Known by his stage name of "Junkie XL," Holkenborg was
introduced to film music by Hans Zimmer, who has used his influence to
guide him to several solo projects in the 2010's. It's never a surprise
when you encounter a Zimmer collaborator who branches off and, to some
degree, emulates the original Zimmer "sound" in his own works. Such was
the origin of the term "Zimmer clone." In Holkenborg's case, you can
hear the Remote Control production element and personal Zimmer musical
methodology all over his recordings, and it's rather shamelessly done.
No matter the emotional response an artist like Holkenborg is attempting
to create, you hear some vestige of Zimmer (or those who inspired
Zimmer, such as Ennio Morricone) in the end result. Holkenborg's music
for
Mad Max: Fury Road is a prototypical Remote Control/Hans
Zimmer score, with very simplistic thematic development, an emphasis on
pounding rhythmic force, extreme favoring of a bass-heavy, sometimes
distorted mix, occasional choral majesty with or without a brass power
anthem, repetitive droning and pounding on key, and token melodic
interludes without much attempt at sincere gravity beyond pleasant
string meanderings. As has been written before and will be written
again, any number of Zimmer clones could arrange this music adequately;
it's almost relegated the musical presence to a mathematical equation or
formula that simply needs the proper variable adjustments to be made in
order to earn the paycheck and claim to someone in the media that the
resulting music is "revolutionary." Of course, it isn't revolutionary.
But it is, in some instances, quite effective, and that's the case with
Mad Max: Fury Road. In many ways, this primordial, basic approach
to this franchise is the more natural fit for it, the musical element on
screen often as brutal as that heard in this score. With depictions of
flaming guitars and percussion in an oddly nightmarish environment on
screen, one cannot blame Miller for taking the Remote Control route. An
emphasis on basic repetitive structures and driving percussion is
precisely the order of the day here, so one cannot fault Holkenborg for
generating music that speaks to the worst of audience blockbuster
expectations. The obliging of those norms is so shameless, however, that
you really do have to separate the music's purpose from a pair of album
presentations that very clearly expose the lack of significant
intelligence behind it, regardless of the layers of instrumental fury
that Holkenborg has attempted to generate during the action
sequences.
Instrumentally, the diversity of
Mad Max: Fury
Road is deceptive because the various elements at work in the score,
from the electric guitar rips and synthetic manipulation to the brass
and choral power anthems and soft string character interludes, never
satisfyingly mingle. The score almost sounds as though several different
composers wrote it without consulting with each other. The primordial
chase sequences are the effective but most obnoxious portions, at times
grinding with such sonic assault that they are totally insufferable on
album. More palatable to the ears will be times when Holkenborg actually
elaborates on one of the several themes and motifs he conjures for the
score, mainly those for the brass to unleash in more harmonically
satisfying performances. Look for the best of these to inhabit cues like
"Storm is Coming," "Brothers in Arms," and "Chapter Doof" (though each
of these cues has some atrocious portions that can be challenging to sit
through as well). Finally, the soft string portions for the female
characters (and Max) occupy a major portion of the work, and while they
are comparatively easy listing, it's truly disappointing that none of
the styles of dystopia managed to impress upon those sequences. Outside
of those strings, all the other portions of this score are very heavily
manhandled in the post-production process, the mixing process definitely
not kind to the original recordings. The harshness of atmosphere, along
with the sound effects, is not necessary in the dose applied here. If
anything, a balance of brute survival and romantic appeal was merited.
Instead, the score simply degenerates into pure noise at times, the
repeating notes blasting away on key likely to induce eye rolls from
Zimmer-weary listeners. Still, this music is certainly sufficient for
the film's purposes and one has to acknowledge that Holkenborg didn't
need to re-invent the wheel for this assignment. The album situation is
unforgivable, however, not just because of the ridiculously overt
dichotomy between the action and character sequences, but because of the
Watertower Music releases of the soundtrack. As expected, there is a
regular and an expanded edition of the score, but rather than placing
all the score's highlights on the regular edition, a number of pertinent
cues of value are placed only on the expanded product. No listener
should be subjected to over two hours of music from
Mad Max: Fury
Road just to collect these highlights, especially with the
redundancy factor figured into the product. In the end, Holkenborg has
succeeded at the task but has produced a score that fails to transcend
past expectations for any Remote Control-influenced project, and the
album situation remains as disgusting here as it is with equivalents
from Zimmer himself. Approach with caution and seek the power anthem
highlights.
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