SUPPORT FILMTRACKS! WE EARN A
COMMISSION ON WHAT YOU BUY:
Amazon.com
Amazon.co.uk
eBay
Amazon.ca
Glisten Effect
Editorial Reviews
Scoreboard Forum
Viewer Ratings
Composers
Awards
   NEWEST MAJOR REVIEWS:
     1. Weapons
    2. The Naked Gun (2025)
   3. Dracula: A Love Tale
  4. Fantastic Four: First Steps
 5. Superman (2025)
6. Jurassic World Rebirth


   CURRENT BEST-SELLING SCORES:
       1. Top Gun (2-CD)
      2. Avatar: The Way of Water
     3. The Wild Robot
    4. Gladiator (3-CD)
   5. Young Woman and the Sea
  6. Spider-Man 2 (3-CD)
 7. Cutthroat Island (2-CD)
8. Willow (2-CD)
   CURRENT MOST POPULAR REVIEWS:
         1. Spider-Man
        2. Alice in Wonderland
       3. The Matrix
      4. Gladiator
     5. Wicked
    6. Batman (1989)
   7. Raiders of the Lost Ark
  8. The Wild Robot
 9. Beetlejuice Beetlejuice
10. Doctor Strange: Multiverse
Home Page
Strange World
(2022)
Album Cover Art
Composed and Produced by:

Conducted by:
Nick Glennie-Smith
Jasper Randall

Orchestrated by:
Stephen Coleman
Andrew Kinney
Michael James Lloyd
Ed Trybek
Henri Wilkinson
Jonathan Beard

Additional Music by:
Halli Cauthery
Sven Faulconer
Evan Goldman
Antonio Di Iorio
Alex Kovacs
Labels Icon
LABEL & RELEASE DATE
Walt Disney Records
(November 23rd, 2022)
Availability Icon
ALBUM AVAILABILITY
Commercial digital release only.
Awards
AWARDS
None.
Also See Icon
ALSO SEE





Decorative Nonsense
PRINTER FRIENDLY VIEW
(inverts site colors)



   Availability | Viewer Ratings | Comments | Track Listings | Notes
Buy it... if you are ready to hear Henry Jackman push past the typical norms of the children's adventure genre to provide an outstanding main theme of harmonically fascinating wonderment for this concept.

Avoid it... if you have no tolerance for childish swashbuckling exuberance, the tone of this score sometimes silly in its more conventional passages.
Review Icon
EDITORIAL REVIEW
FILMTRACKS TRAFFIC RANK: #2,022
WRITTEN 12/5/22
Shopping Icon
BUY IT

Jackman
Jackman
Strange World: (Henry Jackman) Plenty of adventure stories have involved a group of main characters journeying through a bizarre world that turns out to be something unexpected on a larger scale. Such remains the case in the 2022 Disney animated romp, Strange World, though the host is sadly not Donald J. Trump's brain. Rather, a group from the secluded land of Avalonia ventures out to determine what's going wrong with local power source, and it takes about two minutes of story time for any audience to determine that all these actions are taking place within a living organism. The main family of explorers, the Clades, is joined by other misfits from Avalonia in search of truth and energy, and they ultimately help save the host and bring balance to their "land" by the end. The touch of existential perspective is saved as a revelation for the gang near the conclusion. Reasonably received by critics, Strange World was quickly labeled a box office failure, one piece of a larger industry problem in late 2022. But also working against the film was its absence from theatrical releases in much of the world, a necessity caused by Disney's insistence upon a homosexual teen character that is considered unsavory in even stranger worlds on our own planet. Reuniting with the filmmakers for yet another animation entry is composer Henry Jackman, though Strange World offered a different strategy from the norm for the composer in this genre. While his animation music had often been defined or at least accompanied significantly by synthetic elements, some of them distinctly retro, this film provided Jackman (and a healthy team of ghostwriters) with the opportunity to dive into more traditional symphonic swashbuckling. Having grown up in the age of John Williams at his height, Jackman was excited to emulate a Williams-level of motific development for an orchestra along with a pretentious adventure sound, citing James Horner influences as well. On top of that, the rhythmic aspects of the music for Strange World find their roots in Alan Silvestri's action scores.

Such 1980's influences are music to the ears of any learned film score collector, and Jackman succeeds in creating a really well-balanced, thematically tight narrative with more than enough to charm and adventure to serve the story. Jackman's approach to Strange World is almost entirely organic, the work's orchestral prowess aided by some slight electronic augmentation for two of his themes. A touch of synthetic choir was added to a real choir to give the vocals an extra, other-worldly tone of mystery. As he had done in his Jumanji scores, the composer supplies more contemporary sounds for the safety of the "real" world at the start and end of these journeys, though these elements don't define much of Strange World. There are some Carl Stalling mannerisms filtered through a Horner lens in cues like "Skin in the Game" and other lightly comedic moments, tuba and woodwinds handling these brighter moments. But the true attraction in this work is Jackman's application of an unusual blend of melody and harmony for his main theme. Rather than maintain a sense of awe and fantasy via unique instrumental coloration, he instead uses the traditional ensemble to generate harmonies that owe much to Jerry Goldsmith's late 1970's and early 1980's fantasy suspense music in their ability to suggest both beauty and danger at once. On the other hand, there's a fair amount of straight forward, brass-led swashbuckling adventure for the main characters, and the pleasant, contemporary portions are appealing in their own way. The score is very heavily thematic, rarely a moment passing without a reference to at least one of the major themes or their derivatives. The "End Credit Suite" contains every significant theme in snapshot succession, though the more discerning ears of film music collectors will be better engaged by Jackman's "Strange World Overture," which is a concert-like arrangement of his main identity that was assembled first and used to sell the filmmakers on the composer's conceptual approach. It's a fascinating theme because of its intentional harmonic imbalance in true Goldsmith fashion, a lovely and alluring construct while maintaining the challenging atmosphere of a foreign world of hidden dangers.


Ratings Icon
VIEWER RATINGS
141 TOTAL VOTES
Average: 3.34 Stars
***** 26 5 Stars
**** 41 4 Stars
*** 41 3 Stars
** 21 2 Stars
* 12 1 Stars
  (View results for all titles)

Comments Icon
COMMENTS
0 TOTAL COMMENTS
Read All Start New Thread Search Comments


No Comments

More...


Track Listings Icon
TRACK LISTINGS
Total Time: 67:15
• 1. They're the Clades!* (1:05)
• 2. A Conflict of Visions (3:48)
• 3. Avalonia Part I (1:37)
• 4. Avalonia Part II (1:07)
• 5. Searcher's Quest (2:27)
• 6. The Descent (3:43)
• 7. Abundance of Life (0:56)
• 8. Crazy Creatures (1:19)
• 9. Callisto (1:12)
• 10. The Misadventures of Ethan Clade (2:54)
• 11. The Tale of Jaeger Clade (2:59)
• 12. Flesh and Blood (1:26)
• 13. Friend or Foe? (1:31)
• 14. Attack of the Reapers (3:28)
• 15. Voyage to the Heart (2:08)
• 16. Skin in the Game (2:06)
• 17. Flight of the Poot Pickles (1:27)
• 18. Winning Ways (1:45)
• 19. Like Father, Like Son (1:25)
• 20. In My Element (1:27)
• 21. The Heart of Pando (3:24)
• 22. An Eye-Opener (2:55)
• 23. Change of Plan (1:55)
• 24. A Great Effort (3:11)
• 25. The Fate of Strange World (2:16)
• 26. Resurrection (2:34)
• 27. Farewell to Arms (1:38)
• 28. A New Perspective (2:15)
• 29. End Credit Suite (2:30)
• 30. Strange World Overture (3:45)
• 31. They're the Clades! (Reprise)* (1:19)
* performed by James Hayden

Notes Icon
NOTES AND QUOTES
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Copyright © 2022-2025, Filmtracks Publications. All rights reserved.
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 Strange World are Copyright © 2022, Walt Disney Records and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 12/5/22 (and not updated significantly since).
Reviews Preload Scoreboard decoration Ratings Preload Composers Preload Awards Preload Home Preload Search Preload