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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
Honey trickling into your ears!, 4 Feb 2003
James Newton Howard is an amazing score composer, his music has been varied in the extreme from the memorable titles to 'ER' to the epic,sweeping, and glorious orchestral themes of 'Dinosaur' to the eerie, hair raising simplicity of 'The Sixth Sense'. He first came to my attention with the thumping percussion and coolly memorable ER theme and then the similar stylings for the film 'Outbreak'. A composer obviously interested in the evocative effects of various unusual instruments he has been creating some amazing film scores in recent years. Signs is no exception and marks his third collaboration with M Night Shyamalan.There is a Bernard Hermann-esque quality to the MAIN TITLES, according to Newton-Howard he composed this piece of music early and it ended up without a place amongst the action so it was used during the titles, a brilliant decision. This short and snappy intro is quite different to the creepy piano motif used elsewhere in the score and it works to great effect. The shrieking violins and urgent pace of the piece work to make the audience feel uneasy, making them expect something appropriately Hitchcockian in style and atmosphere, it doesn't let you relax because that initial repsonse stays with you throughout the film, you expect *something* to happen. Newton-Howard uses a three note piano motif throughout most of the rest of the score, a sort of melody which can be powerfully emotional and magical one moment and altered to become chilling and creepy the next. Shyamalan says that he never imagines his films needing music until the last moment, I can't imagine Signs working with anything but a score of this type. You barely notice the melodies and cues working away in the background to trigger emotional repsonses to the pictures onscreen, which I why I believe this score is so great. The score starts with a bang and then like the film builds the tension slowly with cues such as BRAZILIAN VIDEO and INTO THE BASEMENT until the amazing finale HAND OF FATE PARTS 1 & 2 where Newton-Howard releases that tension with a wonderful, orchestral sweep and soar that turns 'the prickly things on the back of your neck' into big lumps in your throat! Though the feeling throughout Newton-Howard's score to SIGNS is one of suspense and building fear he also weaves in some very tender and heart-tugging moments that take you by suprise when they emerge from such apparent despair, BOARDING UP THE HOUSE is a perfect example of how to manipulate the troughs and peaks of audience emotion with scoring perfectly tailored to the visuals. The finale to HAND OF FATE PART 2 is also a slow, beautiful relaxation, a 'coming down' after the hair raising PART 1 and you'll probably want to start from the beginning all over again as soon as it draws to a close. The whole score is around an hour long and like Newton-Howard's music for 'Unbreakable' and 'The Sixth Sense' is more of a slow burning collection of cues that build to a climax rather than a series of huge, epic themes. The influence of Bernard Hermann and John Williams is undeniable *and* appropriate but this is one of the best you will hear if you enjoy scores that have a powerful and seperate life outside the film they were intended for. Highly recommended, it is never too far from my ears...
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