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Hans Zimmer|The Da Vinci Code

The Da Vinci Code

Hans Zimmer

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It is tempting to think that even Hans Zimmer, a composer who has written music for cinema projects large and small -- mostly large -- for decades, would be intimidated by the responsibility of composing an original soundtrack score for Ron Howard's film adaptation of Dan Brown's pulp fiction blockbuster The Da Vinci Code. Apparently not. While the music here holds some of Zimmer's trademark dynamic and textural tropes, it is remarkably fresh and expertly nuanced. The high degree of melancholy in the first three sections -- "Dies Maercurii I Maritus," "L'Espirit des Gabriel," and "The Paschal Spiral" -- creates a remarkably brooding tension and a speculative sense of foreboding. The first of these, "Dies Mercurii I Maritus," with its piano and hovering stings, does give way to a large pastoral theme a little over halfway through, but even it is re-introduced by eerie, sparse strings (Hugh Marsh's solo violin playing throughout is his highest achievement yet in a career full of them) before they begin to pulse with suspense. Even here, Zimmer holds some of his cards in check, because this theme gives way to more complex shades, colors, and emotions that don't so much resolve as lead the listener in further. The cues on "Fructus Gravis" that assert themselves about a minute in and carry it out on a swirl of strings, soprano voices and piano, provide for one of those moments in film scoring where the entire range of emotion and ambivalence is revealed. The longer pieces, the aforementioned "Dies Mercurii," "Ad Arcana," "Daniel's 9th Cipher," and "Rose of Arimathea" carry within them those necessary elements not simply to color the screen narrative, but to underscore its meaning, its emotional transference, its sense of confusion, terror, and the impending revelation of a truth long buried. The use of faux Gregorian chant here is ingenious; it never feels contrived or simply layered in for authenticity. It is a genuine creative force and pushes the music into the nooks and crannies where dimension is what makes texture and pace come together in an instructive and creative whole. While this is to be expected in the larger cues, it's often in the incidental music a score falters, loses its place inside the bigger themes, yet Zimmer's control and vision holds firm and carries the listener on a journey that not only points toward the film it illustrates, but one of deep resonance that borders on the spiritual. No matter what aural side projects are created as a cash-in, this original score will stand on its own and should -- if there is any critical or commercial justice -- become a classic. One does wonder what happened to the planned collaboration with Armenian duduk master Djivan Gasparyan, who isn't present, but it's a small question in the end. Bravo.

© TiVo

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The Da Vinci Code

Hans Zimmer

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1
Dies Mercurii I Martius (From The Da Vinci Code Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Hans Zimmer
00:06:03

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

2
L'Esprit Des Gabriel
Hans Zimmer
00:02:48

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

3
The Paschal Spiral
Hans Zimmer
00:02:49

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

4
Fructus Gravis
Hans Zimmer
00:02:49

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

5
Ad Arcana
Hans Zimmer
00:06:07

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - HUGH MARSH, Violin, AssociatedPerformer - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

6
Malleus Maleficarum
Hans Zimmer
00:02:19

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - HUGH MARSH, Violin, AssociatedPerformer - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

7
Salvete Virgines
Hans Zimmer
00:03:14

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - Dee Lewis, Vocalist, AssociatedPerformer - Simon Charger, Editor - Abhay Manusmare, Author

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

8
Daniel's 9th Cipher
Hans Zimmer
00:09:31

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

9
Poisoned Chalice
Hans Zimmer
00:06:19

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - Hila Plitmann, Soprano, AssociatedPerformer - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

10
The Citrine Cross
Hans Zimmer
00:05:21

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

11
Rose Of Arimathea
Hans Zimmer
00:08:11

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - Hila Plitmann, Soprano, AssociatedPerformer - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

12
Beneath Alrischa
Hans Zimmer
00:04:23

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Peter Lale, Viola, AssociatedPerformer - Thomas Bowes, Violin, AssociatedPerformer - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - Fretwork, Viol, AssociatedPerformer - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

13
Chevaliers De Sangreal (From The Da Vinci Code Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Hans Zimmer
00:04:07

Gavyn Wright, Orchestra Leader, AssociatedPerformer - Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Composer, Producer, MainArtist - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Peter Lale, Viola, AssociatedPerformer - Thomas Bowes, Violin, AssociatedPerformer - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, Artist - Fretwork, Viol, AssociatedPerformer - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

14
Kyrie For The Magdalene
Richard Harvey
00:03:55

Alan Meyerson, Mixer, StudioPersonnel - Hans Zimmer, Producer - Geoff Foster, Recording Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Al clay, Mix Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Richard Harvey, Conductor, MainArtist, ComposerLyricist - Hila Plitmann, Vocalist, AssociatedPerformer - Simon Charger, Editor

℗ 2006 Universal Music Classical

Album review

It is tempting to think that even Hans Zimmer, a composer who has written music for cinema projects large and small -- mostly large -- for decades, would be intimidated by the responsibility of composing an original soundtrack score for Ron Howard's film adaptation of Dan Brown's pulp fiction blockbuster The Da Vinci Code. Apparently not. While the music here holds some of Zimmer's trademark dynamic and textural tropes, it is remarkably fresh and expertly nuanced. The high degree of melancholy in the first three sections -- "Dies Maercurii I Maritus," "L'Espirit des Gabriel," and "The Paschal Spiral" -- creates a remarkably brooding tension and a speculative sense of foreboding. The first of these, "Dies Mercurii I Maritus," with its piano and hovering stings, does give way to a large pastoral theme a little over halfway through, but even it is re-introduced by eerie, sparse strings (Hugh Marsh's solo violin playing throughout is his highest achievement yet in a career full of them) before they begin to pulse with suspense. Even here, Zimmer holds some of his cards in check, because this theme gives way to more complex shades, colors, and emotions that don't so much resolve as lead the listener in further. The cues on "Fructus Gravis" that assert themselves about a minute in and carry it out on a swirl of strings, soprano voices and piano, provide for one of those moments in film scoring where the entire range of emotion and ambivalence is revealed. The longer pieces, the aforementioned "Dies Mercurii," "Ad Arcana," "Daniel's 9th Cipher," and "Rose of Arimathea" carry within them those necessary elements not simply to color the screen narrative, but to underscore its meaning, its emotional transference, its sense of confusion, terror, and the impending revelation of a truth long buried. The use of faux Gregorian chant here is ingenious; it never feels contrived or simply layered in for authenticity. It is a genuine creative force and pushes the music into the nooks and crannies where dimension is what makes texture and pace come together in an instructive and creative whole. While this is to be expected in the larger cues, it's often in the incidental music a score falters, loses its place inside the bigger themes, yet Zimmer's control and vision holds firm and carries the listener on a journey that not only points toward the film it illustrates, but one of deep resonance that borders on the spiritual. No matter what aural side projects are created as a cash-in, this original score will stand on its own and should -- if there is any critical or commercial justice -- become a classic. One does wonder what happened to the planned collaboration with Armenian duduk master Djivan Gasparyan, who isn't present, but it's a small question in the end. Bravo.

© TiVo

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