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Alive (James Newton Howard) (1993)
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Average: 3.3 Stars
***** 23 5 Stars
**** 31 4 Stars
*** 36 3 Stars
** 20 2 Stars
* 10 1 Stars
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Composed, Co-Orchestrated, and Co-Produced by:

Conducted by:
Marty Paich

Co-Orchestrated by:
Brad Dechter
Mark McKenzie
Chris Boardman

Co-Produced by:
Michael Mason
1993 Hollywood Album Tracks   ▼
2022 Intrada Album Tracks   ▼
1993 Hollywood Album Cover Art
2020 Intrada Album 2 Cover Art
Hollywood Records
(February 9th, 1993)

Intrada Records
(January 13th, 2020)
The 1993 Hollywood album was a regular U.S. release. The 2022 Intrada set is limited to an unknown quantity and available only through soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $30.
The insert of the 1993 Hollywood album includes no extra information about the score or film. That of the 2020 Intrada product contains details about both.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,236
Written 3/17/22
Buy it... if you appreciate James Newton Howard's melodies at their most redemptive and graceful heights, Alive containing a handful of outstanding symphonic moments of salvation.

Avoid it... if you expect the bulk of the score to consistently develop the themes from those highlights, most of the work somber and understated in its plentiful woodwind solos and light ethnic tones.

Howard
Howard
Alive: (James Newton Howard) Few movies can stake a claim to featuring gruesome cannibalism and also a sappy Hollywood ending, but 1993's Alive attempted just that. The movie's depiction of an Uruguayan rugby team's crash in Andes in 1972 isn't exactly a pleasant viewing experience, though studios were lining up to tell the true story. The plane went down with 45 people aboard, and while the snowy crash initially killed only ten people, failed rescue attempts caused the survivors to remain atop the mountain for more than two months. After exhausting their food supplies, they famously began eating their dead to survive. Eventually, two of the players descended the mountain and alerted authorities, who then rescued the 14 remaining people at the crash site. The battles with the elements and an avalanche promised good cinema, but critics couldn't get past the cannibalism aspect. Audiences still made the movie a box office success, and the tale has lived on as a legend. With filming taking place in such an immense and gorgeous wintry setting, the music for the film was tasked with matching in scope. Intriguingly, director Frank Marshall decided against applying music to the crash and avalanche sequences, allowing sound effects to carry those scenes. For the character interactions, scenery shots, and ultimately sugary ending, Marshall turned to composer James Newton Howard for his music. While film music collectors later enjoyed an illustrious career from Howard in the adventure genre, he wasn't a proven commodity with such music at the time. The composer sought to develop a largely melodic but not necessarily thematically tight score, striving to match the appeal of Jerry Goldsmith in the larger symphonic sections. Mostly leaving synthetics aside, the orchestral score is laced with pan pipes, shakuhachi flute, and, most importantly, acoustic guitar to provide the ethnic flavor of the region. Of significance are a plethora of woodwind solos for the softer passages; in fact, woodwinds truly dominate the character of the score when the guitar is not present. Outside of these colors, the orchestra provides a standard dramatic score with a handful of momentous ensemble highlights.

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