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Review of Wilde (Debbie Wiseman)
Composed, Orchestrated, Conducted, and Produced by:
Debbie Wiseman
Labels and Dates:
MCI Presents
(European)
(October 27th, 1997)

Sonic Images Records
(American)
(September 8th, 1998)

Availability:
Both the MCI Presents and Sonic Images albums (with identical musical contents) were commercial releases in their respective regions, though the Sonic Images version from America is easier to find on the secondary market.
Album 1 Cover
1997 MCI Presents
Album 2 Cover
1998 Sonic Images

FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... if you never fail to be impressed by grandiose expressions of melodramatic tragedy, Debbie Wiseman's immense orchestral presence for this biography a gripping reflection of the tortured beauty of life as seen by the titular character.

Avoid it... if you can't stand being pummeled by symphonic melancholy that hammers home its demeanor with little variation during its entire, lovely but tiring length.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
Wilde: (Debbie Wiseman) If ever there was a perfect casting of an actor in the role of a real life figure, it was Stephen Fry and his portrayal of famed 1890's playwright Oscar Wilde. Despite his incredibly popular writing at the time, Wilde was destroyed by society's refusal to accept his homosexuality, an aspect of his life revealed through a torturous series of public humiliations that led to his imprisonment. He was a loyal family man who became infatuated with fellow poet Lord Alfred Douglas after discovering his homosexual inclinations, and the two carried on a secret relationship until members of both men's families intervened. Wilde inadvisably sued Douglas' father and his orientation was exposed to the extent that he was tried for indecency and imprisoned for two years, during which time his health failed and likely caused his death at only the age of 46. Both the man's writing and his intriguing personal story have fascinated scholars for a century, and a Pulitzer Prize-winning 1987 biography of Wilde by Richard Ellmann was used as the basis for Brian Gilbert's cinematic adaptation, Wilde, in 1997. The biographical project was not a financial success, though it was applauded in the film festival circuit and later received warm critical reviews and a handful of award nominations for its acting performances. Fry's depiction of Wilde was almost universally praised for its seemingly perfect reflection of the man. Conversely admonished in those same reviews was Debbie Wiseman for her score, which for some critics substantially overplayed its hand when matched with the visuals. Gilbert's rather sparse directorial career hasn't remained loyal to one composer, though Wiseman did offer her services to his 1990's pictures Tom & Viv and Wilde after Gilbert had worked with David Shire and Jerry Goldsmith previously. Wiseman was already a veteran of both film and television by the late 1990's, though her work was not known widely in the international film music scene until after a few immensely popular action and fantasy scores in the subsequent decade. Her techniques at conjuring morbidly enticing melodies proved to be key for Wilde, for which she decided to write unrestrictedly beautiful music to match the title character's view on life. The resulting orchestral score is melodramatic to a fault, lushly romantic and tragic in such overwhelming doses as to result in the aforementioned dissatisfaction with how obviously it forces its emotional impact upon the narrative. Rarely has any score been as depressingly lovely on such a scale during its entire length, yielding an impressive album experience that transcends its efforts to jerk tears in context.

The ingredients for Wilde are conservatively appropriate, the orchestra unaided by any specialty contributors. The influence of waltz rhythms prevails in the score's thematic material, though despite the adaptation of Gilbert and Sullivan's song, "Ah, Leave Me Not to Pine," in three cues, there is little of what listeners might refer to as "period" music in the tone of the work. Wiseman instead writes timeless tragedy that relies upon the sheer weight of the orchestra's capability to express tonal magnificence of a dark nature. The composer seems to be comfortable writing in a gothic mode of minor-key heartbreak, her twists of progressions for this work's darker identities instilling an implied deviancy to their feel. There are two major recurring themes in Wilde and an elusive but equally impressive third motif that toils in less glamour. The main theme represents Wilde himself, a grandiose expression of drama that suits the man's larger than life mystique. The beguiling primary phrase of this idea yields to an interlude sequence that is prominently conveyed in the summary "Wilde" suite that opens the album. Occasional oboe and piano solos of this theme reflect the saddest portions of the score. The other major identity is the love theme for Wilde's wife, Constance, and, by association, their two sons. Introduced in the final third of "Wilde," this theme offers the score's most intimately sincere moments. Respect and somber beauty are expressed in this idea's many similar renditions throughout the score. Hidden in the middle of Wilde is the score's arguably most tormented theme of appealing reach, likely representing Wilde's connection to Douglas. Heard at the outset of "The Wounds of Love" and "Don't Ever Change Your Love," this theme receives major ensemble treatment later in the former cue and in the latter half of "Cast Into Outer Darkness," in which it foreshadows Wiseman's outstanding Arsène Lupin. Singular moments also shine in Wilde, the brightly optimistic "The Selfish Giant" similar to the sappy love theme of Lesbian Vampire Killers and "Wild West" addressing the film's opening in Colorado with a spirited Aaron Copland tribute led by fiddle solo and a rousing, full-blooded Western theme over rollicking rhythms that could be strong enough to anchor an entire score for a movie about the Old West. Overall, Wilde is an interestingly divergent experience in film and on album. Wiseman really doesn't attempt to steer the score through any form of greater development; it's as morbidly powerful at the start as it is in every cue thereafter. As such, the man's decline isn't convincingly reflected in the music's evolution. On album, though, this flaw becomes a tremendous asset, for you will have difficulty finding 55 minutes of more consistently tragic orchestral weight with a resounding quality of sound.
  • Music as Written for the Film: ****
  • Music as Heard on the Albums: *****
  • Overall: ****

TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 55:27

• 1. Wilde (4:29)
• 2. Wild West (2:41)
• 3. I Do Need an Audience (1:48)
• 4. Almost as Beautiful as His Mother (2:07)
• 5. Nothing Should Reveal the Body But the Body (1:48)
• 6. He Loves (1:15)
• 7. Gates Thrown Open (1:39)
• 8. Love Goes Round (1:27)
• 9. I Will Kiss Thy Mouth, Jokanaan (1:46)
• 10. The Wounds of Love (3:53)
• 11. Constant Constance (2:03)
• 12. The Selfish Giant (1:09)
• 13. Mr. Wilde, You Must Go (4:31)
• 14. Cast Into Outer Darkness (2:02)
• 15. Don't Ever Change Your Love (2:04)
• 16. What Is the Love That Dare Not Speak its Name (1:20)
• 17. Angel At My Side (1:52)
• 18. Who Has Dared to Wound Thee (3:11)
• 19. De Profundis (1:39)
• 20. So Wildly Worshipped and So Madly Kissed (2:11)
• 21. An Age of Silver (9:37)
NOTES & QUOTES:
The insert includes extensive information about the film, composer, and score.
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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 Wilde are Copyright © 1997, 1998, MCI Presents (European), Sonic Images Records (American) and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 1/31/12 (and not updated significantly since).