Planet of the Apes
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- Main Titles
- Ape Suite #1
- Deep Space Launch
- The Hunt
- Branding The Herd
- The Dirty Deed
- Escape From Ape City/The Legend
- Ape Suite #2
- Old Flames
- Thade Goes Ape
- Preparing For Battle
- The Battle Begins
- The Return
- Main Title Deconstruction
- Rule The Planet Remix (Remix by Paul Oakenfold)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #146773 in Music
- Released on: 2001-07-24
- Number of discs: 1
- Format: Soundtrack
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: .22 pounds
Customer Reviews
A few jewels found amoung lots of noise
First, let me go on record to say that Danny Elfman is my idol (he says without shame) and is basically the reason I got into music in the first place. I consider him an unrecognized musical genious. And I'm serious about this. I own almost every album he's released.
Unfortunately, I find again to be less than overly thrilled with this latest effort, and I've finely figured out why. It's too much. Way too much. Good taste is all but discarded in favor of loud musical broo-ha-ha. This album is exteremly loud, testosterone pumping dissonance, with little in the way of sensitivity or musical understanding.
It used to be, for instance with Mission: Impossible (my controversial pick for Danny Elfman's best score ever) that by the time he got to this level of over-the-top musical excitement, as in on the train at the end of the movie, he had earned it. We were ready for it, and when the full orchestral and sampled percussive forces are unleased it's unstoppable. But here, we get this from the very start. By about the fourth track, there is no where else for the music to go, and the album suffers from boredom. Loud boredom it's true, but it's still boredom.
In my opinion this worked a lot better in Sleepy Hollow (and granted this score may be just what the movie ordered- we will see) probably because it was almost all accoustic so the musicians we're able to enjoy it. Here, they were probably passing out from exhaustion. Furthermore, the loudness and over-sampling and just blatant action score adrenaline masks what real substance there may be. It's like hyping something way up, blowing it way out of proportion, obscuring whether there really was anything there to begin with. I think Sleepy Hollow has something, a seed of brilliance, and Mission: Impossible is incredible. Here it's very hard to say.
That said, track 4- the Hunt- must be heard to be believed. It's astounding. I just wish there was greater contrast to it elsewhere in the album. Also worth note is the Main title, and more so the Main Title Deconstruction. I also firmly appreciate track 11, Preparing for Battle, in which- despite its extremely thick orchestration and purcussive sounds- you can still here what makes this Danny Elfman, and why he is an extremely skilled composer. The counterpoint is exquisite, if in danger of being lost to the over-the-top standard Hollywood mixing job. However, with these tracks you can hear what makes this Danny Elfman and not another over-the-top Hollywood action [...](cough-cough-zimmer-cough). Elfman also gets his usual mileage out of a simple three note motive- nobody can do it better.
In conclusion, worth buying for the fan and for the adrenaline dose, not as good a score as Sleepy Hollow or Simple Plan (his most recent best), but still far and away better than his embarrassing Instinct and Proof of Life.
Big effort for 1 track
This album can be viewed as a good efford of Elfman for short music. The main titles is really surprising and if not harmonically rich, great entertainment to listen. The other tracks are not anything we haven't heard of. When there's less harmony in a score, then it should be much powerful in orchestration. Elfman doesn't show us anything which is different than other Elfman albums like M.I.B. or Mission Impossible. But even for Main Titles and the "deconstruction" of it. The Oakenfold mix is really terrible and it's like Eric Serra mixes. If you like them maybe you can enjoy that track but considered as a part of the score, it doesn't fit. I rated this with 4 stars since I really liked the 8 minutes of the album. Buy it if you liked M.I.B. score.
A Pleasant Mix of Opposing Sounds
When the score for the re-imagined version of Planet of the Apes starts playing on your speakers, it can easily be a frightening experience. It is wild, it is harsh, it is loud, it is schizophrenic, it is seemingly disorganized. Then you listen some more. You go through a few tracks, some are like the opening, others are subtler--maybe not much, but at least the percussion takes a break. By the end of the album, however, there is an overall unity, exuberance, an underlying thematic quality that somehow turns this oppressive score into a success. Don't ask me how; just take my word for it. Since Danny Elfman came onto the film-scoring scene, he has been relatively diverse. He started silly, became thematically dramatic, then slipped into obscure minimalism. Planet of the Apes represents a new stage, or perhaps a whole new style completely.
Even with the first track, despite my hesitations to immerse myself in the style, I was overjoyed with what Elfman had done with this score. For anyone familiar with Jerry Goldsmith's work on the original, there is no dispute that it was unique--to simply use the word unique is to deprive it of the vulgarity it cherishes. If I said that Elfman's score comes across as initially oppressive, then Goldsmith's is like a recording of nails on a chalkboard played to the tune of painful infant screams. For this reason, the original score has achieved a lot of respect for its originality and the harsh way it coupled with the plot of the story. For myself, I need something that at least resembles music, before I stick it in a CD player. Was Goldsmith's score appropriate? Yes! Was it listenable? No! Does Elfman make up for this? Indeed!
Elfman's score can easily be sectioned into two opposing categories: Percussive pounding and simple strings. In the end, both are effective and a welcome listen. There is surprisingly little thematic material, a decision not wholly inconsistent with Elfman's minimalist period, but certainly uncharacteristic of his Burton scores. In the end, however it isn't needed, because the cohesion lies in the rhythms and beats. It has always been my opinion that Elfman has achieved his composing fame most persistently for his ability to use percussion to new advantage, perhaps a byproduct of his Oingo Boingo years. Therefore, whenever he engages in a rowdy excerpt of high-pounding percussion, it succeeds beyond one's expectations for such a limited aural experience.
This score certainly, however, would have failed, were it only an hour of percussion. Elfman uses it to his advantage, but never overdoes it. If rhythmic percussion categorizes the militaristic apes and action sequences, then the intermittent, subtler passages are seemingly intentional references to a more space-oriented sci-fi genre. To this effect, it is a provocative contradiction to the setting of the story, the lush ape city and the dusty wastelands that out lie it. In the end, however, it creates a style and a mood that captures the listener's interest more wholly then if Elfman had slumped into the simple underscore that a lesser composer would have been content with. It is small additions like this that make for a unique and ultimately entertaining experience.
In conclusion, Planet of the Apes, as a listenable score if not as a film, exceeds its predecessor and combines two contradictory styles--one brash and unrelenting, the other subtle and magical--to form an overall whole that would have failed without the opposing polarities of these two sounds. One will undoubtedly be put off at first by the maddening sounds that escape the speakers, but be patient: there is an interesting and unusual score here that will not fail to entertain. This is Elfman at his most revolutionary, combining elements that don't seem inappropriate for the film, but utilizing them in ways never before explored.





