Why Revell took the job is beyond understanding, other than the fact that
the movie promised to be somewhat cool in concept before the public discovered otherwise.
The composer certainly had many other interesting projects upcoming, including one that
promised to reunite him with
Red Planet partner Emma Shapplin later in the year.
Revell was given only ten days to score and record
Tomb Raider (some reports placed
that number at 12, but in either case, it was an insanely short amount of time for any
project requiring an orchestra). Instead of the 90+ piece orchestra best suited for a
production of this magnitude (Revell would argue otherwise, perhaps just being modest when
he claimed that orchestral bombast would have been inappropriate for
Tomb Raider),
the composer was given a London performing group of 65 for only part of the score,
immediately causing a larger portion of the work to rely upon electronics. In his favor,
however, was the contracting of a 50 member choir, as well as his comfort level in taking a
more synthetic approach to the film from the start. So fast paced was the composition and
recording of his music that Revell never stepped within a thousand miles of the performing
group, writing from the United States and sending the music to London, where his team of
associates (one of which being his own brother) would record it and send it back over the
internet for him to approve. Such methods in scoring were occurring more often than not by
the 2001's, and unfortunately, too many composers resolve themselves to being unhappy with
the resulting final product. In a rare event, Revell actually issued a public apology to his
fans for the lesser quality of his score for
Tomb Raider (presumably in comparison to
his other scores, which have usually proven at least interesting, if nothing else). He
stated on his own website that the album release from Elektra is seriously flawed, with
tracks mislabeled and the quality of music generally subpar. He recognized that the time
factor was too "prohibitive," and specifically apologized to fans for the poor listening
experience. Revell should have been commended for getting any score done at all, earning a
paycheck in the process, and it was perhaps good fortune that the movie wasn't terribly good
anyways.
Revell shouldn't have apologized because the music is intolerably bad, but
rather because it is simply as nondescript as ten days of composing would entail. Unlike his
just-previous
Red Planet, which remains one of the most provocative scores of his
career,
Tomb Raider is one of the least interesting scores of the entire decade.
Outside of about five minutes of inspired electronic and choral combinations, the score is
awash with simplistic rhythms, extended minimalistic meandering on electronics, and no
thematic development worth speaking of. Its robotic textures are the main feature, and with
some of them intolerable in their grating and slapping tones, they can't sustain the album.
In general, while the electronics work well enough to create a basic atmosphere, there are
several cues that are so harsh with electronic disharmony and pounding rhythms in their
entirety that they cannot be tolerated. The opening main title cue is by far the lone
highlight (perhaps composed first by Revell, when he still had some decent sleep), however
this enjoyable choral-accented piece is only two minutes long and bleeds into less engaging
material by its end. Because the music was recorded in London, a somewhat lengthy score
album was made financially possible. The 49-minute product was a disastrous affair for
Revell, who attempted to have the CD stopped just before pressing in order to correct the
Elektra's erroneous titles of the tracks. But the pressing had already begun and the
mislabeled products are what fans found on the shelves. As Revell himself suggests, the
Tomb Raider album is definitely not the best representation of his talents. The
production quality of the album is sparse, matching the content of the music. Revell has
been known to take underdeveloped ideas from previous scores which did not receive the best
of treatment and incorporate them into his larger and better works at a later date. The
title sequence of
Tomb Raider shows a glimpse of something that could have been very
entertaining had Revell been able to record it with a fuller orchestra and chorus after a
decent amount of development time. As it stands, you have to give credit to him for getting
anything done in this situation, but the album cannot escape the circumstances which led to
45 minutes of bland and uninspiring material. The film and score are best forgotten, though
some redemption came with Alan Silvestri's much stronger music for the 2003 sequel.
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