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Tale of a Lake (Panu Aaltio) (2016)
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Average: 3.85 Stars
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Aaltio Fan 1 - March 21, 2022, at 1:15 p.m.
1 comment  (375 views)
Amazing
David Lounsberry - March 3, 2017, at 6:49 p.m.
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Composed, Co-Orchestrated, and Produced by:
Panu Aaltio

Co-Orchestrated by:
Anton Valle
2016 MovieScore Album Tracks   ▼
2023 Quartet/MovieScore Album Tracks   ▼
2016 MovieScore Album Cover Art
2023 Quartet Album 2 Cover Art
MovieScore Media
(March 25th, 2016)

Quartet Records/MovieScore Media
(July 8th, 2023)
The 2016 MovieScore Media album received a commercial download release with a limited CD pressing, the latter available primarily through soundtrack specialty outlets for $20. The CD sold out by the end of 2016 and escalated in price. The 2023 set from Quartet Records and MovieScore Media is limited to 350 copies and available for an initial price of $33 through the same outlets.
The insert of the 2016 MovieScore Media album includes a list of performers and notes about the film, composer, and score. That of the 2023 Quartet/MovieScore set offers different notation and a partial list of performers.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #1,799
Written 2/19/17, Revised 8/25/23
Buy it... if you can't miss one of the most accomplished nature documentary film scores in the history of the genre, a sonic delight that transcends Panu Aaltio's other work in the franchise.

Avoid it... if you have little tolerance for the necessary leaps in tone and style required from cue to cue in this genre, because although Aaltio masterfully weaves his themes through these changing scenes, you still have to accept the occasionally jarring transitions.

Aaltio
Aaltio
Tale of a Lake (Järven Tarina): (Panu Aaltio) Breaking box office records for documentary films originating from Finland, 2016's Tale of a Lake (Järven Tarina) followed the strong performance of its predecessor, Tale of a Forest (Metsän Tarina), three years prior. Director Kim Saarniluoto returns from the previous effort, this time joined by Marko Röhr and shifting focus from the mammals of Finland's forests to the birds and aquatic creatures of its many lakes and rivers. Several years of photography and careful narration in English and Finnish convey a story of the seasons punctuated by the featuring of an extremely rare Saimaa ringed seal. After out-grossing a plethora of American blockbusters in the country in 2016, Tale of a Lake encouraged the filmmakers to immediately start production on Tale of the Sleeping Giants for release a few years later. Much of the same crew supplies talent to this franchise of highly touted nature documentaries, and this notable work includes the music of Los Angeles trained but Finland-based composer Panu Aaltio. The score for Tale of a Forest was a breakthrough to the film music community for Aaltio, in his early 30's at the time, and Tale of a Lake represented an even more impressive extension of the composer's developing skills with orchestral and vocal colors. The composer's approach to the second film is an interesting evolution of thematic fluency and orchestration prowess when compared to the first. While a solid nature documentary score, Tale of a Forest remains perhaps somewhat overrated, its ensemble often too sparse to lend the necessary weight to the scenery and the primary theme not as seductively robust or memorable, waiting until the final few impressive cues to really congeal into a satisfactory whole. That said, you could hear the seeds of Aaltio's talents in his handling of individual lines of orchestration for the personalities of the animals, and that capability blossomed into a remarkably improved effort all-around for Tale of a Lake, which not only stands well above Tale of a Forest but ultimately proved itself among the best of film music from all reaches of the industry in 2016.

Listeners expecting to hear direct carry-overs of thematic ideas from the prior score will be disappointed; Aaltio seems more content referencing some common instrumental vocabulary while treating the watery environments as an all-new playground for thematic ideas. One of the relatively obscure film music pleasures of 2015 and 2016 was the refinement of Aaltio's writing and recording for larger productions. Along with Tale of a Lake, you can hear him explore increasingly complex symphonic ideas, although sometimes betrayed by budgetary restrictions, in films like 2015's The Island of Secrets and 2016's Rölli and the Secret of All Time, both of which offering a healthy dose of Indiana Jones-related adventurism. None of these works, however, prepares you for just how finely tuned the lines of orchestration are in Tale of a Lake. This detail is perhaps the most intellectually intriguing improvement since Tale of a Forest, but also of importance is Aaltio's much better thematic handling and, crucially, his ability to take a small ensemble and utilize layering techniques (one gets the impression that liberal overdubbing might have been employed) and absolutely perfect reverb levels to achieve a sound much larger than you'd expect from a limited group of performers. In most cases outside of the strings, each instrument has only one performer, but Aaltio still achieves larger ambience when necessary with the help of tastefully applied percussion and bass enhancement (perhaps electronic, but not distractingly so). Whereas brass and choir in Tale of a Forest were sampled, this recording adds five brass players to a larger string section and the same four woodwinds. (Tale of the Sleeping Giants eventually employed a full orchestra.) Also an obvious difference in Tale of a Lake is the infusion of Johanna Kurkela's ethereal wordless vocals to supply a personality to the Ahitar, the Water Spirit, in numerous cues. There are a few moments when a discerning ear can tell that the soundscape of the larger portions is rather shallow, but typically the recording is so well handled that you forget the underlying budgetary limitations. The use of each instrument is so carefully judicious that you have to admire how Aaltio passes ideas between players effortlessly and at the forefront of the soundscape.

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