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Review of The Specialist (John Barry)
Composed, Orchestrated, Conducted, and Produced by:
John Barry
Sax and Piano Solos by:
Ronny Lang
Michael Lang
Label and Release Date:
Epic Soundtrax
(October 25th, 1994)
Availability:
Regular U.S. release. The song album, which is still readily available, has tracks from Barry's score titled "The Specialist" and "Did You Call Me," which are essentially the opening and closing tracks on the score album.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... if you want a troubled, but intriguing cross between John Barry's sultry jazz from Body Heat and his trademark James Bond-style action motifs.

Avoid it... if you have no interest in the echoes of Barry's jazzy past or a curiosity about what Barry might have written had he continued in the Bond franchise.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
The Specialist: (John Barry) You have to give the filmmakers at least a little credit for figuring out what parts of The Specialist were going to sell with audiences. After all, a film that was originally intended to be a noir thriller ended up relying on Sharon Stone's breasts, Sylvester Stallone's bulging muscles, and a myriad of exploding buildings to retain audience interest. It ended up being an odd collection of different film genres rolled into one dismal package. The cinematography and music had all the dark, seedy atmosphere of a high class thriller from yesteryear, and yet the convoluted plot and unenthusiastic acting (apart from James Woods, of course, who foamed at the mouth in the role) had B-rated action film nonsense written in every line. The plot involves Stallone as the ex-CIA bombmaker, Woods as his former partner gone bad, Stone as a vengeful foe and friend of both, and Rod Steiger as an unintelligible crime boss. Throw the Miami locale into the equation, and the humid environment steams up the picture in between scenes of spectacular explosions. One of the more odd elements of The Specialist is the score by action and romance veteran John Barry, who was within the final few years of the productive end of his career. Critically acknowledged in several reviews, Barry latched strongly onto the tense, seductive side of the story and wrote a score for The Specialist that is, by almost all accounts, too sophisticated for the film and therefore out of place.

By 1994, of course, the James Bond franchise was stalled, though Barry had contributed to his own exile from the franchise anyway by declaring the quality of the films to be poorer each time (by the time he would reconsider, David Arnold was firmly rooted in the franchise, and door had been slammed shut on Barry's return). Nonetheless, Barry still had some Bond-style writing in his blood, for The Specialist remains the closest Bond-like inspiration recorded by Barry late in his career. Some fans have speculated that the score for The Specialist contains some of the sound that Barry might have employed for Goldeneye the following year, had he been assigned to the project. Keep in mind, however, that unlike the Bond films, The Specialist was primarily treated as a darkly romantic thriller, and so the level of action is held to a minority of the album. In its favor, The Specialist leaves behind Barry's lushly layered strings that had redefined melodramatic romance on screen throughout the 1980's, so at the very least, the score has a sound largely distinct from the stale instrumentation and/or orchestration of his concurrent efforts. Still, every aspect of The Specialist is trademark Barry in its underlying rhythm and construct. The title action piece has the snare rips and brass motifs straight from the Bond franchise, with more suspenseful cues in the middle offering familiar meandering deep-note piano performances and tingling metallic percussion that would yield better results in The Scarlet Letter the following year.

Far more intriguing in The Specialist is Barry's seductive love theme, which is performed generously throughout the score; if a film were to ever over emphasize a theme in an attempt to sway the entire demeanor of the film, it would be this one. Straight from the echoing halls of Barry's well-respected, sultry Body Heat, the "Did You Call Me" theme (based on a song version in the film) is Barry's response to Jerry Goldsmith's The Russia House. Featuring elegant piano (by Mike Lang, the same performer from the Goldsmith score), lonely sax, stylish bass, and light percussion, the theme slowly builds in its performances throughout the film until it is joined by a brass-dominated orchestra (led by full-fledged noir trumpet) with fantastic effect in the "End Titles." Unfortunately for Barry, his ambitious "End Titles" performance of the theme was removed from the film in favor of the vocal song, which prompted Barry to insult the head of Warner's music department in a public interview. One other standout cue in the score is "Ray Meets May at her Funeral," which offers a tight crescendo of slightly dissonant choral layers, in the same style as some of Moonraker's choral use. Overall sound quality is strong, but not quite as clear as in Chaplin or his three scores in 1995. On album, the score is has significant repetition, with some of the suspenseful underscore perhaps unnecessary for inclusion. A song album with significant cuts from Gloria Estefan and the Miami Sound Machine include the opening and closing tracks from the score-only album, which fell badly out of print and remains difficult to find. For Barry, The Specialist is a troubled, but ever intriguing effort.  ****
TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 57:50

• 1. Main Title (1:41)
• 2. Bogota 1984 (2:49)
• 3. The Specialist In Miami (2:34)
• 4. May And Ray at the Cemetery (1:51)
• 5. May Dances with Tomas - "Did You Call Me" (2:34)
• 6. Ray Covers May - "Did You Call Me" (2:37)
• 7. After Tomas (2:56)
• 8. The First Bomb - Ray's Place (2:57)
• 9. Explosive Trent (1:56)
• 10. The Parking Lot Bomb (2:31)
• 11. Don't Touch Me Ned - Bomb For Tomas (3:17)
• 12. The Death of Tomas (2:07)
• 13. May's Room - "Did You Call Me" (1:26)
• 14. Ray Meets May at Her Funeral (2:33)
• 15. Let's See That Beautiful Face - "Did You Call Me" (2:43)
• 16. Closing In on Ray (2:56)
• 17. There Goes the Hotel Room - The Fight (2:20)
• 18. May Meets Joe - I'm Not a Woman you can Trust (2:58)
• 19. You Go in and Get Him - "Did You Call Me" (4:04)
• 20. The Whole Place is Wired - She's Hot Ray (3:25)
• 21. Get the Hell Out of Here (2:15)
• 22. You Bastard - How Do You Feel? - Better! - "Did You Call Me" End Title (3:09)
NOTES & QUOTES:
The insert includes no extra information about the score or film.
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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 The Specialist are Copyright © 1994, Epic Soundtrax and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 7/5/98 and last updated 2/19/06.