The only other major composing credit for the
Rango soundtrack goes to Heitor Pereira, Zimmer's longtime
assistant specializing in the area of Latin-flavored, guitar-driven
flair, and John and David Thum, who wrote the two original songs
performed by Los Lobos for the production and had some of that material
incorporated into medleys within the score. In only three tracks
featured on the album is Zimmer afforded solo writing and production
credits, the remainder of the score cues arranged by a plethora of his normal
Remote Control staff. Call these laborers "arrangers" if you must, but
the term ghostwriters will always enter the discussion so long as
Zimmer's material is adapted by his army of assistants in such a high
number of stylistic directions throughout these types of scores.
Otherwise, everything you need to know about the soundtrack is summed up
by this statistic: 35 minutes of music over 20 tracks. That's the
breakdown of the commercial album, and really the only practical way of
presenting the music given how compartmentalized its final development
seems to be. The two Los Lobos songs are offered at the end, and a
series of source-like blends of song and score exist in several tracks
provided by Rick Garcia. The two Pereira tracks are pure Mexican
stereotype source additions, guitars and trumpets unashamed of their
unoriginality. There's one medley that uses music by Richard Wagner and
Johann Strauss as well, integrating "Ride of the Valkyries" directly
into the tone of the score. Otherwise, you have about ten cues of
Zimmer's thematic and instrumental tendencies adapted into recognizable
variants. His solo cues are "Rango Suite," which touches upon all of the
thematic material referenced through the later arrangements, "Rango and
Beans" (a largely subdued and inconsequential cue), and "The Sunset
Shot" at the end, a good finale that is unfortunately cut short at its
conclusion by a very abrupt edit in the mastering. The other cues
liberally quote and manipulate the themes in Zimmer's main suite, often
making very clear references to previous Zimmer scores.
As one could predict, Zimmer's long established love of
Ennio Morricone's Spaghetti Western music is clearly an influence, and
the parodies of the classic genre style is joined by John and David
Thum's cute rip of Elmer Bernstein in "We Ride, Really!" The
contemporary side of the score owes a bit to Robert Rodriguez's music,
too. Some of the rhythmic sound effects employed by Zimmer late in the
suite are reminiscent of early Danny Elfman personality. More
interesting for Zimmer collectors will be the parodies of Zimmer's own
early mannerisms, including several passages and thematic progressions
seemingly lifted directly from
Broken Arrow and
Point of No
Return. A fair amount of spritely spirit of a swashbuckling nature
points back to
Muppet Treasure Island more than
Pirates of the
Caribbean. The heralded open trumpet sequences from
Crimson
Tide make a return at the end of "It's a Miracle." Once again,
Zimmer handles prancing comedic movements through staccato pounding in
the base region, and despite some of his ensemble's attempts to breathe
life into the score through dynamic instrumental humor, the recording's
shaving of the upper and lower reaches to maximize gain levels once
again betrays that intent. Ultimately, the music for
Rango
achieves its goals, and Zimmer's army of assistants managed to supply
the score with the appropriate stream of parody. But at the end of the
day, there's very little unique substance to be heard in this score, and
the choppy album presentation won't likely appeal to film score
collectors. While Zimmer has produced some outstanding music for
animation in the past, this one is unfortunately closer to the format
and quality of the
Madagascar scores. With many of the cues
overlayed with dialogue from the film, the
Rango soundtrack album
is clearly meant as a souvenir for enthusiasts of the film, as such
succeeding in emulating the wacky personality when heard in context.
Otherwise, it's a lightweight effort from Zimmer, one that once again
proves his immense capability in regards to coordinating the talent
around him.
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