Cameron was impressed by Silvestri's ability to handle
these two differing sides of the score with ease, and in
The
Abyss, the music is functional in the first half and magnificent in
the second. The climactic scenes of the film, underscored by Silvestri's
magical choral and orchestral blend, put the finale cues of the score
into concert halls around the country, yielding a lengthy series of
re-recordings. Everyone from The City of Prague Philharmonic and Crouch
End Festival Chorus to Erich Kunzel and the Cincinnati Pops began
producing equally impressive performances of the finale cue. The score
opens with a preview of the romantic and redeeming themes that Silvestri
would largely save until the climax of the film. A burst of straight
militaristic snare bravado was to accompany the sinking of the U.S.S.
Montana at the outset but was dialed out. Most of the following major
cues would be defined by Silvestri's cost-saving electronics (one can
only imagine the woes of the exploding budget for
The Abyss in
its final stages). Many of the cues are so lightly atmospheric that they
barely register, often including a slight synthetic tingling to help
further the wondrous aspect of the deep. Silvestri also attempts to
utilize electronic pinging and underwater clanging effects, causing an
eerie echo to many of these soft cues, though he doesn't quite capture
them with the resounding and convincing authenticity of Basil Poledouris
at roughly the same time. The orchestra does make a few notable
appearances before the alien influence begins to shape the score. In
"The Crane," a terrific storm sequence features material similar in
action style to the final storm scene in
Back to the Future.
Likewise, the "Sub Battle" cue cranks up some of the rhythmic and brass
heat directly from
Predator just prior. In other cues, you hear
continued references to both of those scores, though not in significant
doses. Unfortunately, Cameron rearranged these cues heavily in the film,
so it's difficult to match Silvestri's original intent with the final
product. The only distractingly poor action cue during the first half is
"The Fight," for which Silvestri employs a more invasive and primal
electronic rhythm. In "Resurrection" we first hear hints of the
"humanity" theme that would develop in full in "Bud on the Ledge."
Cameron rejected Silvestri's original "The Only Way," a lovely
Cocoon-like statement of the main theme, preferring a more subtle
kettle drum-led cue that was renamed "Lindsey Drowns" on the original
album release for the score.
The final twelve minutes of the score for
The
Abyss are pure orchestral and mixed choral dynamism, featuring
Silvestri's two major themes in a simple, broad harmonic spectrum, often
with outstandingly satisfying counterpoint. The "Finale" cue features a
symbolically rising flourish of these themes to rousing conclusion. The
mixing of the male and female sides of the choir are of particular note,
with the cues featuring the sensitive female tones and the deep male
counterparts in elegant layers at the same time. The director's cut of
the film added scenes both before and after the aliens' dramatic
surfacing, and Silvestri's music is not employed to any great length
during these additions. For the scene in which Bud (Harris) is shown the
horrors of mankind, Cameron purchased the rights to Jack Nitzsche's "The
Walk to the Gas Chamber" cue from
The Seventh Sign, with moderate
success. The tragedy of the extended version of the film is the terrible
original music written by Robert Garrett specifically for that
director's cut. Apparently, Silvestri was working on the film after it
had already been slimmed down, and Garrett had already been involved in
the project as a temp-track composer. Garrett's juvenile electronic
music is a far departure in quality compared to Silvestri's obviously
superior material, and this sudden change in musical tone is bound to
cause a distinctly unnerving reaction for film score fans who witness
the tidal wave sequence on the director's cut. As such, the consistency
of Silvestri's music makes the original version of the movie, regardless
of the numerous other factors that go into the debate about the merits
of the additional plotline, a better overall experience. The original
Varèse Sarabande album provided only 47 minutes of the score, but
this presentation does offer most of the work's highlights, including
the bulk of the majestic material. A 2013 expanded and limited 2-CD set
cleans up the sound quality a few degrees, adds extensive extras, and
fleshes out the early suspense and action music a bit better, the latter
really benefitting from its original placement and edits. The most
impressive and heartbreaking addition to this set is the aforementioned
original death scene in "The Only Way," one of Silvestri's best career
compositions for full orchestra. The final minute of this cue,
highlighted by a more frantic rendition of the score's theme set over
rambling piano and snare drum, is nothing less than outstanding. Both of
these albums fail to feature the Nitzsche and Garrett material, which is
probably for the better. Overall, aside from some of the action bursts,
this score won't impress you until its final quarter, but those final
tracks will be well worth the price.
**** @Amazon.com: CD or
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