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Review of A League of Their Own (Hans Zimmer)
Composed, Arranged, and Co-Produced by:
Hans Zimmer
Co-Orchestrated and Conducted by:
Shirley Walker
Co-Orchestrated and Additional Music by:
Bruce Fowler
Co-Orchestrated by:
Ladd McIntosh
Co-Produced by:
Jay Rifkin
Labels and Dates:
Sony/Columbia
(June 30th, 1992)

(Bootlegs)
(2006)

Availability:
The 1992 Sony/Columbia album is a regular U.S. release, re-issued in identical form in 2008. The bootlegs of this score have circulated widely in the 2000's and contain different art and track configurations.
Album 1 Cover
1992 Sony/Columbia
Album 2 Cover
2006 Bootleg

FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... if you love Randy Newman's vintage, big band jazz and Western-tinged character themes of pure Americana spirit, because Hans Zimmer emulates those sounds so well in A League of Their Own that you may not be able to tell the difference.

Avoid it... if the above statement violates every notion of "the masculine Zimmer style" that you've come to know and love, even if the composer really does an outstanding job of adapting to the genre.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
A League of Their Own: (Hans Zimmer) A universally liked, fictional account of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League that existed as an alternative to professional baseball in the 1940's, A League of Their Own translated positive reviews into massive fiscal success in 1992. Sporting an all-star cast and an effective balance of interpersonal dramatics and confrontation on the diamond, the film is a unique entry in the sports genre and reaffirmed its director, Penny Marshall, in the mainstream. It takes a few major liberties with the actual historical circumstances of the league, but the innocuous tale with an enormous heart was endearing enough for CBS to attempt a failed television series based on the concept and starring some of the film's supporting actors. The casting of Madonna as one of the players on screen led to a hit song from her for the picture, and although the official soundtrack album didn't include "This Used to Be My Playground" due to contractual reasons, it did feature several light rock and vintage jazz pieces that symbolized the spirit of the film. Short-changed on that product was Hans Zimmer's score, however. The composer and director enjoyed a fruitful relationship in the years following A League of Their Own, with similar assignments allowing Zimmer to explore his more humorously zany side. There was over an hour of almost completely orchestral music recorded by Zimmer for the assignment, and it represented a distinct change from the synthetically-dominated tone of his previous works. He had only just written his first orchestral score two years prior, and his non-action sound was still defined by the contemporary style of Driving Miss Daisy and Green Card. While extending from the same generally upbeat personality of those works, A League of Their Own was a remarkably organic turn for Zimmer at the time. It emulated the style of Randy Newman so well that you would have difficulty differentiating between A League of Their Own and the jazzy portions of The Natural. Some refer to the 1992 Zimmer score as a direct spin-off of that famous Newman work, but without the ultra-heroic title theme. In many ways, that's a pretty accurate claim, though the outright silly parts of A League of Their Own have a Western influence that goes beyond Newman's similar Western tilt to his Americana jazz and whips up the dust with the frenzied enthusiasm that David Newman or Marc Shaiman might bring to the same film. Either way, it's a score that sounds almost nothing like the mass majority of Zimmer's career work.

Big band vintage jazz isn't exactly Zimmer's specialty, but he nails it with authority in A League of Their Own. The ensemble allows rambling percussion, plucked basses, and uninhibited piano under an abundance of brass in sequences so wild that they make the most rambunctious portions of Danny Elfman's Dick Tracy seem tame. Sure, Zimmer does rely upon a few obvious sources of inspiration in A League of Their Own, but he has his tongue firmly lodged in his cheek some of the time as well. References to Beethoven and common pop culture melodies are joined by a solo trumpet that only reminds of Ennio Morricone when applied to the final at bats between sisters in the pivotal game. Thematically, Zimmer develops a familiar rolling rhythm of jazzy progressions for the game sequences throughout the film (culminating in "The Final Game"). Starting in earnest in "Training Playoffs," wild cymbal tapping and imaginative woodwind lines highlight these otherwise brass-dominated portions. The sheer energy in cues like "Win the Crowd" is remarkable, because Zimmer's comedy material rarely approaches this level of density. The other half of A League of Their Own is occupied by tender character development, to which Zimmer applies an orchestral variant on his typical synthetic melodies of simple, pleasing harmony. Although the bridge section of the dramatic theme has some similarities with the family theme in Backdraft, the tone here couldn't be any more different. From simple piano solos to organic versions of the clarinet solos that were so endearing in Driving Miss Daisy, Zimmer creates a tear-jerking environment without cranking up the volume to melodramatic levels. The final two cues in particular, "Sisters Say Goodbye" and "Life Goes On," are tastefully handled. Some of the credit is owed to Bruce Fowler and Shirley Walker's orchestrations, which spread counterpoint across the entire spectrum (to even solo violins in their highest ranks). Together, A League of Their Own is a very solid score that only misses the highest ranking because of its inability to reconcile its two disparate halves into one cohesive listening experience. You either have to appreciate the jazzy baseball cues in one sitting or the respectful dramatic ones in another. The commercial album contains only two tracks that pull music together from mostly the final scenes of the film, but a full bootleg eventually presented the recording sessions complete with Zimmer's harmless source material (newsreel and stadium organ-related). Whenever you become frustrated with the composer's stale action mode of the 2000's, it's always refreshing to go back and revisit A League of Their Own to remind yourself of the composer's early triumphs of style and personality.  ****
TRACK LISTINGS:
1992 Sony/Columbia Album:
Total Time: 43:45

• 1. Now And Forever - performed by Carole King (3:16)
• 2. Choo Choo Ch'Boogie - - performed by Manhattan Transfer (2:58)
• 3. It's Only a Paper Moon - performed by James Taylor (2:51)
• 4. In a Sentimental Mood - performed by Billy Joel (4:03)
• 5. Two Sleepy People - performed by Art Gafunkel (3:39)
• 6. I Didn't Know What Time It Was - performed by James Taylor (3:38)
• 7. On the Sunny Side of the Street - performed by Manhattan Transfer (3:18)
• 8. Flying Home - performed by Doc's Rhythm Cats (2:57)
• 9. Life Goes On* (6:10)
• 10. The Final Game* (9:31)
• 11. The All-American Girls Professional Baseball League Song - performed by The Rockford Peaches (1:24)
* score suites composed by Hans Zimmer



2006 Bootleg:
Total Time: 61:04

• 1. Main Titles (2:13)
• 2. War Commercial (1:00)
• 3. Race to the House (3:00)
• 4. The Station and the Field (3:06)
• 5. Training Playoffs (2:30)
• 6. Welcome to Jimmy's Ball Game (1:42)
• 7. Diamond Galls (1:41)
• 8. The Sud's Bucket (2:28)
• 9. Heaven's Just a Ballpark Win Away (2:44)
• 10. Win the Crowd (5:35)
• 11. The Telegram (7:40)
• 12. The Playoffs/The Prayer (2:34)
• 13. The Final Game (13:00)
• 14. Sisters Say Goodbye (2:48)
• 15. Life Goes On (8:47)
(track arrangements and cover art vary between bootlegs)
NOTES & QUOTES:
The insert of the 1992 Sony album (re-issued in 2008) includes no extra information about the score or film, but it does clearly indicate on back cover that the Madonna song is absent. The bootlegs contain no consistent packaging.
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The reviews and other textual content contained on the filmtracks.com site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Christian Clemmensen at Filmtracks Publications. All artwork and sound clips from A League of Their Own are Copyright © 1992, 2006, Sony/Columbia, (Bootlegs) and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 3/24/10 (and not updated significantly since).