. The first of these is a
cyclical 14-note piano rhythm that repeats its closing four-note descent
twice, suggesting the unforgettable allure of the woman killed early in
the story and her effect on everyone else. It's this conspiracy motif
that each character cannot shake at any turn, and Williams weaves this
idea throughout the score masterfully.
The conspiracy motif in
Presumed Innocent opens
"Main Title" and sometimes churns underneath the other themes, typically
making some kind of connection back to the murdered female character.
Next on solo horn and later piano in that "Main Title" cue is Williams'
main theme for the movie, representing Ford's haunted and flawed
character. As the theme dies away in that cue, the composer provides its
extremely pretty secondary phrasing, a sequence that won't experience
fully harmonized treatment until about 0:45 into "End Credits." The main
phrase follows Ford's lead throughout the film as a reminder of his
personal failings and sadness, often tinged with the conspiracy motif
underneath. The lovely nature of this idea's core progressions is never
realized in the work, a recognition of the story's inevitably troubled
ending. Williams adapts the idea into an intriguing, ghostly offshoot
with electronics at 1:23 into "End Credits," a keen blending with the
corruption motif. That third idea of tawdry, ominous dread is another
cyclical rhythm, this time four notes accompanied by a cheerless
three-note answer in the bass region by timpani. It's introduced softly
at 0:25 into "Main Title" and develops further at 0:17 into "The B
File," where its association with corruption is cemented. When a
character is directly connected with dishonest acts, Williams runs the
corruption motif underneath another theme, as throughout "On the Advice
of Counsel" and early in "The Boat Scene." It's a highly tricky theme,
as Williams adapts its bass answering portion to the treble to open "In
the Patio," a fascinating cue that also applies the hypnotic conspiracy
motif for the murdered woman to an unexpected new character, the wife of
Ford's lead. The fourth theme Williams provides to
Presumed
Innocent is one of Americana typical to the composer, reminiscent of
his fuller-fledged, wholesome, 1970's era that struggles to survive in
this work but plays a vital role at identifying the dichotomy between a
normal life and everything unseemly in this story. Heard initially in
"Family Morning," Williams touches upon the idea briefly in "Family
Theme" (but haunted by hints of the darker themes) and uses it as a
false conclusion in "Case Dismissed" and "Return to Normal." Its brevity
is necessitated by the few scenes of peace in the work. Minor motifs
also exist for the bribery subplot on electronics ("The B File" and
"Leon Talks") and the role of the wife ("Carolyn's Apartment" and
"Barbara's Confession"), the latter a frightful but intelligent
deconstruction of the conspiracy motif into a seemingly aimless
meandering for celeste and piano.
Also of interest is the horror music in the score for
Presumed Innocent, anchored by the troubling "Love Scene" cue
(the sex in this film is not meant to be purely erotic) and "The
Basement Scene," which agonizingly starts to unravel the whole plot with
the long overdue discovery of the murder weapon and uses tortured
renditions of the main theme for the full ensemble. Shadows of this
darkness without resolution continue into the "End Credits," exploding
with a powerful, electronically enhanced performance of the corruption
theme's bass portion that punches the audience in the face one last
time, relentlessly driving home the surprise ending after the plot's
devastating conclusion. All of this gravity is made with careful,
troubled elegance, and you have to appreciate how Williams changes the
tempo on the piano performances of the primary two themes in accordance
with the level of fright on the screen at any given moment. One of the
more remarkable aspects of the score is the difficulty with which other
ensembles toil when attempting to re-record its suite arrangement by
Williams; these other groups almost always lose touch with the stark
tone of the original performance. On album, the score received a
sufficient, 43-minute presentation from Varèse Sarabande at its
debut that contained a few alternate recordings and combined multiple
cues into its tracks. (Ironically, the album was longer than the amount
of music actually utilized in the picture after a few cues were dropped
by Pakula.) In 2022, the label offered a "Deluxe Edition" expansion that
provides the full 50 minutes of the composer's original film versions of
the cues alongside 28 minutes of album-specific arrangements. The longer
presentation does illuminate intelligent additions to the narrative,
from the conclusion of "Main Title" to the delicate duet of primary
themes on piano in "Burning the Note" and "Outside the Courthouse;"
these additions showcase Williams' very light synthetic keyboarding
nicely. Other newly released cues, as in "Physical Evidence" and
"Fingerprints," add little to the flow of the listening experience, the
latter the score's only sustained dissonant moment. The sound quality on
the 2022 album isn't significantly improved, but the proper arrangement
of the full score will be highly appreciated by its enthusiasts. Some
listeners will never be able to connect to
Presumed Innocent
because of its restrained subtleties and its tendency to dwell at
minimal volumes in its midsection. And yet, the work remains one of the
most striking deviations from Williams' standard action and drama works,
and it continues to be an easy recommendation as a tensely stellar,
hypnotically gripping, and lesser-known triumph from the master.
***** @Amazon.com: CD or
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