VIP |
Subscribe to become a VIP member of SST!
· Request More Often
· Unshared Requests
· Request Countdown Timer
· Request Ready Indicator
· Your Request History
· Access To The VIP Forum
· Add More Favorites
:: Click Here To Upgrade ::
:: Give VIP as a Gift ::
|
|
StreamingSoundtracks.com - Titus - Elliot Goldenthal
Album Information |
|
Album
|
Titus |
Artist
|
Elliot Goldenthal |
Year
|
2000 |
Genre
|
Soundtrack |
Rating
|
|
ASIN
|
B00003WGNS |
Hint: Hover over buttons and album/artist name next to the cover for more info.
Reviewers Rating |
|
1 review done for this album. |
|
The only Eliot Goldenthal score you’ll ever need! |
By: |
LadyInque |
Date: |
8 Jan 2009 |
Rating: |
|
|
Okay, wow. The movie, Titus, was one of the weirdest pictures I’d ever seen. It was an adaptation of a somewhat obscure Shakespeare play by Julie Taymor (Goldenthal’s wife). It’s a bloody, anachronistic, fascinating mess. The score is everything you’ve come to expect from Goldenthal: it’s loud, brash, crazy, quiet, jazzy… it’s as weird as the picture, and there is certainly no attempt to match the music to the period of the story (though the direction doesn’t do that, either). This score has received some more attention recently, because some of the tracks were ripped off by Tyler Bates for 300. Accept no imitations.
Let’s begin with the bombast. The opening track, “Victorious Titus” starts with a booming choir and adds some clanging. “Crossroads” features the blaring horns you might remember from Goldenthal scores like Interview with the Vampire and Alien 3. “Finale” is another good track for this sort of thing, though it’s more majestic than, well, bellicose.
It’s not all like that. There is some quiet, ethereal woodwind work on “Tamora’s Pastorale.” Jazzy tracks like “Swing Rave” and “Apian Stomp” may make you want to dance.
And then there’s the crazy. “Mad Ole Titus” begins with the kind of psycho circus music we love from early Danny Elfman scores, and then turns into a harder, driving song complete with electric guitars. “Pickled Heads” is probably the most divisive track on the album. It starts with crazy sound beds, moves to hard rock, and ends with psycho circus. Even with my warning, the beginning of the track, after whatever precedes it in the queue, will probably scare you.
The album ends with “Vivere,” by Italian songwriter C. Bixio. It’s become something of a standard, but I don’t know which recording is used here. I like it.
Request: “Pickled Heads” “Tribute and Suffrage” “Tamora’s Pastorale”
Avoid: “Pickled Heads”
1 of 2 found this review helpful
Please log in to vote on this review
|
Please log in to write reviews and submit corrections.
|
|