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Total Recall (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) [The Deluxe Edition]

Jerry Goldsmith

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Album Review

This Jerry Goldsmith soundtrack release is worth extended attention. The album is pulsingly rhythmic from the start, beginning with syncopation driven by whipcrack percussion and a clock-precise digital synthesizer pulse, on which Goldsmith builds ascending orchestra chords that sneakily reference "Mars" from Holst's The Planets without utterly aping the piece; this builds to a climax and changes, softening before managing to indicate menace without using the easy escape of minor chords. For once, despite the inevitable digital synthesizers and distinctive electronic percussion, Goldsmith has fashioned a score that's primarily driven by the orchestra, rather than being primarily dependent on electronic keyboards. To that extent, it's a rather old-fashioned action/suspense score, building and releasing tension in many varied ways. "The Hologram" uses everything from a clock-like ticking to low-key orchestral discord to massive orchestral stabs designed to propel action along at a stunning rate, after which it's back to a supposedly calming effect — which, of course, has a subtly unnerving counter-theme running through it. One can easily visualize action coupled to the music — again, that old-fashioned, almost Hitchcockian nervousness where nothing makes any sense and everything is a threat. While themes, as always, reappear at points during the score, the repetition is kept to a minimum, which is also a plus. Also kept to a minimum is Goldsmith's tendency to insert the odd too-sweet theme (this worked very well with Gremlins 2, and not so well in other places). If anything, this particular score is a stunning display of Goldsmith's brilliance as a composer — a great deal of it would not be out of place on the concert stage. By turns overwhelmingly dramatic, scary, and gorgeous, Total Recall is by far among Goldsmith's best, ranking with his score for the European release of Legend. On the audio and mastering side, Goldsmith engineer Bruce Botnick has done an excellent job, providing a clear and transparent stereo master that clearly delineates the separate instrument groups while maintaining an excellent balance of low, middle, and high (the bass is clean and powerful; this is usually the first area to suffer badly in a digital recording). [2000s Deluxe Edition was expanded by 17 tracks, none of which appeared on the original release of the soundtrack.]

Customer Reviews

A soundtrack even Quatto would love.

I love this album. The intense, rythmic, and fluid sounds make me feel like I am living in Venus Ville.

Hey Godzilla Guy!

The composer is Jerry Goldsmith. Not the actor Jeff Goldblum. Just thought you should know since you're such a big fan of this score. ;)

Not A Total Rip Off...

This is to eyebum, Jerry Goldsmith did not steal this directly from Basil Poledouris. What makes it similar is that he used some of the same instruments or he got the idea for a barbaric tone from a barbaric movie. Its also normal to get ideas form other mediums like music and movies. Like Conan, Total Recall comes off like a barbaric male testosterone kind of movie filled with blood, violence, sex, odd characters and legendary Gods or myths. The only difference is that Total Recall takes place in the furture. And there are also plenty of times when composers share notes with one another or reuse the same tune in there movie or use a them in one film that another composer did not use in the film they were working on. Oh yeah by the way Goldsmith wrote music for Timeline and Alien Nation and both scores were rejected by the directors but the cds have been realeased for the first time about a year ago and they are only available on the net. Both cds are limited 3000 copies and are very rare. Rest In Piece Jerry Goldsmith, we will miss you

Biography

Born: February 10, 1929 in Los Angeles, CA

Genre: Soundtrack

Years Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s

For over four decades, Jerry Goldsmith ranked among the film and television industry's most highly-regarded and prolific composers; at the peak of his activity during the 1960s, he was estimated to have scored an average of about six films annually. Born in Los Angeles on February 10, 1929, Goldsmith studied music at the University of South Carolina, and after accepting a job as an office clerk at CBS television later graduated to the network's music department in 1950. There he composed themes for...
Full Bio
Total Recall (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) [The Deluxe Edition], Jerry Goldsmith
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