The same questions about authenticity that plague the
film abound when considering the score, which is a highly unoriginal
piecing together of various existing sources with doses of prior Zimmer
mannerisms slathered on the parts not explicitly emulating the
composer's own personal hero, Ennio Morricone, as well as Elmer
Bernstein, Jerome Moross, and others. It's truly challenging to find
originality in Zimmer's approach to the production of this score, and
one has to wonder if time constraints played a role in this haphazard
collection of ideas. By no means is
The Lone Ranger the absolute
stylistic mess that was
Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger
Tides, though you still get the sense here that there are too many
cooks in the kitchen. The ensemble is better rounded in its
representation of the recording mix, though Zimmer's taste for deep bass
does continue to weight heavily on much of the work despite better
enunciation of treble elements. Electronics are held to an outward
minimum aside from the accentuation of the bass realm that Zimmer
insists upon. Some honky tonk piano, guitar, and fiddle work is
expected, as is the composer's predictable referencing of spaghetti
Western techniques with a modern flair, akin to Marco Beltrami's
3:10
to Yuma. While Zimmer claims to have always wanted to write a
Western action score, however, it's surprising to hear so few truly
modernized genre mannerisms in a cool and affable package in
The Lone
Ranger, the cue "Ride" the only real exposition of such tribute-like
genre music. Rather than taking this score down the purely Western
route, the composer has clearly armed his ghostwriters with concepts
that are mired in his own past, and some of the re-applications of this
material are nonsensical. The heroic and action sensibilities are
informed by the
Pirates of the Caribbean scores and, oddly
enough,
Angels & Demons. The identity for Tonto is a totally
bizarre mixture of
Rango and
Sherlock Holmes, with an
unexplained infusion of Irish spirit as well. The traditional Irish folk
song "After the Battle of Aughrim," arranged by Zimmer and performer Ann
Marie Calhoun, is heard for the character in the deceptively named cue
"Silver." Somewhere in between the realm of Zimmer power anthems and his
underdeveloped sense of Americana exists the theme for John Reid, heard
in pleasantly extended though somewhat anonymous form in "Home." He
cannot escape his penchant for neoclassical progressions even here,
several cues in the score emulating his prior use of them almost
verbatim.
The stomping action material in
The Lone Ranger
is highlighted by "The Railroad Waits for No One," an entertaining
though simplistic regurgitation. The suspense music in "You've Looked
Better" and "You're Just a Man in a Mask" relies upon dissonant textures
and fails to engage. The most inexplicable moment in the score is "For
God and for Country," an important cue that completely dismisses the
Native American element with a single cry before launching into chanting
choral attack music more suitable for a modern setting. What was Zimmer
and his crew thinking here? Would it have been too difficult to adapt
Tonto's style into some form of a Comanche war theme? That cue, while
enjoyable in parts outside of the picture, is a monumentally wasted
opportunity. All of these moments in the score are completely
overshadowed by the outside insertions, including the Irish folk tune.
Along with it are compositions by Brian Satterwhite, the three songs by
White, and a slew of other licensed usages. And then there's the
extensive work by Geoff Zanelli, a veteran Zimmer ghostwriter
responsible in this case for adapting "Battle Hymn of the Republic,"
"Stars and Stripes Forever," "The Star Spangled Banner," "Marse Henry
March," and Gioachino Rossini's "William Tell Overture" into the film.
What Zanelli managed to accomplish with the "William Tell Overture" in
"Finale" is truly remarkable and very easily the highlight of the score.
Whereas the rest of the score alternates between tired recapitulations
of Zimmer's past and senseless ethnic attributions, Zanelli adapts the
"Overture," which was the theme song for the famed television show, into
an incredible action piece complete with highly intelligent
manipulations of Zimmer's themes into its formations. The passages from
about 4:40 to 5:10 and 6:55 to 8:20, along with snippets in between, are
nothing less than brilliant, and thankfully the recording is mixed
without such a heavy-handed bass. This work is so damn pleasing in an
intellectual way that it really does make the rest of the score seem
like simple rehash, and one could easily wish that Zanelli had been
allowed to write the entire score. While thematic integration throughout
The Lone Ranger is decent, you still get a score of disparate
pieces in the end, one with no narrative due to the composer's
methodology. The absolutely botched ethnic side of the work, from the
Tonto identity to the Comanche raid on the train, is so insultingly
off-base that it's hard to appreciate even apart from the film. If not
for Zanelli's "Finale," this is a two-star score that could function as
a three-star listening experience on album for the easy flows of "Ride"
and "Home." But Zanelli saves the day with his arrangements,
supplementing the other ghostwriters' toil with enough smarts to save
the whole.
*** @Amazon.com: CD or
Download