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The Fabelmans
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Composed, Conducted, and Co-Produced by:
Piano Solos Performed by:
Joanne Pearce Martin
Co-Produced by:
Ramiro Belgardt
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LABEL & RELEASE DATE
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ALBUM AVAILABILITY
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Regular U.S. release, the CD option following the digital
release by a month.
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AWARDS
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Nominated for an Academy Award, a Golden Globe, and a Grammy Award.
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ALSO SEE
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Buy it... if you appreciate John Williams' mastery of subtle melody
and restraint, his approach to this score extremely understated and
short in duration.
Avoid it... if you expect warmth from all corners of this work,
Williams' two themes sometimes struggling to engage emotionally in such
a sparse environment.
BUY IT
 | Williams |
The Fabelmans: (John Williams) Famed director and
producer Steven Spielberg had long been planning a somewhat
autobiographical film about his youth, one of his sisters helping craft
the story but Spielberg never comfortable moving forward while his
parents were still alive despite their late support in doing so. His
youth was marked by turbulent family relations, moves across country,
and eventually anti-Semitism, and despite those potential obstacles,
Spielberg managed to nurture his love of filmmaking. Through the
fictional family in The Fabelmans, he shows this passion budding
from a young age all the way through his move to Los Angeles to enter
the industry as an adult, support from his extended family important
throughout the story. While the anti-Semitism is tangible in the plot,
it's the dysfunction in Spielberg's family that really drives the
adversity, his mother maintaining an affair with a friend of the father
and eventually causing a divorce. Foremost to the success of The
Fabelmans, however, is Spielberg's typical mastery of engrossing
visual techniques and direction of children in leading roles, and the
film was highly acclaimed despite failing to engage audiences initially.
The project represents what Spielberg and composer John Williams have
stated is their final collaboration, their 31st over fifty years.
Inevitable talk of retirement is understandable for the maestro in his
90's, and The Fabelmans was an emotionally satisfying culmination
and goodbye for the duo. Williams knew Spielberg's parents well, and the
story therefore held deep personal meaning for him, too, so the composer
saw the music as an opportunity to pay tribute to them as well as
function for the film. The role of Williams' score in the picture is
actually quite minimal in length, as Spielberg utilized a variety of
classical music pieces, most notably by Johann Sebastian Bach and Joseph
Haydn, on solo piano to accompany the performances that his mother, here
represented by Mitzi Fabelman, provide to the story and film.
Additionally, as the boy is shown emulating his favorite childhood
movies, original recordings of famous film scores of the Golden Age by
Max Steiner, Victor Young, Alfred Newman, Elmer Bernstein, Cyril
Mockridge, and more are tracked into the mix. None of these vintage
insertions is included on the album release for this soundtrack.
In between the numerous and obviously placed classical
music and pre-existing film music in The Fabelmans, Williams'
score amounts to only roughly 22 minutes of running time. Whereas all
the outside music represents more extroverted concepts sonically, the
score is left to handle the deeply introspective familial relationships
for most of its length. Listeners hoping that the Spielberg and Williams
collaboration would end with a bang need to be prepared for how
minimally rendered this 2022 score will sound by comparison, slotting
behind even the composer's very light dramatic mode of the late 1980's
and 1990's in its volume. The soundscape is dominated by the safely
familiar, suburban tones of the piano on either end, but it is more
frequently carried by celeste and harp, joined at times by acoustic
guitar, string section, and select woodwind solos, notably oboe. The mix
of the piano performances of the classical pieces is drier than in their
score counterparts. The guitar really shines in its placement. There is
truly only one fully orchestral cue at the end of the score, spanning
both the singular, jaunty opening 45 seconds to "The Journey Begins" and
the end credits performance of the score's themes that follows. This
suite also provides the only orchestral performances of the classical
material in something of a victorious evolution of the main character's
aspirations; the remainder of the work supplies these insertions from
solo piano only while the boy and family struggle to reach their proper
destinies. The rest of the soundtrack is very softly understated,
typically pleasant outside of the challenging dissonance of the
"Midnight Call" cue foreshadowing mental illness in one frightening
scene. Spielberg allows Williams intimate conversational or solitary
moments of contemplation or subdued discovery, and most of these are
tonally accessible even if they are extremely sparse in construct. The
composer does provide two original themes for the score, and both are
conveyed in ways that are basically compatible with the solo piano
performances of the classical selections, though Williams never attempts
to emulate their stately sense of elegance. Intriguingly, neither theme
is particularly memorable. While Williams has certainly proven himself
more than capable at generating notable melodies through the years, the
two provided to The Fabelmans are not meant to be obvious
head-turners, and one of them is actually quite elusive in how it is
developed. Don't expect them to develop far beyond their original
incarnations, either.
The main family theme for The Fabelmans by
Williams will garner the most attention in the score, as it obviously
opens and closes the work on piano. Tender and aspiring, intimate and
unassuming, restrained and subdued, this theme moves with a slight waltz
rhythm to suggest a dance in progress and resolves to key in all
important moments, giving it a sense of finality. Heard immediately on
solo piano in "The Fabelmans," the idea repeats at 1:05, and an
ascending stairstep interlude sequence at 0:41 is equally attractive. A
friendly acoustic guitar performance at the outset of "Mother and Son"
returns to this tonally satisfying interlude at 0:41 for harp and cello,
lightly shifting the primary phrasing to fuller strings before resolving
back to piano over the guitar. The interlude is intriguingly accessed at
the end of the cue as a closing tool. The main theme emerges out of the
other one for a moment at 3:09 into "The Journey Begins," reassuming its
opening suite piano performance at 3:47 but joined by string ensemble,
the most exuberant rendition coming at 4:59 on strings over ebullient
piano lines. That second theme is the one for both sadness and Mitzi,
and Williams accesses this idea far more frequently in the score.
Descending and meandering, this theme accompanies moments of
perseverance and is a somewhat lost identity that struggles early but
finally ascends in later phrases. Introduced at the start of "Mitzi's
Dance" on harp and celeste, the theme clarifies itself at 0:33 on
strings. It's barely recognizable in the dissonance of "Midnight Call"
but rolls through "Reverie" on piano with the same waltz movements as
the main theme. The theme emulates a music box on celeste at the start
of "Reflections," toying with solo string accompaniment before reverting
back at the end, and revisits the music box tone in "The Letter,"
eventually shifting to solo oboe over string pulses. Cyclically
tentative on piano to open and close "New House," it moves to woodwinds
and subtle brass shades in the middle of that cue. The sadness theme
slows the tempo of the credits on celeste at 1:58 into "The Journey
Begins," subtly emerging from the Haydn piece, returns in consolidated
form at 3:27, and closes out the suite at 5:34 with class and final
resolution. Overall, The Fabelmans is an extremely sensitive mood
piece that may not warm your heart and may not be what many Williams
collectors were hoping for after a two-year break for the composer. But
it is a deeply personal, minimalistic expression of care. The very short
album is disjointed due to the disparate personality of the classical
performances, and the final cue does stand strikingly apart as well.
Moments like "Mother and Son" lose the stark demeanor and offer
occasional warmth, however, and these are reminders of Williams' mastery
of melody and restraint.
@Amazon.com: CD or
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- Music as Written for the Film: ****
- Music as Heard on Album: ***
- Overall: ***
Bias Check: |
For John Williams reviews at Filmtracks, the average editorial rating is 3.68
(in 91 reviews) and the average viewer rating is 3.54
(in 363,716 votes). The maximum rating is 5 stars.
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Total Time: 31:14
1. The Fabelmans (2:13)
2. Mitzi's Dance (2:05)
3. Sonatina in A Minor, Op. 88 No. 3: III. Allegro Burlesco - composed by Friedrich Kuhlau (1:51)
4. Midnight Call (2:23)
5. Reverie (1:44)
6. Mother and Son (2:28)
7. Sonatina in C Major, Op. 36 No. 3: Spiritoso - composed by Muzio Clementi (1:58)
8. Reflections (2:02)
9. Concerto in D Minor, BWV 974: II. Adagio - composed by Johann Sebastian Bach (3:46)
10. New House (2:28)
11. The Letter (2:08)
12. The Journey Begins* (6:08)
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* includes excerpt from Sonata No. 48 in C Major, HOB. XVI: 35: I. Allegro Con Brio by Joseph Haydn
There exists no official packaging for the digital version of the album.
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