Jarhead (album)
From AwardAnnals
| Artist(s) | Thomas Newman |
|---|---|
| Label | Decca |
| For his third collaboration with director Sam Mendes (after American Beauty and The Shawshank Redemption), composer Thomas Newman has come up with one of his finest scores. The music mixes modern atmospheric quasi-rock touches with Middle Eastern influences (with particularly great success on the tracks “Welcome to the Suck” and “Zoomies.”). The latter manifest themselves in both the beats and the instrumentation—the credits include soloists on exotic instruments such as the bowed cumbus (a type of banjo-like lute) and the processed xaphoons (a sax… | |
Reviews
Amazon.com
For his third collaboration with director Sam Mendes (after American Beauty and The Shawshank Redemption), composer Thomas Newman has come up with one of his finest scores. The music mixes modern atmospheric quasi-rock touches with Middle Eastern influences (with particularly great success on the tracks “Welcome to the Suck” and “Zoomies.”). The latter manifest themselves in both the beats and the instrumentation—the credits include soloists on exotic instruments such as the bowed cumbus (a type of banjo-like lute) and the processed xaphoons (a sax made of bamboo). All the more jarring, then, when the CD’s handful of songs pop up. (It’s quite a jolt to hear Bobby McFerrin’s “Don’t Worry Be Happy” after four eerie instrumental tracks.) The other song picks are obvious but well chosen: T-Rex’s “Bang a Gong (Get It On),” “Naughty by Nature’s “O.P.P.,” Public Enemy’s “Fight the Power,” and Tom Waits’s “Soldier’s Things.” Still, it’s Newman’s work that propels this CD, not the pick-up songs. Surprisingly, Wagner’s “Ride of the Valkyries,” which figures in one of the movie’s most memorable scenes (when soldiers watch Apocalypse Now), isn’t included here. —Elisabeth Vincentelli
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