Expect to read many accounts that applaud Goldenthal's
approach to
Cobb, most of which once again glowing about the
composer's wildly inventive clashes of musical identities. Indeed, there
has to be intellectual appreciation of what the composer accomplishes
here; rarely do you hear film music with so many intentional collisions
of disparate tones, genres, rhythms, and pitches. At the same time,
Cobb is a score without any sensible cohesion outside of its
direct adherence to the context of the movie. On one hand, you hear
Goldenthal addressing the pastoral aspect of the sport and its legend,
using a wholesome trumpet theme over sentimental strings for what little
sincerely caring angle exists in the story. Heard in "Variations on an
Old Baptist Hymn" and "Stump Meets Cobb," the idea dissolves in much of
the score until a melancholy reprise in "Cobb Dies." Even within these
seemingly wholesome passages, Goldenthal toys with the progressions of
the theme to twist it into the minor key at periodic intervals. The same
technique permeates the lengthy Americana string performances in the
"Cooperstown Aria" cues and "The Homecoming," all of which brooding more
often than not. Other motifs exist in the score, but not to a
structurally important end. Rather, the score's chaotic blend of vintage
jazz, hymns from America's Deep South, and roaring action sequences keep
the listener guessing. The opening hymn utilizes Goldenthal's own
gritty, soulful vocals in eerie layers, and "Stump Meets Cobb" features
unnaturally skittish string figures to perhaps represent the scheming
Stump. While "Nevada Nightlight" and "Meant Monk" present straight
forward vintage night club jazz, "Newsreel Mirror" and "Georgia Peach
Rag" intentionally mangle that genre with extremely abrasive brass and
woodwind textures supplemented by groaning dissonance and shattering
percussion that wouldn't be out of place in
Alien 3. The two
"Reno Ho" cues offer tremendous symphonic action akin to Goldenthal's
Final Fantasy work (stripped back in "Sour Mash Scherzo"). Softer
cues of battling tones on woodwinds and strings in "Winter Walk" and
"Hart and Hunter" are unsettling at best. Throaty horror overtakes the
pastoral side in "The Baptism," a cue that ends with a rowdy crescendo
of pure, swirling Goldenthal character. Perhaps not unexpectedly, the
cue "The Beast Within," inspired by
Alien 3, is credited and
included on this soundtrack, followed by the vintage
baseball-appropriate song "The Ball Game." All together, every moment of
Cobb contains Goldenthal's usual brilliance of construct and
instrumentation, but unless you specifically seek the composer's score
to appreciate them intellectually, don't expect this work to hit a home
run. Like many of the composer's most impressive achievements,
Cobb could drive a person crazy.
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