|
|
White Noise
|
|
|
Composed and Produced by:
Conducted by:
Lucas Richman
Orchestrated by:
Steve Bartek David Slonaker
|
|
LABEL & RELEASE DATE
| |
Netflix Music
(November 18th, 2022)
|
|
ALBUM AVAILABILITY
| |
Commercial digital release only.
|
|
AWARDS
| |
None.
|
|
ALSO SEE
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Buy it... for fifteen minutes of engagingly tonal Elfman drama of a
tortured, retro variety, the highlights of this score raising fond
memories of the composer's early tragedies.
Avoid it... if you expect the score to make much sense, its
infusion of 1980's electronica not always meaningfully impactful and the
thematic narrative extremely elusive.
BUY IT
 | Elfman |
White Noise: (Danny Elfman) Despite the acclaim of
the 1985 novel that inspired the movie, Noah Baumbach's 2023 adaptation
of White Noise was a monumental popular failure, unable to
capture audiences with its horrifyingly comedic dystopian character
journey. The people of an Ohio town are gripped by a fear of death, and
this story follows one particular family as it deals with its own
internal demons and then a disastrously toxic train accident that sends
the people of the area into a panic. Not only must the dysfunctional
family of six survive the cloud of death emanating from the wreck, but
they have to reconcile with their own drug use and other, more bizarre
hang-ups. The 1980's setting is imperative to the plot, the family's
station wagon and local supermarket emblematic of larger concepts, the
latter actually representing salvation. The absurd character arc of
White Noise didn't allow it to connect with most audiences
despite reasonably warm critical and awards responses, the movie costing
upwards of $100 million more to produce than it initially brought in.
Aside from its flying station wagon, some of that budget was allocated
to an actual recreation of a train and semi-truck collision that is the
ignition point for the whole plot. This phenomenal scene is masterfully
choreographed against an impassioned speech about Hitler made by Adam
Driver's lead character, and key to its success is Danny Elfman's music
for that moment. Elfman saw White Noise as an opportunity to
stretch his career with another quirky arthouse project aimed at
possible awards consideration. While such accolades never came, the
resulting score is an intriguing evolution of the composer's early
styles. In the film, the score only makes an impact in a handful of
scenes, however, with most recognition going to the song "New Body
Rhumba" by LCD Soundsystem that accompanies the remarkably choreographed
salvation dance sequence in the supermarket at the end of the story. The
composer was asked by first-time collaborator Baumbach to infuse the
tone of Giorgio Moroder and Tangerine Dream into his score, and Elfman
somewhat obliged. With 1980's electronic sensibilities in mind, Elfman
wrote upwards of 20 minutes of music for the film based only these
instructions before seeing the movie.
Ultimately, the Moroder and Tangerine Dream aspects do
somewhat impact the score for White Noise, but the work still
remains mostly within Elfman's comfort zone. When he does really embrace
the electronica elements, the music achieves an intriguingly darker
tone. And yet, classical minimalism in Elfman's 1990's dramas is the
standard mode, and quirky influences from his 1980's comedies are also a
contributing factor. A fully-rounded orchestra joins the electronic
elements, brass a rare but at times impactful presence. Choral
accompaniment, sometimes with the composer's trademark solo boy voice
technique, is used at upbeat or inspirational moments, and a massive
theremin-aided crescendo with the choir occupies "Up There." A
vibraphone provides some contemporary character while piano is once
again the reliable representation of suburban home life. The personality
of the score works well, but the narrative is minimally effective,
mostly due to the fact that Elfman's themes are highly elusive and
disjointed by design. It's a film about people in various states of
being out of their minds, so cohesive thematic threads aren't always
called for. For some listeners, a handful of standout tracks emulating
vintage Elfman music will appeal. The aforementioned lecture and train
disaster sequence yields one of Elfman's own favorites in "Duel
Lecture," with countless retro techniques including memories of
Beetlejuice in the solo voice applied as the toxic disaster is
about to unfold. For others, "Teddy Bear" is a frantic play on 1980's
Elfman zaniness. For those inclined to appreciate the composer's most
horrifying material, the explosive dissonance in "Bad Dream" is
striking. The culmination in "Sunrise" is one of the composer's most
touching cues in quite some time. The thematic duties are split between
the primary characters and the overarching sense of fear from the people
of the town. The main theme has a variant representing the lead female
character, Babette, and the two are intertwined several times depending
on how fragmented Elfman's development of either can be. The main
identity is a meandering and lost one, with repetitive, circular
phrasing in its descending movements. You receive it with upbeat spirit
at 0:25 on strings over bubbly percussion in "Waves and Radiation." It's
twisted towards light Elfman tragic mode in "Highway Disaster,"
elongated for tender piano and strings in "Terribly Sad Moment," and
hopeful on woodwinds over cool percussion late in "You Shot You."
The main theme's epiphany in White Noise comes
in the latter half of "Sunrise" as it reaches for religious heights of
coolness, and the last 30 seconds of this cue at the supermarket
entrance is a highlight, wrapping the theme well. It prances lightly in
the second half of "Wrap Up," too, a seemingly unused cue. The variant
on this theme for Babette is quietly pretty but troubled and staggering
in progressions. Tentative on piano and woodwinds at 0:39 in "Me First,"
the idea turns sinister by the cue's end. It is pensively attractive on
the same instruments in "Chew Gum or Smoke," returns with tired whimsy
on piano in "Sunrise," and obtains more refinement early in "Wrap Up."
Dominating the score's midsection is Elfman's often electronically-aided
fear theme, an inescapable, alternating rhythmic figure that supplies
much of the work's discomfort. Defined at the start of "Duel Lecture"
and during all of "Airborne Toxic Event," this idea becomes slight in
the middle of "Toxic Chemicals" but evolves into a rambling electric
bass figure in "We're Late." From there, the fear motif is a driving
force, propelling the middle of the horrifying "Teddy Bear" and
continuing in "Panic." It becomes even more synthetically overbearing
throughout "Trash," takes a determined lead on electronics in "Finding
Mink," strikes a more organic and lighter tone in "You Shot You," and is
summarized in the unused "Nebulous Mass," which takes this idea to
militaristic ends with synths and snare. Listeners yearning for the
generally accessible passages in White Noise, thematically or
otherwise, will find fifteen minutes of more of compelling throwback
material. The entirety is saturated with Elfman's styles even
considering the outside 1980's influences, and that appeal alone will
suffice for some. When the composer unleashes his tragically tonal
inclinations in this work, it really shines. The remainder is
comparatively troubled beyond appeal on the album, which contains the
two unused tracks at the end and appends the vintage "The Cloud is
Coming" song. The "Sunrise" cue segues into the dance song, "New Body
Rhumba," which was released separately as a single. Its absence on the
album shows once again why licensing issues still stand in the way of
the soundtrack album everyone wants. Based on Netflix's awards
consideration website, some Elfman cues were left off of the album, too.
Given the failure of the movie and the obscurity of this Elfman music,
few listeners will be clamoring for more. It's comforting to hear the
composer continue to develop ideas from his early years of film scoring,
and while much of White Noise is grating, its highlights are well
worth the endeavor for his collectors.
*** @Amazon.com: CD or
Download
Bias Check: |
For Danny Elfman reviews at Filmtracks, the average editorial rating is 3.16
(in 89 reviews) and the average viewer rating is 3.27
(in 153,897 votes). The maximum rating is 5 stars.
|
Total Time: 45:14
1. Waves and Radiation (1:22)
2. Me First (2:05)
3. Duel Lecture (4:59)
4. Airborne Toxic Event (0:31)
5. Toxic Chemicals (1:00)
6. Chew Gum or Smoke (1:32)
7. We're Late (1:03)
8. Highway Disaster (1:06)
9. Up There (2:09)
10. Teddy Bear (1:51)
11. Panic (1:07)
|
12. Terribly Sad Moment (4:39)
13. Trash (3:34)
14. Bad Dream (2:16)
15. Lost in the Kitchen (1:14)
16. Finding Mink (3:02)
17. You Shot You (1:45)
18. Sunrise (2:43)
19. Wrap Up (0:55)
20. Nebulous Mass (2:32)
21. The Cloud is Coming* (4:02)
|
* performed by Dean Wareham and Britta Phillips
There exists no official packaging for this album.
|