Nanny McPhee stars Emma Thompson as the eponymous nanny, although far from the cheery Mary Poppins, McPhee is almost witch like in appearance, stern in demeanor, but equally magical and, naturally, a fine carer of children. The rather unsavoury (sorry) They've Eaten the Baby! opens and its comedy quotient is a little off putting, suggesting a fun, if slightly silly score. However, things soon settle down and Secret Toast and Jam introduces the lovely main theme. Although having produced some fine scores in the past few years, Doyle has become a little more subtle with his main thematic material, slightly moving away from the instantly memorable themes he penned as a matter of course a decade ago. However, this is a considerable return to form and, if not exactly high impact, is a wonderfully warm, lilting and slightly whimsical melody, put to most enchanting use in the rhapsodic finale, Snow in August.
Although a fairly light hearted fantasy, Doyle doesn't shy from some more portentous moments; Measle Medicine, in particular, comes to a crushing and dissonant climax. A large chorus augments several tracks, most notably the lengthy I Did Knock which reaches surprisingly epic proportions (but still magical in tone), for such an inauspiciously titled cue. Of course, there are plenty of playful delights, A Clockwork Mouse, Soup du Jour, Barnyard Fashion and others. While a scattering of short cues in the middle of the album may, at first, seem rather unpromising, instead of them being a series of unimportant bits of padding, Doyle treats each one as a delightful vignette with something to offer and so they stand perfectly well alongside the longer, set-piece cues toward the beginning and end.
For once, living near the UK has paid off as the film has been released here before the US and consequently the album has appeared on British shelves first. Overseas Doyle fans will probably be content to play their Harry Potter CD to death, but shouldn't overlook Nanny McPhee when it's released in early 2006. Only a couple of moments stuck in the mind first time through, but the second and subsequent spins reveal the multitude of motifs throughout - some of which only appear once, but fit in just perfectly alongside each other - together with the terrific main theme. The comic music generally avoids being grating while the sentiment is broad, but not maudlin. A colourful, memorable score, given a terrific performance by the London Symphony Orchestra, impossibly easy to recommend and a delight from start to finish.
Rating ~
Total Time ~ 53:21