Versatile because of his experience recording overseas,
Young seems to have placed himself in a position to whip up one of these
grand film score epics every three or so years, and
The Monkey
King is to 2014 what
Priest and
Drag Me to Hell were
for their respective years: a dazzling whirlwind of symphonic, choral,
and electronic style uninhibited by any notions of modesty. The effort
was truly an international one, with Young opting to use Slovak National
Orchestra and Lucnica Chorus in Bratislava for the bulk of the
performances while also employing Los Angeles vocal soloists (including
a child performer selected out of hundreds of auditions) and an
impressive variety of Chinese-centric instrumental soloists, including
erhus, gongs, dizis, and dulcimers. Throw in some totally Western rock
instrumentation (electric guitars and drum kits) and you have the
ultimate in multi-ethnic flair, a score true enough to its location to
serve its basic purpose but also exhibiting all the modern techniques of
a Hollywood blockbuster to ensure that the godly battles on screen are
accompanied by ass-kicking, no-nonsense rhythmic force in the score. The
vocal elements feature most combinations of inflective tone you can
imagine, leading up to even the Enya-like closing song. This wide
palette of sounds is one of two key characteristics of the score for
The Monkey King; the other is Young's undeniably bombastic
application of rhythm to the work. There is more overt drum-pounding in
this music than any other in recent memory, taking the Basil Poledouris
philosophy of developing folk rhythms into full battle mode to a new
level. Young has always done this in his bigger scores, often shifting
gears (quite literally, sometimes, as in the train sequence in
Priest) through tempo and instrumentation alterations when needed
but always shamelessly emphasizing the propulsive aspect. Expect to be
blasted out of your seat by the incessant slamming and banging of this
score during each of its full ensemble portions. Even the lighter
portions for comedy or respect ("Ruxue, the Silver Fox," "Erlangshen,
the Three-Eyed Warrior," and "Subhuti, the Old Master") rely heavily on
loftier, tingling percussion rhythms to carry the same movement. This is
certainly a score of emphasized texture, though Young also supplies an
endless stream of harmonically tonal bliss as well. There is some
dissonance to be heard, especially in the striking broken chords of the
ensemble hits in the opening "Yu Huang Da Di, the Jade Emperor," but the
listening experience is largely accessible. It's interesting to
appreciate how Young's action techniques have matured in broad
listenability since
The Core.
The single most intriguing aspect of Young's approach
to
The Monkey King is the general lack of interaction between his
multitude of themes in the score. Since the film largely rotates between
godly encounters in its plotline, Young simply provides a unique
identity for each one and doesn't make a serious effort to mingle them
together. Even the title character's theme doesn't directly engage often
with the other themes, leaving the score as one of several massive but
mostly singular suites that share the same instrumental vocabulary and
some seemingly incidental progressions, but no overarching connecting
narrative in the melodies. Such was reportedly the result of the
filmmakers' instructions to Young. The main theme in "Sun Wukong, the
Monkey King" only features fully and at length elsewhere in "Nuwa, the
Goddess of Works." The secondary theme for the Monkey King, a softly
romantic interlude in his suite, becomes the basis for the song, "Just
Dreams," which, as previously suggested, is an Enya knock-off of
completely shameless proportions. You will find that some of the other
character themes in
The Monkey King, notably the passage at 4:20
into "Yu Huang Da Di, the Jade Emperor," will supply inspiration to
later sequences, including the latter half of "Ao Kuang, the Dragon King
of the East Sea," but don't go looking for more obvious connections.
While irksome for a few listeners, this absence of narrative flow in the
score is countered by Young's strength in each individual idea. For the
album releases, Young features them in ten combined suites, each
representing a character (though, as mentioned above, the "Nuwa, the
Goddess of Works" cue offers the theme from "Sun Wukong, the Monkey
King" extensively in its first half) and thus explores many unique
melodies. Some, as in those for the Tieshan Gongzhu, Nuwa, Subhuti, and
Guanyin characters, are downright lovely in their choral and erhu
beauty. Others, as in the tracks "Niu Mo Wang, the Buffalo Demon King"
and "Yu Huang Da Di, the Jade Emperor," are outrageously bombastic. The
Buffalo Demon King's suite requires special attention, the Jerry
Goldsmith-like nobility countered by
Ghost Rider coolness
culminating in all-out rock attitude. The entire work is saturated with
the best of Young's mannerisms, with several homages to his past
greatness whipped up with zeal. The score was initially only provided
promotionally to film music critics in 2014, presenting a tremendously
unfortunate dilemma for enthusiasts worldwide. But by 2015, Intrada
Records pressed the same contents to a limited CD for all to enjoy.
There is no doubt that
The Monkey King makes for a stellar
listening experience, one of Young's most vibrant and entertaining
career efforts, and his continuing involvement in the franchise is most
welcomed.
***** @Amazon.com: CD or
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