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The Adam Project (Rob Simonsen) (2022)
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Average: 3.07 Stars
***** 19 5 Stars
**** 39 4 Stars
*** 57 3 Stars
** 31 2 Stars
* 17 1 Stars
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Composed and Produced by:
Rob Simonsen

Conducted by:
Anthony Parnther

Orchestrated by:
Peter Bernstein

Additional Music by:
Taylor Lipari-Hassett
Total Time: 59:42
• 1. The Adam Project (4:55)
• 2. Hallway (0:38)
• 3. Make Good Choices (2:09)
• 4. Forest (2:25)
• 5. Hawking, Zip It (4:42)
• 6. Plan A (1:53)
• 7. You Can Be a Real Jerk (1:21)
• 8. Who's This? (1:49)
• 9. Tell Him (1:45)
• 10. Find Him (0:40)
• 11. Ouchie with the Face (3:06)
• 12. Look Up (2:54)
• 13. I Found You (2:38)
• 14. Echo of This One (2:01)
• 15. They Found Us (2:46)
• 16. Plan (2:10)
• 17. Laura (1:07)
• 18. Punch That Sh*t (1:59)
• 19. Is This Time Travel? (1:59)
• 20. He Doesn't Need Perfect (1:24)
• 21. Butternut Sippy Cup (3:52)
• 22. Take Your Son to Work Day (1:33)
• 23. Supper Time, Spanky (1:11)
• 24. You Never Understood the Science (2:36)
• 25. Catch (4:27)
• 26. I Found You Again (1:42)

Album Cover Art
Milan Records
(March 11th, 2022)
Commercial digital release only, with high-resolution options.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,141
Written 4/30/22
Buy it... if easily accessible sufficiency can carry an hour of generically sincere character and fantasy tones that strive to pull on your heartstrings like it's the 1980's.

Avoid it... if you expect to hear genuinely exciting and fun enthusiasm or depth of complexity from tonal highlights that struggle to shake electronic manipulation at times.

Simonsen
Simonsen
The Adam Project: (Rob Simonsen) Skeptics who scoff at time paradoxes need not concern themselves with The Adam Project, a fairly typical family reconciliation story told through the science fiction lens of time travel. A "time jet" pilot in a bleak 2050 travels back to 2018 and 2022 to thwart the events of that future, saving his wife in the past and coming to terms with his estranged mother and dead father, the latter the inventor of time travel in the first place. When the corporate villains from 2050 aren't chasing down these characters, the pilot, Adam, is bonding with his 12-year-old self and his father, healing old emotional wounds and eventually setting the timeline towards a better 2050. There's a touch of Steven Spielberg aspiration in this Shawn Levy film, the fantasy element existing only as a mechanism to address a lonely child and bring peace to his family. The Netflix film, which had struggled for ten years to reach completion, performed well despite tepid reviews. The director had collaborated with composers Alan Silvestri, Danny Elfman, and Christophe Beck throughout his career, but for The Adam Project, he turned to Rob Simonsen fresh off of his strikingly nostalgic success for Ghostbusters: Afterlife. The original intent of the composer was not to pull at the 1980's heartstrings with his music for The Adam Project, the atmosphere initially meant to be electronic and experimental. But as Simonsen and Levy progressed through their ideas, they realized that a throwback orchestral score was largely inevitable for the family element and the general 1980's tone of the story. Also figuring into the movie is a variety of songs that required Simonsen to work around and write lead-ins to. The result, generally, is nowhere near as nostalgic as the lightning in a bottle that Simonsen provided for Ghostbusters: Afterlife, nor does it contain the whimsically self-aware fantasy tones that someone like Silvestri likely would have provided. There is definitely no John Williams influence to be heard anywhere.

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