The personality of
Amistad is split into two
halves, which is perfectly understandable given the plot of the film.
The African elements, heard in the primary theme's song performance and
a sub-theme for Djimon Hounsou's character of Cinqué, both
feature instrumentation atypical to Williams for the period and are a
refreshing exploration of percussive and vocal tribal spirit. The
American counterpart to this African half is scored with Williams' usual
noble ideas for trumpet and French horn, respectfully tasteful at every
moment. The main theme informing "Dry Your Tears, Afrika" is the score's
most obvious identity, and it offered Williams a chance to assemble 50
vocalists and a variety of authentic percussion, including a slapping
metallic sound unique to this score, to accentuate the powerful bass of
the orchestral ensemble, that region sometimes aided electronically. The
poem "Dry Your Tears, Afrika" by Bernard Dadie is adapted with all the
victorious bravado that Williams can raise, though the upbeat nature of
this theme is a somewhat surprising choice for the composer. For the
slaves, there would be decades of hardship to come, and "Dry Your Tears,
Afrika" seems to handle the topic with valiant defiance that perhaps
doesn't apply necessary gravity to the concept. The underlying theme's
presence in the score is pervasive in that it features an elegant
repetition late in its progression that is used to tie the score
together. This five-note conclusion to the theme is appended masterfully
to the end of both Cinqué's theme and the American theme,
symbolizing the eventual and inevitable merging of cultures. Full
reprises of the song explode in "The Liberation of Lomboko" and the
official concert-suite arrangement at the end of the album, though the
theme's most beautiful performance comes from the wordless vocals in the
latter half of "Middle Passage." This cue alleviates some of the
problems with abrasive, dry mixing from which the three full song
performances suffer. The theme for Cinqué in
Amistad is
provided with a concert arrangement of its own in "Cinqué's
Theme" and features the solitary longing in flute performances that
Williams collectors will best remember from
Hook. This theme is
interestingly handed over to the full, lush ensemble and concludes with
a horn solo that seemingly foreshadows the America that the character
would come to encounter. This melody receives a haunting resolution in
the subdued choral performance of "Going Home" at the finale of the
film, once again followed by a subtle reference to the main theme.
The increased presence of the American mores and
setting of
Amistad in "The Long Road to Justice" is announced
with a buoyant and optimistic trumpet and French horn theme that
represents the better halves of
JFK and
Born on the Fourth of
July. Williams' positive themes for Americana settings seem to blend
together after a while, and the one for
Amistad remains rather
anonymous in this history. While well performed, these good-natured
passages in later cues like "Adams' Summation" and "The Verdict" lack
the powerfully genuine touch that Williams had provided them in times
past. In both "The Long Road to Justice" and "Mr. Adams Takes the Case,"
the American theme yields to the African main theme but maintains the
Western instrumentation. Outside of these soothing thematic passages,
there are few other cues worth noting. Much of the remainder of the
score is darkly suspenseful, scored with a slight hand by Williams. An
exception is "Sierra Leone, 1839," which features a deep male chorus
chanting to tribal rhythms that combines the raw menace of
Indiana
Jones and the Temple of Doom with the synthetic edge of
Jurassic
Park. The same style extends into "Crossing the Atlantic," which
opens with an electronic pan pipe rhythm synonymous with James Horner's
career. These more subdued tracks are expanded on a 2022 La-La Land
Records set containing a fuller presentation of the score and a wealth
of alternate takes. Because of available recording time, Williams
availed himself of several additional recordings that served both the
suite-like arrangements and alternate cues. The 155-minute edition of
Amistad is admirable but definitely overkill, especially given
the redundancy in the newly revealed passages. The additional cues do
offer renditions of the American theme to a greater extent in the first
half of the score, though their performances don't yield any new insight
into the theme. Added cues of tribal minimalism for percussion and
exotic flute are competent at establishing a mood but are too
understated for appreciation apart from the film, elongating the first
CD on the set to tiresome lengths. The score, despite the appeal of its
highlights, simply cannot sustain such expansion on album unless
intellectual appreciation is the goal. Overall,
Amistad does not
offer sweeping melodies or attractive action material. It is an
intelligently successful exercise in restraint, though its major
detraction is the overly optimistic nature of the primary song and a few
of the suspense cues. Otherwise,
Amistad is a very impressive
score that compensates well for its slower passages with outstanding
thematic integration and execution.
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