If Titans does seem tame then at least The Drums of Gaugamela turns up the heat. Again, it's not complex or subtle stuff and the ominous four note motif the composer introduces teeters on the melodramatic. James Horner trotting out his own four note threat motif in Troy is nothing new, but he knows how to invoke menace without parody. After the excitement of all the drumming, Vangelis' score settles back into a more restful mode, with strumming lutes/guitars/whatever - random plucked things - over synth pads and forays into ethnic territory. It's either pleasantly relaxing or dull, depending on your tolerance for such writing. Roxanne's Dance introduces some somewhat cliché desert type twanging (more faux authentic instrumental than Maurice Jarre, however), although the seemingly omnipresent harp twittering - which reappears later in Gardens of Delight - rather put me in mind of Barry Gray's music for the Angels in Captain Scarlet. Odd. The romance, of sorts, is the least interesting aspect and Roxane's Veil is a veritable 80's cheese fest of synths and Vanessa Mae's electronic violin.
To provide a nice bookend balance to the album, Across the Mountains reverts back to the anthemic style of Titans, although with a bit more grit, plus the odd cadence that wouldn't be out of place in a Zimmer epic. Indeed, Zimmer's own recent scores make an interesting comparison with Vangelis' as both have similar approaches that mix varying amounts of orchestra with synthetic underpinning and some ethnic colour. Zimmer now has a number of this kind of score under his belt and they are starting to blur into one - Vangelis has novelty on his side - but when properly inspired, Zimmer's dramatic sense seems just that bit more convincing and, love it or hate it, Gladiator had a good number of great themes and a good feeling of dramatic and musical architecture. Alexander, on the other hand, has very simplistic anthems and a just about engaging, but meandering midsection. Still, for all that, it is memorable enough to be worth hearing, but like the film itself, some way below what was hoped for.
Rating ~
Total Time ~ 56:11