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Rebuilding Paradise
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Co-Composed and Produced by:
Co-Composed by:
Additional Music by:
Boris Salchow Peter Adams Max Aruj Steffen Thum
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LABELS & RELEASE DATES
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Lakeshore Records (Digital)
(November 6th, 2020)
Rambling Records (Japan) (CD) (April 2nd, 2021)
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ALBUM AVAILABILITY
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Digital release from Lakeshore Records in 2020 but available on CD in
2021 from Rambling Records in Japan. The CD maintains an import price of about $24.
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AWARDS
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None.
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ALSO SEE
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Buy it... if you want to feel the misery of total loss in your
music, Lorne Balfe and Hans Zimmer providing hazy atmospheres and drab
thematic constructs that set a consistently somber mood.
Avoid it... if you demand more than static and lifeless
performances for a topic of human suffering, this recording so careful
to avoid overstatement that it achieves very little emotional
connection.
BUY IT
 | Balfe |
 | Zimmer |
Rebuilding Paradise: (Lorne Balfe/Hans Zimmer) For
those who have assumed that the utility PG&E stands for "Pigs, Greed, &
Excess," the California wildfires of 2018 proved that "incompetence"
needed to be somewhere in that name as well. Mismanagement of the power
grid by Pacific Gas & Electric was a major contributor to the most
expensive fires in history that year, eventually causing the company to
assume countless billions of dollars in damages and declare bankruptcy.
Particularly poignant was the Camp Fire of Northern California that
wiped out entire towns and killed civilians and firefighters alike.
Several documentary films have been made about this fire, and
particularly its devastation of the town of Paradise, which saw almost
all of the its structures destroyed, displacing tens of thousands of
residents. One such examination of the fire and the tale of individual
perseverance was helmed by Ron Howard, who began producing a steady
stream of documentaries at the conclusion of the 2010's. His 2020 film,
Rebuilding Paradise, shows footage of the fire from those that
experienced it, segueing to more traditional shots of recovery and
rebuilding in the months following the tragedy. Howard isn't shy to
remind audiences of the utility company's role in the destruction,
either, advocacy and politics never far behind in a movie such as this
one. Critics widely embraced the picture as one of the director's better
efforts of the era. Howard's documentaries have often eschewed typical
film scores, but Rebuilding Paradise was different, and the
director reached out to his usual collaborator for feature films, Hans
Zimmer, to assist with the somewhat minimal amount of score to be placed
in the picture. Zimmer has a history of contributing to and producing
documentary music in a wide swath of areas, almost always with a
collaborator in the lead. His partner of choice for Rebuilding
Paradise was Lorne Balfe, who takes main production credit for this
score and receives help from four ghostwriters.
Balfe's stated strategy with the music for
Rebuilding Paradise was to understate it as much as possible,
providing only a few moments of dramatic catharsis for an otherwise
downbeat and deadly serious topic. The general tone of the music on
Rebuilding Paradise exhibits mannerisms of both Zimmer and Balfe
at times, though the score's restrained demeanor doesn't allow much
unique development to emerge. The personality of the work is drab and
depressing in its tone and hazy atmospheres. It's not meant to be really
pleasant and is nearly inaudible in some parts. It rarely rubs the
listener the wrong way until late, the distorted piano over troubled
murkiness in "Memorial" really obnoxious. Otherwise, it's a stewing,
brooding experience outside of rare glimmers of hope, with sterile and
static, lifeless performances performing structures that are completely
inelegant in all their facets. Keyboarding is dominant over a wash of
string and brass tones, guitar and synthetic accents sometimes
meandering in the background. No distinctive soloists stand apart or are
credited as standouts, though individual lines that suggest woodwinds
are provided at the height of "We're Coming Back." Each of the
composers' themes function as four-note groupings, background chords
centered on pairs within that scheme. A main theme informs two
offshoots, though neither of these alterations really takes flight with
consistency. Introduced during the entirety of "Rebuilding Paradise" in
one very long, tedious crescendo, the main theme is conveyed by strings
and brass strokes joined late by acoustic guitar ramblings. This idea is
essentially a wavering, descending series of four notes in slow cycles,
starting at key. A second phrase has one rising progression at the end,
though both phrases apply broken chords that would make Carter Burwell
proud. Its performance in this cue conveys itself as monotonous and
unstoppable, like the fire. The theme is layered by slurred string
effects in "Return to Ashes," distorted and annoying, and takes a Thomas
Newman turn in "Fire Reunited Family" with fuller strings, plucked
rhythms, and fluttering piano figures.
The main theme of Rebuilding Paradise is
expanded into other meandering lines in "Aftermath" and turns more
lyrical in "We're Coming Back," where those passages from "Aftermath"
are further explored. The tone of the loftier performance in "We're
Coming Back" provides the most expressive soundscape in the score, as it
does not simply resort to basic volume or power to supply gravity. The
main theme is accelerated but battered in the keyboarded cloudiness of
"Love of the Land," but it's barely recognizable by this point. The two
thematic offshoots of the main theme for Rebuilding Paradise are
highlights, but their presentations are brief. A hope motif still uses
four-note phrases like the main theme, but it does so in more dynamic
progressions. It receives anthemic treatment at 4:17 into "Rebuilding
Paradise," closing out cue on low piano; this cue ends on a single
orphaned note, likely unfinished by design. This alteration is shifted a
bit to open "One Year Anniversary" on piano. Meanwhile, a different
version of the main theme, possibly for the fire itself, also uses slow,
four-note phrases in pairs but this time turns them ascending. This idea
is developed throughout "Day of Fire," adding some sadness on high
strings in middle of the cue and melodramatic heights for those sounds
at the end. It melds with the hope version of the theme for a stomping
rendition late in "One Year Anniversary" that supplies a slight dose of
synthetic choral tones for an artificially grandiose triumph. The
entirety of the score is inartful in this way, stumbling through aimless
atmospheres for much of its length and pounding away at the tail end of
crescendos without any sophistication for its moments in the sun. The
unsatisfying, short album (primarily digital in release but offered on
CD internationally) gives the listener absolutely zero narrative arc,
its last two cues highly annoying in their deliberately atonal and
somewhat distorted lines of monotony. Zimmer would offer far more
interesting and palatable soundscapes for Hillbilly Elegy later
the same year. What little warmth that exists in "We're Coming Back,"
along with the anthemic glimpse of hope at the end of "Rebuilding
Paradise," cannot salvage the overall experience from one of quietly
disturbing misery.
** @Amazon.com: CD or
Download
Bias Check: |
For Lorne Balfe reviews at Filmtracks, the average editorial rating is 2.83
(in 30 reviews) and the average viewer rating is 2.86
(in 23,359 votes). The maximum rating is 5 stars.
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All Albums Tracks ▼ | Total Time: 34:41 |
1. Rebuilding Paradise (5:30)
2. Day of Fire (3:09)
3. One Year Anniversary (4:18)
4. Return to Ashes (3:34)
5. Fire Reunited Family (5:30)
6. Aftermath (2:55)
7. We're Coming Back (3:39)
8. Memorial (3:27)
9. Love of the Land (2:39)
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There exists no official packaging for the 2020 digital album. The insert of the
2021 CD contains notes about the film and score in Japanese.
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