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Review of Those Who Wish Me Dead (Brian Tyler)
Composed, Conducted, and Co-Produced by:
Brian Tyler
Orchestrated by:
Dana Nui
Robert Elhai
Brad Warnaar
Performed by:
The Hollywood Studio Symphony
Co-Produced by:
Joe Lisanti
Label and Release Date:
WaterTower Music
(May 7th, 2021)
Availability:
Commercial digital release only, with high resolution options.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... if you can zone out to softly suspenseful ambience of tonally accessible simplicity, Brian Tyler taking a surprisingly low-key approach to this thriller.

Avoid it... if you expect the composer to address the location of the tale or supply interesting action material despite his unconventional burning of a leading instrument while playing it.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
Those Who Wish Me Dead: (Brian Tyler) The last thing you need when you're trying to escape a forest fire is to be the target of assassins at the same time. Such is the troubled premise of Taylor Sheridan's 2021 thriller Those Who Wish Me Dead, taking place not far from the locale of the director's "Yellowstone" series. An accountant discovers a murder and runs to seek protection from a rural sheriff. On the way there, he is assassinated, his young son escaping into the Montana forests with evidence of the original crime. With the bad guys in pursuit, the boy happens upon the sheriff's ex-girlfriend, who is a smokejumper-turned-lookout. The remainder of the movie involves the cat and mouse game between these characters, but the drama is complicated when the assassins intentionally start a forest fire that threatens them all. Although the movie was moderately successful, Angelina Jolie was badly miscast in the smokejumper role, her persona and appearance simply incompatible for the task. The simultaneous theatrical and HBO Max release represented the most major assignment for composer Brian Tyler in a few years, and he approached it with his usual flair for the flamboyant. While one might expect Tyler to treat the scenery in the same way Trevor Jones did so brilliantly with the similarly plotted Cliffhanger, he does nothing in his music to address the majesty of the locale. In fact, there's nothing really Western about this score at all, its suspenseful rendering just as suitable for an urban setting as the forests of Montana. For all of Tyler's intellectualized pondering of how to supply the concept of fire with an interesting musical personality, he lost the bigger picture. Still, his score for Those Who Wish Me Dead is adequate at its basic purpose, though it might be far more ambient than you would expect. The aforementioned experimentation Tyler undertook for this recording was the use of a burning cello to represent the tone of his fire motif. He literally recorded himself playing a burning cello until he could no longer do so. (The insurance companies must have been thrilled that he didn't ask anyone else to risk a workers' compensation claim.) While moderately amusing, this technique didn't achieve any sound that couldn't have been rendered by other means, and nothing in the music screams out "this is the sound of a cello and its bow literally on fire." Rather, the decently sized orchestral ensemble is joined by an array of electronics that produce a surprisingly gloomy but oddly relaxing listening experience for much of its length.

Piano and strings provide much of the score's default mode in Those Who Wish Me Dead, with lower brass weighing at times and limited woodwinds applied for the villains. Tyler's intent to emphasize woodwinds because of the winds driving the fire on screen doesn't have obvious results in the sound of the score. The work has a solid melodic core, though expect the themes to be overly simple and dissolved to simple expressions of chord progressions at times. The main idea is what the composer calls the "heartbreak theme," its performances utilizing what seems like a blend of electronic strings over an organic base and clustered mostly in the first half of the album. These passages are softly resolute and most often pleasant, setting an accessible ambience in "Those Who Wish Me Dead (Main Theme)," "Elegy for a Soul," "Opus" (in which its personality becomes manipulated), "Lament" (taking on the fire's electronic edge), and the redemptive "Those Who Wish Me Dead Finale." The fire's motif is a growling, atonal pitch that, like the heartbreak theme, dwells on key quite often. It debuts in hints late during "Embers" but explodes in "Shadow Mechanics," "Lightning Strikes," "A Burning Cello," the last of which illuminating the unnecessary instrumental destruction in most displeasing ways. The most interesting but elusive theme in Those Who Wish Me Dead exists for the two assassins, their idea targeting woodwind ostinatos with mysterious ambiguity. This material begins to emerge in "The Love of a Father" but is fully enunciated in "Zero Sum Game" and shifts to deep electronics by "Ultimatum." Faint echoes of the motif persist against the heartbreak theme, even at the start of "Those Who Wish Me Dead Finale." All three ideas in the score are juxtaposed in disheartening ways by "Mind Heart Conflation," the final third of the work pushing these melodies across onto the instrumentation of the other themes. These passages aren't tremendously exciting, even in "Ultimatum" Tyler seemingly content to press the suspenseful horror element rather than straight action. The whole endeavor is basically competent, but the lack of any distinguishing characteristic for the location or these main players yields an emotionally disconnected score. The fire's instrumental experimentation doesn't compete with Hans Zimmer's Backdraft, and the woodwind applications for the villains are under-emphasized. This tendency towards the mundane leaves the listener with the many renditions of the heartbreak theme that open and close the album, and these function as readily accessible tonality of bland but satisfying background meandering. This fifteen minutes of resonating, vaguely muscular music is a worthy addition to any Tyler compilation. Instrumental destruction should sound more impressive than this.  ***
TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 62:10

• 1. Those Who Wish Me Dead (Main Theme) (4:05)
• 2. Elegy for a Soul (2:20)
• 3. Opus (5:11)
• 4. Lament (2:36)
• 5. Embers (4:16)
• 6. The Beauty of Time (2:21)
• 7. Glimmer of Hope (1:18)
• 8. The Love of a Father (2:06)
• 9. Shadow Mechanics (7:07)
• 10. Presence (2:35)
• 11. Mind Heart Conflation (3:29)
• 12. Lightning Strikes (5:08)
• 13. A Burning Cello (2:44)
• 14. Zero Sum Game (4:23)
• 15. The Calm Inside the Storm (1:05)
• 16. Ultimatum (7:21)
• 17. Those Who Wish Me Dead Finale (4:06)
NOTES & QUOTES:
There exists no official packaging for this album.
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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 Those Who Wish Me Dead are Copyright © 2021, WaterTower Music and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 5/31/21 (and not updated significantly since).