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Wild Rovers (Jerry Goldsmith) (1971)
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Average: 3.37 Stars
***** 8 5 Stars
**** 13 4 Stars
*** 9 3 Stars
** 6 2 Stars
* 4 1 Stars
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Composed, Conducted, and Produced by:

Orchestrated by:
Arthur Morton
1990 Memoir Album Tracks   ▼
2000 Chapter III Album Tracks   ▼
2003 Film Score Monthly Album Tracks   ▼
1990 Memoir Album Cover Art
2000 Chapter III Album 2 Cover Art
2003 FSM Album 3 Cover Art
Memoir Records
(1990)

Chapter III Records
(July 25th, 2000)

Film Score Monthly
(September, 2003)
The 1990 Memoir Records and 2000 Chapter III Records albums were regular commercial releases, both featuring this score alongside other Goldsmith works and falling out of print. The 2003 Film Score Monthly expansion was limited to 3,000 copies and available only through soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $20. After selling out, it escalated to collector's prices over $100.
The inserts of all the albums include information about the score and film, the 2003 Film Score Monthly products' notes especially detailed.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,353
Written 11/13/24
Buy it... for one of Jerry Goldsmith's most memorably lyrical themes and a few romping, Aaron Copland-inspired Western action cues, Wild Rovers among the composer's best Western scores.

Avoid it... on all but the 2003 Film Score Monthly album if you desire a comprehensive presentation of the both the film and album recordings for the score, each with unique attractions.

Goldsmith
Goldsmith
Wild Rovers: (Jerry Goldsmith) Western films were a dying breed by the early 1970's, and director Blake Edwards thought he could buck that trend by pairing the nostalgic veteran William Holden and upstart hunk Ryan O'Neal as the lead duo in 1971's Wild Rovers. The two ranch hands are brutalized and decide at a whim to rob a bank and set off a series of events that inevitably ends badly for them. But for Edwards, it's the journey that counts, and the film's edginess is largely based upon its almost comedic indifference to the obvious downsides of Western living. A reasonably impressive cast of characters casually kills in between conversational scenes, a touch of philosophy thrown in good measure. Still, the movie is highlighted by its cinematography in typical Western fashion, and Edwards initially sought to ride the strength of that setting and his characters to a three-hour epic result. The studio, understandably, declined to oblige, and the director eventually disavowed the movie as it was cut down to a more manageable size. Edwards was so distraught by the experience that he even made a satirical movie about Hollywood's treatment of this and his other films in the following years. Rolling with the post-production mayhem of the project was composer Jerry Goldsmith, whose score for Patton had impressed the director a year earlier. The original plan for the score was for it to provide only occasional depth to the narrative, with a fair amount of the movie either absent music or utilizing subdued atmospheres. Even some of the major action scenes are left unscored. Goldsmith did provide Edwards with a pair of Aaron Copland-inspired Western action cues that the director fell in love with, and variations of these two cues ended up placed all over the picture despite Goldsmith's far more modest intentions. On screen, the music thus plays a very outsized role, making the score (and even some of the scenes) seem more exciting than it actually is. Thankfully, the extremely high quality of these cues, aided by a spectacular combination of instrumentation and melody, forgives Edwards' decision to an extent.

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