Showing posts with label Christopher Young. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christopher Young. Show all posts

Friday, February 14, 2025

Species


Species
(Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Music Composed by
Christopher Young


Renovatio Records kicks off 2025 with an exciting new release: Christopher Young’s chilling and atmospheric score for the sci-fi horror film Species (1995). Directed by Roger Donaldson, the film features a stellar cast, including Ben Kingsley, Michael Madsen, Forest Whitaker, Marg Helgenberger, Alfred Molina, and Natasha Henstridge in her breakout role as Sil, a seductive yet deadly alien-human hybrid. The film follows a team of scientists and US government agents racing against time to stop Sil before she successfully mates with a human male, a scenario that could spell disaster for mankind. Species blends elements of erotic thriller and creature horror, with H.R. Giger’s striking biomechanical creature design adding to its distinctive aesthetic. Despite mixed critical reception—praised for its visual effects and action but critiqued for unoriginal plot devices—, Species was a box-office success, grossing over $113 million worldwide against a $35 million budget. Over time, it has gained a cult following, spawning sequels and securing its place as a memorable entry in 1990s sci-fi horror cinema.

One of its strongest and most enduring qualities is Christopher Young’s score, which significantly elevates the film’s atmosphere and tension. By 1995, Young had already established himself as a master of horror scores, having worked on the likes of Hellraiser, The Fly II and many more, and having a tremendous understanding of how orchestral effects can cause fear and tension. With Species, he approached the music with a unique blend of sci-fi eeriness, horror tension, and orchestral grandeur to reflect the film’s duality—Sil’s seductive, human-like nature versus her monstrous alien instincts.

The main theme, introduced in the opening track “Species”, perfectly encapsulates this contrast. It is a hypnotic, almost romantic melody imbued with dark, brooding undertones, evoking both Sil’s beauty and the menace lurking beneath. Young employs sweeping strings, ethereal choral passages, chimes, harp, and wooden percussion to highlight not only Sil’s beauty but also her outer space origin. Often described as “cold,” the theme creates a detached yet mesmerizing atmosphere.

As the score progresses, Young further explores these ideas in tracks like “Young Sil” and “Track Her Down” where he introduces a delicate piano figure that represents Sil’s deceptive innocence. “Sil in L.A.” incorporates synthesizers, female vocals, and drum loops, blending contemporary elements with traditional orchestration to reflect Sil’s adaptation to the human world. The score then becomes increasingly aggressive as Sil transforms into a lethal predator. “Transformation” teases the horror elements, but it is in “Bad Experiment” that Young fully unleashes his arsenal of dissonant orchestral techniques: double bass chords, undulating woodwinds, crashing percussion, unsettling vocal lines, and frenetic string writing. One of the score’s most recognizable motifs appears in “Manhunt Begins”: a pulsing, faded flute-plucking effect that underscores Sil’s growing mating drive. This motif is particularly effective, as it subtly conveys her deceptive allure while maintaining an eerie undertone that hints at the danger beneath. It is further developed in “Dangerous Sex”, reinforcing the character’s duality. The climatic moments of the film see Young push the orchestra to its limits. Cues like “Sil Stages Her Death”, “The Alien Underground”, and “Sil’s Demise” explode with aggressive brass, percussive intensity, and frenetic string writing, delivering chaotic, operatic horror that mirrors Sil’s final form and demise. The score is then bookended by a reprise of the main theme in “End Credits”, offering a haunting yet elegant conclusion.

Overall, Christopher Young’s Species score is a prime example of how to merge sci-fi and horror into a compelling musical experience. While it may not be as immediately iconic as some of his other works, it remains an underrated gem, full of intricate textures, thematic depth, and masterful orchestration that elevate the film beyond its B-movie premise.

The Species score has seen multiple releases over the years. Initially, a bootleg “composer promo” version circulated in 1995, presenting selections of the score in suite-based arrangements, offering a broad thematic overview but lacking a structured narrative flow. Intrada Records later released two official editions: the first essentially expanded on the bootleg with some additional unreleased material, while the second provided a comprehensive, complete edition, including every note Young composed for the film. While this definitive release was a goldmine for completists, its sheer length—comprising numerous short cues and stings—could be overwhelming for casual listeners.

Renovatio Records’ new release addresses these concerns by presenting the score in a carefully curated, chronological structure. This edition preserves the best elements of Young’s work while refining the listening experience, ensuring a coherent dramatic progression that highlights the film’s thematic development. By balancing the film’s narrative arc with Young’s most compelling compositions, we offer both longtime fans and newcomers the ideal way to experience this hauntingly beautiful score.


Track listing:

1. Species (3:38)
2. Young Sil (2:55)
3. Track Her Down (2:04)
4. Transformation (2:01)
5. Sil in L.A. (3:26)
6. The Transmission (4:56)
7. Bad Experiment (4:25)
8. Manhunt Begins (3:10)
9. She's Lonely (2:21)
10. Dangerous Sex (5:00)
11. The Set Up (2:53)
12. Sil Stages Her Death (2:24)
13. The Alien Underground (7:19)
14. Sil's Demise (7:22)
15. End Credits (4:12)

Total Running Time: 58:06




Size: 301.1 MB
Files type: FLAC Audio File [.flac]
Channels: 2 (stereo)
Sample Rate: 44.1 KHz
Sample Size: 16 bit
Bit Rate: 1,411 kbps


Cover Artwork:







Credits:

Music Composed by Christopher Young

Music Produced by Christopher Young
Executive Producer: Roger Feigelson
Executive in Charge of Music for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Music Inc.: Barbara Custer
Executive Producer for Renovatio Records: John M. Angier

Conducted by Pete Anthony
Orchestrations by Pete Anthony, Patrick Russ, Christopher Young
Orchestra Recorded and Mixed by Bobby Fernandez and  Dan Wallin
Synths Recorded and Mixed by Mark Zimoski and Larry Mah
Recorded at Sony Picture Scoring Stage, Culver City, CA
Orchestra Contractor: Sandy De Crescent

Album Sequencing: John M. Angier
Art Direction: Mira Ellis




Cue Assembly:

Track Title

Slate and Cue Title

1. Species

1m1 Main Title (Revised)

2. Young Sil

1m2A Sil Escapes - Part 1

3. Track Her Down

2m3 Track & Hunt Her Down

2m1 Sil Gets Off Train

4. Transformation

2M5 Young Sil Transforms

More Docile

5. Sil in L.A.

Battlefield L.A. (Edited)

Sil in L.A.

6. The Transmission

3m1 Dan The Psychic (Original)

3m4 The Experiment

7. Bad Experiment

5m1A Bad Experiment - Part 1

5m1B Bad Experiment - Part 2 (Revised) (Edited)

8. Manhunt Begins

Sil’s Dream #4

6m2 Sil Kills Robbie

9. She’s Lonely

6m8 She's So Lonely (Edited)

6m9 Body Repair [6M9]

10. Dangerous Sex

7m3A Dangerous Sex - Part 1 (Edited)

7m3B Dangerous Sex - Part 2 (Edited)

11. The Set Up

8m2A Set Up - Part 1

8m2B Set Up - Part 2 (Revised)

12. Sil Stages Her Death

8m4B Sil Stages Death

13. The Alien Underground

8m4A Sil Stages Death

10m1A Sil Makes A Baby - Part 1 (Edited)

10m1B Sil Makes A Baby - Part 2

2m5 Young Sil Transforms (Edited)

11m1 Fitch Gets It

7m3B Dangerous Sex - Part 2 (Edited)

5m1B Bad Experiment - Part 2 (Original) (Edited)

14. Sil’s Demise

11m2 Sil Watches Team (Edited)

11m5A The Babie's Demise - Part 1 (Edited)

11m5B The Babie's Demise - Part 2

12m1 Sil's Demise

15. End Credits

12m2 End Credits (Edited)



Motion Picture Artwork, Stills and Images © 1996 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. All rights reserved.
This compilation and cover artwork © 2025 Renovatio Records. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applicable laws. For promotional use only.

Renovatio Records [0-01702-19094]
 

Friday, July 21, 2023

Virtuosity

 

Virtuosity (Original Motion Picture Score)
Music Composed by Christopher Young

The newest addition to Renovatio Records’ catalog is Christopher Young’s complex score for the 1995 sci-fi action thriller Virtuosity, directed by Brett Leonard and starring Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe, with supporting roles played by Kelly Lynch, William Forsythe, Stephen Spinella, William Fichtner, Louise Fletcher, and Kevin J. O’Connor. Washington plays Parker Barnes, a former cop imprisoned after killing a terrorist that murdered his wife and daughter. In a not-so-distant future, Barnes is being used by the government as a guinea pig to test a virtual reality system designed to train police officers. The goal of the VR system is to capture Sid 6.7 (Crowe), an artificial intelligence program that was developed as an amalgam of psyches of the most violent serial killers in history. Eventually, Sid manages to escape from cyberspace and creates himself as an android in the real world. Thus, Barnes is reactivated as a cop because he is the only person that has ever been close to capturing Sid in VR. As expected, a number of thrilling action and chase sequences ensue, as Sid wreaks havoc and commits acts of terrorism, torture and murder across the city of Los Angeles.

Even though it is just a retelling of the familiar plot formula in which a rogue cop is reactivated because he is the only one capable of dealing with a dangerous villain, the film offers plenty of interesting ideas. Just having an artificial person walking the streets as any regular person is enough to get one’s attention. Plus, Crowe plays Sid with such charisma and fun that you cannot wait for the next scene involving the character. The story interestingly touches a bit upon the psychology behind a programmed personality like Sid’s; he’s just an interactive “software in the flesh” that is constantly in motion and analyzing people so that he can adapt his profile, using his vast library of psyches to raise the bar of those who challenge him. Since the terrorist that killed Barnes’ family is part of Sid’s personality, the stakes are higher making the action sequences a lot more engaging. And it is in Barnes and Sid’s confrontation where the heart of the film really lies; one character looking for redemption and proper justice, and the other just toying with his chaser. All of this makes of Virtuosity an enjoyable thriller, worthy of appreciation, in spite of its flaws.

For the score, composer Christopher Young was brought by producer Gary Lucchesi, who had worked with him previously on Jennifer 8. Young’s approach for the music is quite interesting as well, resorting to complex techno-electronic music for the first two thirds, while adopting a full orchestral soundscape for the film’s climax. The electronic cues have pulsing rhythms to accentuate action and suspense scenes, offering plenty of enjoyable synthetic textures, techno loops, and electronic guitar riffs. The orchestral cues, on the other hand, fittingly provide an organic feel to the struggle between the hero and the villain. As expected, throughout the score there’s a palpable emotional baseline focused on Barnes. The cue “The Evaluation” introduces Young’s main idea for the titular character, a progression of a repeating four-note figure, usually performed by solo guitar or piano. This motif perfectly encapsulates the character’s melancholy, its dynamism allowing Young to play around with the idea throughout the score. Notice, for example, the final part of the track “The Loyalizer”, in which the figure descends in key each time it’s played, encompassing Barnes’ emotional downfall after allegedly having just killed an innocent person by accident. Young also incorporates elements and melodies from Peter Gabriel’s song “Party Man” into the score; this material is namely associated with Barnes' lost family. The orchestral arrangement of this song heard in the optimistic “Safe”, when Barnes has finally found redemption and broken free, is one of the score's highlights. All in all, Virtuosity was a clear indication of what Young’s mind was capable of producing. The entire score is a dynamic non-stop entertainment, with surprises on each turn.

At the time of the film’s premiere in 1995, an all-song album was released by Radioactive Records, with the only existing presentation of the score being a promotional release assembled by Young himself and Douglass Fake. In 2019, Intrada Records provided the first commercial presentation of Young’s score, in the form of a generous 76-minute CD that contained all of the composer’s contributions to Virtuosity. This new release by Renovatio Records compiles the best cues from the score, in chronological order, intertwined with some of the most memorable songs from the film, namely “Young Boys” by Lords Of Acid, “The Loyalizer” by Fatima Mansions, as well as Peter Gabriel’s own “Party Man”, featuring The Worldbeaters. With just over an hour of music, let yourself be captured by the musical reality of Christopher Young!


Track list:
1. Virtuosity (2:15)
2. Game Over (3:30)
3. LETAC (1:38)
4. Nano-Cells (2:44)
5. The Evaluation (1:49)
6. Party Man (Demo) (0:49)
   Peter Gabriel/Christopher Young
7. Birth (1:33)
8. Leaving Prison (2:20)
9. Media Zone (3:00)
10. Young Boys (Stript) (2:35)
    Lords Of Acid
11. Symphony Of Colision (2:11)
12. Sid On Video (1:27)
13. The Loyalizer (3:39)
    Fatima Mansions/Christopher Young
14. Flashback (3:25)
15. Parker Escaped (3:03)
16. The Cemetary (1:56)
17. Computer Suicide (2:22)
18. Death TV (2:26)
19. Splinters (4:07)
20. Dysfunction (4:46)
21. Never Net (6:06)
22. Safe (1:50)
23. Party Man (5:39)
    The Worldbeaters/Peter Gabriel

Tracks 14 and 22 include interpolations of "Party Man" written by Peter Gabriel, Tori Amos and George Acogny

Total running time: 65:10




Cover Artwork:





Credits:
Music Composed and Produced by Christopher Young

Executive In Charge of Music for Paramount Pictures: Randy Spendlove

Conducted by Pete Anthony
Orchestrations by Christopher Young, Pete Anthony and Marco Beltrami
Orchestra Scoring Mixer: Robert Fernandez
Assistant Scoring Engineer: Tim Boyle
Orchestra Recorded at Paramount Scoring Stage M
Orchestra Scoring Crew: Paul Wertheimer
Synthesizer Scoring Mixers: Dann Michael Thompson and Rick Winquest
Synthesizer Supervisor: Daniel Licht
Synthesizer Programmers: Mark Zimoski and Kevin Hayes
Synthesizer Coordinator: John Van Houten
Assistant to the Composer: Mark Killian
Music Scoring Consultant: Larry Mah
Music Preparation: Bob Bornstein
Orchestra Contractor: Sandy DeCrescent
Music Editors: Lee Scott, Christopher Kennedy and Scott Grusin
Tracks 14 and 22 include interpolations of "Party Man" by Peter Gabriel, Tori Amos and George Acogny

"Party Man (Demo)"
Vocals Performed by Peter Gabriel
Written by Peter Gabriel, Tori Amos and George Acogny
Arranged by Christopher Young

"Young Boys (Stript)"
Performed by Lords Of Acid
Written by Praga Khan, Jade 4 U, Oliver Adams and J.K. Magick
Produced by Praga Khan, Jade 4 U and The Lords Of Acid
Lords Of Acid perform courtesy of Antler Subway Records and American Recordings
℗1994 American Recordings

"The Loyalizer"
Performed by Fatima Mansions
Written by Cathal Coughlan
Includes Arrangements and Score by Christopher Young
Produced by Jerry Harrison
Remixed by Juno Reactor for MCT
Recorded in the U.K.
℗1994 Radioactive Records, J.V.

"Party Man"
Performed by The Worldbeaters and Peter Gabriel
Written by Peter Gabriel, Tori Amos and George Acogny
Produced by Peter Gabriel and George Acogny
Peter Gabriel performs courtesy of Geffen Records (U.S. and Canada) and Virgin Records Ltd. (rest of the world)
The Worldbeaters perform courtesy of U. Groove Ltd.
℗1995 George Acogny Inc. and Peter Gabriel Limited

Renovatio Records [0-01702-19053]

Sunday, August 31, 2014

Priest


PRIEST (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Music Composed by Christopher Young


Renovatio Records is pleased to present the original motion picture soundtrack for Priest, composed by horror master Christopher Young. The film directed by Scott Stewart and starring Paul Bettany, Karl Urban, Maggie Q, Lily Collins, Cam Gigandet and Christopher Plummer is a dystopian post-apocalyptic science fiction story about a long-time war between humans and vampires. Bettany plays the title character, who hunts down the vampires after realizing that they are planning to release a final attacking horde against the last remnants of mankind. The film was panned by critics and audiences to such an extent that the making of potential sequels was cancelled. Despite these opinions, the film has a lot of visual delights to offer, with a characteristic stylish design and well-orchestrated action scenes. Another aspect that cannot be missed is Christopher Young's bombastic score.

Young is a versatile composer, having composed music in many different genres. However, he is mostly known for his horror scores, which choral and orchestral bursts of pure thematic passages. Priest is not the exception! Furthermore, listeners will find plenty of gothic themes, grandiose action sequences, tender and inspiring motifs, chilling creepiness and majestic choral beauty to quench their thirst for everything they should expect from a Young score.

The music was released by Lakeshore Records at the time the film was premiered. Though the album was very well-balanced and offered a great presentation of Young's work, the label left out a lot of considerably good music. With the appearance of expanded and complete bootlegs, here at Renovatio Records, we decided to put together our own take on this one, with new unreleased material and a whole different track arrangement. Be sure to rock your walls (and possibly, your neighbours') with this terrific and explosive score!

Track listing:
1. Prologue (3:22)
2. Cathedral City (2:10)
3. Priest Fights Guards (3:32)
4. Family Photo (2:45)
5. Leaving City (3:12)
6. Priest Remembers (2:05)
7. Blackhat (4:01)
8. Killing Vamps (3:11)
9. Finding The Hive (3:40)
10. Eclipsed Heart (4:28)
11. Boarding The Vampire Train (4:58)
12. Blackhat Confrontation (4:21)
13. Aftermath (2:31)
14. Finale (4:57)
15. A World Without End (7:38)

Total running time: 56:51








Cover Artwork: