The most general similarities between Horner's
Ransom and his previous works tie into
Clear and Present
Danger. The main theme for
Ransom follows the same patriotic
rise of chords, performed by strings and piano with brass counterpoint
that is almost identical. A heroic and harmonically satisfying
performance of the theme at the end of the closing credits, complete
with tolling chimes, pounding timpani, and crashing cymbals, is
ironically what
Clear and Present Danger could likely have better
used. The second Horner cue on the album ("Delivering the Ransom") is
almost perfect for study by a composition student, for it successively
takes entire pages of music from four previous Horner scores and
combines them into one massive regurgitation of ideas. The main theme
slurs its notes with the same twist that Horner employed in
Sneakers. Descending notes tapping their way down to the start of
a rhythm denote the same "change in scene" tactic heard in
Clear and
Present Danger. Pulsating snare rhythms are reminiscent of
Apollo
13 and distant piano thuds and other various clunking sounds from
Thunderheart are heard. In other places, the descending woodwind
(previously saxophone) theme from
Commando makes an entrance in
the opening cue. Wildly rambling piano, clicking rhythms, and more snare
are another extension of
Apollo 13 in "The Quarry." After those
two early cues,
Ransom hibernates until the finale. A light
woodwind theme continues to twist notes in
Sneakers fashion in "A
Two Million Dollar Bounty," and the previously mentioned finale, "The
Payoff," takes a page or two of chaotic writing from
Aliens. The
Billy Corgan cues were minimized in the film for good reason, but they
still occupy 25 minutes on the latter half of the
Ransom album.
The grungy band performances in these cues have the same intelligence in
structure as their track titles and share absolutely no characteristics
with Horner's music. Obviously an attempt by the studio to mass-market
the
Ransom album, Corgan's contribution would be a disgrace to
any orchestral score product, and here it is best ignored if possible.
As for Horner's work,
Ransom represents what some critics could
deem "the ultimate self-rip-off," but given that he had only two weeks
to manipulate temp tracks into a new work, you have to cut him some
slack. As a listening experience, however, the
Ransom album
presents nothing really interesting in Horner's half and nothing worth
tolerating in Corgan's half. This is definitely an album for which no
ransom should be paid.
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