The main theme starts with a shimmering string note that is then joined by the horns that results in a melody as wide as the landscape that the film depicted. This fusion of music writing style and cinema is all to rare, but the music really does conjur up images of vast and splendid vistas, just as it should. Of course, films are also about people and in this regard, the secondary theme displays a more intimate warmth, as opposed to a splendid one. This theme is generally associated with the lead character, Karen and actually appears more frequently than the main theme. In a couple of places it reminded me of You Only Live Twice, but only as a fleeting suggestion of the opening phrase.
Almost every cue features one or other of the two themes and only in such cases as Karen's Journey Starts is there any kind of divergence in style. This actually features some quite dissonent music and even though it is never overtly brutal or harsh, it does provide a nice break in the lush solemnity of the rest. Any film which features long shots of scenery or sequences containing minimal dialogue are bound to have at least one highlight and Out of Africa is certainly no exception. Flight Over Africa is certainly a highlight; a noble rendition of the main theme backed with a fairly distinctive Barry choral arrangement.
While not quite as repetitive as some of his other scores, it does suffer from only having a couple of major motifs a somewhat limited variation in orchestral colour. However, given that the original film is over two and a half hours long and this is the lion's share of the music written, spread over the entire running time keeping the tone consistent would have been difficult without re-introducing the themes on a regular basis. That having been said, this is still one of Barry's most popular scores, given a wonderful treatment by Joel McNeely and RSNO and so I highly recommend this version, even if it isn't the original.
Rating ~ ![]()
Total Time ~ 39:39