The resulting studio interference with Kamen's
X-Men music thus afforded fans a score more in tune with the
trashy
Event Horizon than any recognizable superhero mould, with
pieces of the score's former self peeking through in a few of the
scenes. The lack of cohesion in the this music is most evident on its
initial album, which was assembled in haphazard fashion as well. The
score, while serviceable, remains among the weakest for any Marvel
adaptation of the 2000's, and the available albums provide an even less
remarkable listening experience in all cases. Had Joel McNeely not
replaced Michael Kamen on
The Avengers two years prior, Kamen
might have produced this exact same result for that film. His score for
X-Men straddles the line between electronic experimentation and
traditional orchestral elements, with the latter struggling to remain
assertive after the last-minute adjustments of continuous synthetic
overlays. The difference between this music and Kamen's more recognized
material for
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves and
Die Hard is
the lack of truly recognizable themes and a heavier reliance on
dissonant and unnerving environments. The main theme of the score, a
nascent superhero identity with no prowess or enthusiasm, does emerge as
the heroes step into their costumes and start fighting, but these
moments are remarkably rare. The "Ambush," "The X-Jet," "Museum Fight,"
and "Final Showdown" cues offer the idea at its fullest, though it also
informs "School Montage" and "Logan Kills Mystique." Kamen applies the
idea's progressions warmer treatment in closing scenes. The narrative
arc of this theme is practically non-existent in the work, leaving the
score without a major identity outside of its drab, angry atmosphere. A
secondary theme of connection between the Logan and Rogue characters is
the score's only truly accessible melody, introduced in "Logan Drives"
before expanding in "Jean Reads Logan's Mind" and shimmering in "Rogue
Heals Logan." Kamen offers solemn but pretty development at length for
the theme in "Logan and Rogue" and "Jean and Logan," the solo woodwind
performances in these cues almost becoming lost in the darkness of the
score's dominant character. Kamen's themes for the two elders of the
tale, Magneto and Xavier (along with his Cerebro machine), are
infrequently accessed. For Magneto, a challenging identity in "Death
Camp" only recurs in "They Knew" and is a wasted opportunity. The
otherworldly Xavier/Cerebro motif is best summarized in "Cerebro" and
was awkwardly tracked in as the opening title music.
Outside of the unsatisfactory thematic presence in
X-Men, the score has little to offer for listeners not enthused
by substandard synthetically-dominated brooding. The majority of the
score features bland orchestral tension in the minor key, served over a
background layer of electronic whooshes and grinding effects. Most of
the score is dark and sinister in tone, accentuating the futuristic,
awe-inspiring concept with ominous meanderings of the string section.
The action material is, like
Event Horizon, consistently loud and
aimless, offering bland rhythmic noise more often than intelligent plot
progression. Instrumentally, "Death Camp" is a highlight in that uses
its lengthy piano and string introduction to glorify a timpani-pounding
crescendo of menacing force. The dramatic undertones of the persecution
of the mutants is effectively conveyed in this weighty material, but
missing is the ambition or conflict that results from that premise. The
electronic accompaniment is best when tingling in the form of a light
rhythm, sometimes along with a choir, for the fantasy atmosphere in
"Mutant School" and "Cerebro." The original album experience in 2000 was
rather senseless but did hide some of the score's greater detriments.
Pieces of Kamen's thematic constructs in "Ambush" and "Logan and Rogue"
represented the obvious highlights, though the latter bubbling cue
represented an anti-climactic and unceremonious end to the listening
experience. Fans of the score long sought bootlegs of the complete
recordings that better exposed Kamen's intentions for
X-Men,
though those that acquired them may not have liked what they heard. In
2021, La-La Land Records offered a nicely produced, limited 2-CD set
with the original versions of each cue on one CD and album or
film-specific arrangements and reconstructions on the second. In
expanded form, the
X-Men score makes a little more sense but is
no more attractive a listening experience. In fact, it's an
extraordinarily tough and at times brutal collection of pointless action
grinds and meaningless suspense and conversation cues without more than
occasional fragments of thematic reference. The full presentation
exposes and amplifies the work's weaknesses, the later versions of cues
with additional synthetic layers almost insufferable. The product is an
instance in which only the most ardent enthusiasts of the work will find
more than passing intellectual interest. On album generally, the score
requires patience and an acceptance of Kamen's extremely dark treatment
of the concept. The sequel scores by John Ottman and John Powell over
the remainder of the 2000's are both superior efforts that provide the
concept with better themes and far more engaging action material.
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