From an intellectual standpoint, the personality
Schachner devises for
Prey demands attention, though few will
find it to be a pleasant experience. While historically minded vocals,
winds, and percussion provide the intrigue of color to the score, it's
the absolutely resolute anger in the string section, and particularly a
solo cello, that defines this work. Few soundtracks are as abrasively
hostile as this one in their performance inflection and mix, Schachner
starting from the bleak atmosphere of Ryuichi Sakamoto's
The
Revenant and twisting that sound to pure menace via string
mutilation akin to Tyler's
Those Who Wish Me Dead. Aside from the
moderately lyrical material for Naru, everything seems to drone on key
in the work, the intelligence of the instrumental applications defied by
structural simplicity that becomes tiresome fast. The constant striking
on key, some of which seems electronically enhanced, overpowers the
accents like the ethnic flute wails a la James Horner in "Horseback
Ambush." Still, the totally raw tone has its own attraction in that it
does sound different from other film scores when expressed with this
ensemble, so the techniques aren't without some merit. Listeners seeking
solace in a thematic narrative will find a fairly consistent set of
melodies, but they do tend to get overwhelmed by surrounding rhythmic
pounding for action and suspense. The themes also don't evolve much in
the score, aside from their adoption of some of the attitude and
instrumentation of each other as the prey turns into the predator. The
idea for Naru is the clear highlight of the work, the only semblance of
hope in the otherwise brutal musical environment. This tonally
accessible theme is dogged, however, by rhythmic and harmonic
similarities to Trevor Jones' well-known
Last of the Mohicans,
especially as it achieves its most concentrated performances. The Naru
theme develops during "Beyond the Great Plains" but shines throughout
"Naru's Way." Its rhythmic progressions teased in "Moon Wanderer" are
twisted into something different in the latter half of "The Cruel
Delight," but they regain confidence suddenly and forcefully at 3:07
into "Brave Girl" and in latter half of "Seeing With New Eyes" as she
learns to use the Predator's technology against it. By the end of the
score, the performances of her theme lose what little romantic
sensibility existed for both her and the landscape in earlier cues,
taking on the primal, mean-spirited abrasiveness of the Predator's theme
in this score. That four-note motif of simplistic power could be
described as a mindless devolving of the Naru theme's rhythm, and it
never changes its tact throughout.
Debuting in
Prey at 2:02 into "Predator
Instinct," the new Predator motif returns in the first half of "The
Onslaught," becomes less cohesive in "Horseback Ambush," and reasserts
itself in the middle of "Brave Girl," tacked on after a silence at 3:53
into that cue as well. The theme experiences an aggressive variant in
"The Hunter" that seems to infuse elements of both primary ideas into
one basic chopping figure on key. Some listeners will only care to know
whether Alan Silvestri's iconic themes from the original
Predator
return in
Prey, as they had been adapted into all four major
sequels to the film over the previous decades. Schachner doesn't
completely dismiss Silvestri's material, but she doesn't outright
reprise its original form like John Debney and Henry Jackman had. Only
the bassline of the main, six-note Silvestri rhythm truly remains in
this score, shifted from thumping percussion to slashing low strings
throughout "Predator Instinct." This application continues as a stinger
late in "Foolish Foray" and during parts of "Brave Girl." Those
listening hard for Silvestri's actual main theme may hear it vaguely
hinted at 1:30 into "Trapped," but that's about it. While the teasing of
Silvestri's rhythmic figure is appreciated, many audiences won't make
the subtle connection. There also remains no reason why composers have
had to abandon Silvestri's fantasy motif for the spacecraft arrival
element of the Predators. Content to blaze her own path, Schachner falls
short in connecting this score to the concept's basic sound, the
percussion selected not necessarily needing to match Silvestri's
piano-dominated tone but ultimately too far removed to be musically
related. All of the coolness and wonder factor of Silvestri's score is
gone. In short,
Prey is not a
Predator score, and some
halfway point between the two disparate sounds would have been
preferred. As it stands,
Prey is adequate to the task but
dissatisfyingly disconnected from the franchise. Its rendering is so
hostile in performance inflection that it makes for a poor listening
experience on album. The distortion effects for the fires in
Those
Who Wish Me Dead return in "The Night Has Ears," and this droning
dissonance is extremely unpleasant. The middle portions of the 45-minute
album drag badly, Schachner's percussive stalking music offering little
of substance and not always genuinely exciting. Aside from the solemnly
pretty duo of "Beyond the Great Plains" and "Naru's Way," the score will
be an immense challenge. For those that can immerse themselves in a
depressing, marginally exotic expression of animosity, the melodic cues,
along with the vocals of "Communion," will distract from an otherwise
consistently bitter atmosphere of sparsely impassioned enmity.
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