
When Steven Spielberg approached John Williams regarding the score to his masterpiece Schindler's List, the story goes that Williams commented that Spielberg would require a better composer than him to score the film, to which Spielberg replied "Yes, but they're all dead." I would imagine that a similar feeling would run through the mind of a composer charged with writing a score for such an important film. Unlike the glossy Biblical epics of the 50's and 60's, the level of realism and intensity is much higher in Gibson's film, never flinching from showing every brutal moment of Jesus' torture at the hands of the Romans. Given this realistic style, Debney's score was never going to be a flashy and piously heroic, but takes a much darker approach that combines swathes of ethnic and period instrumentation with various choral and vocal parts, all topped with the might of a symphony orchestra. The drive of some of the percussion passages comes as a surprise. Jesus arrested moves along at quite a pace, but the slow chorus provides the dramatic gravitas.
Several reviewers have commented how some of the score appears as though from a horror film and in many ways, this conclusion doesn't seem unreasonable. That is not to say there are orchestral bangs and stingers, but more the slow burn, suspenseful horror, particularly in the opening tracks. Naturally the dramatic and musical high point is the crucifixion itself where Debney is given space to sustain his string adagios of anguished beauty, topped with a potent chorus that is on the verge of wailing, but fortunately never does anything quite so melodramatic. Surprisingly, some of the score's least agonising passages occur here with a quietly upbeat central section of real beauty, rightly placing the good of the sacrifice alongside its immediate tragedy. Although there is an inherent danger in doing an extreme change in emotional direction at the last minute, but the Resurrection is surprisingly unheraldic. Here the mixture of percussion and chorus evokes Adiemus or, dare I say it, Gladiator.
While I appreciate that Gibson's intent was to show the brutality of Jesus' treatment and the suffering he went through, I can't help but feel that the music seems a little relentless downbeat. After all the pain, the resultant good coming from the sacrifice isn't really palpable in the music - the quiet close of Resurrection is quite lovely, but isn't quite optimistic for the emotional release one might hope for. Still, Debney's deep commitment to his faith through the music shows throughout, the results are certainly more deeply felt than anything he has produced before and probably more than anything he will write from now on. However, I still can't say I connected or felt The Passion any more strongly than with Jeff Danna's Gospel of John which has received a tiny fraction of the publicity, but is an equally impressive work. Still, The Passion of Christ is undoubtedly a score like no other of Debney's and shows a composer of far greater skill than most of his other scores combined.
Rating ~
Total Time ~ 54:09